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Scotch Rutherford and Alec Cizak preview the future of criminal takes on technology in special editions of Switchblade and Pulp Modern. Available now in print and digital.

Switchblade: Tech Noir

Switchblade: Tech Noir
Contents Page
Scotch Rutherford: Editor’s Corner
Eric Beetner “Killer App”
Callum McSorley “Baby on Board”
John Moralee “Bad Score”
Mandi Jourdan “Folie à Deux”
Hugh Lessig “Muscle Memory”
Nick Kolakowski “Night Mayor”
Alec Cizak “Post-Biological-Stress-Disorder”
Matthew X. Gomez “Galatea in the Garden of Eden”
James Edward O’Brien “Torna Nails, Mindbender”
Rob D. Smith “Sundown”
Author Bios & Acknowledgements

Switchblade: Tech Noir October 2019
Editor: Scotch Rutherford
Cover Photos: Scotch Rutherford
Cover Model: Kiana Gonzalez
5” x 8” 222 pages
Print $8.99 Kindle $2.99
Switchblade Magazine website
Switchblade Merchandise

Pulp Modern: Tech Noir

Pulp Modern: Tech Noir
Contents Page
Alex Cizak: From the Editor
C.W. Blackwell “A Deviant Skin”
Nils Gilbertson “The Moderator”
Tom Barlow “Love in the Time of Silicone”
Deborah L. Davitt “Leaving Red Footprints”
Angelique Fawns “A Time to Forget”
J.D. Graves “Three, Two, One Zebra-Stripe Shake-Off”
Don Stoll “15 Minutes”
Jo Perry “Lights Out”
Zakariah Johnson “Walking Out”
Contact and Links

Pulp Modern: Tech Noir Fall 2019
Chief Editor: Alec Cizak
Guest Editor: Scotch Rutherford
Design: Richard Krauss
Cover and Interior Art: Ran Scott
Cartoons: Bob Vojtko
5.5” x 8.5” 132 pages
Print $6.99 Kindle $2.99
Pulp Modern website

Groundhog Files

Excerpt from the tribute: “The Creative Works of Joe Wehrle, Jr.” from The Digest Enthusiast No. 8, June 2018:

In 1991, Joe Wehrle, Jr. produced a mini comic loosely based on the famous Punxsutawney Groundhog, featuring a groundhog detective. “I think it was a bit too far off the beaten path for most of the local populace. Most would rather have had a coloring book,” said Joe. Groundhog Files was a 24-page comic that Joe produced in a limited run. In 2015, Joe reprinted the comic at about one-half of its original digest-size.

Most of Joe’s self-published works were hand-bound. Quantities were low, which makes them rare and highly collectible. If you’re lucky enough to find a copy of one, I advise you to grab it. His publications were always something truly special.

Joe’s bibliography appears on the Larque Press website.

Out of the Gutter No. 2

The Modern Journal of Pulp Fiction and Degenerate Literature
Endorsements
Title Page
Masthead and Indicia
Matthew Louis: From the Editor
Contents Pages

Flash
John McFetridge
“Plugged”
Albert Tucher “Tipping is Optional”
Christs Faust “Hit Me”
Stephen Rogers “Drive Thru”
Matt Wallace “Notes”
Keith Gilman “Bunker Hill”
r2 “Yellow Pellets”
Jacob Kohl “The One That Got Away”

Approximately 10 Minute Read Dept.
William Boyle
“Neighborhood Girl”
Michael Bracken “Professionals”
Paul A Toth “For All I Know”
J.D. Smith “The Flower Girl”
Rey A. Gonzales “Bad Luck
Clair Dickson “The Pleasure Business”
Grant McKenzie “White Volcano”
M.C. O’Connor “Tweaker”

Gangland
John Rickards
“Vengeance is Mine”
Ken Goldman “Fat Larry’s Night With the Alligators”
Mark Marquez “To Get to Uncle Johnny’s”
E.E. Howard “The Thug We Love”
The Classic American Gangster (comic)

15 to 20 Minute Read Dept.
Rick McMahan
“Out On the Razor’s Edge”
Steve Alten “Lost in Time”
William Carl “Rumble”
Julie Wright “Devil, Me and Cherry B”

Nonfiction
Edwin Decker: Guzzle and Go, Goddamnit
Seth Ferranti: Adventures of a Meth Monster
Dale Bridges: Hooked

Other
Mind of My Own
Li’l Dahmer
Submission Guidelines
Notes on Contributors

Out of the Gutter No. 2 Summer 2007
Chief Editor: Matthew Louis
Deputy Editors: DZ Allen, Dale Bridges, Hana K. Lee
Finance: Joel Huck
Associate Publisher: Hassan Brubuddy
Publicity: Barney Stims
European Editor: Offenbach Stutz
5.5” x 8.5” 200 pages Originally $13.50
Out of the Gutter Online

An excerpt from Michael Bracken’s interview in The Digest Enthusiast No. 8, June 2018:

The Digest Enthusiast: In “Professionals,” the narrator is a gay prostitute. In “My Sister’s Husband,” Pulp Adventures No. 27 (Fall 2017) the narrator is a middle-aged woman. How do you ensure your characters act and speak authentically, with respect to their gender, sexual orientation, race, etc.?

Michael Bracken: I’m never certain that they do, and can only hope that they come close enough that readers will accept any mistakes I make.

The key, though, is to build characters from the inside out rather than from the outside in. Regardless of our gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religious beliefs, and whatever else divides us, we share many commonalities. We want to love and be loved. We want to feel safe and free from fear. We want to be happy and healthy. We want to be appreciated by our families and respected by our peers. The list goes on and on.

If we build characters from the inside out, the characters will “speak” appropriately and more genuinely than if we build characters from the outside in and rely on stereotypes or presume that all women speak one way and all gay men speak another.

Additionally, I try to minimize the use of jargon. A police office will use terminology from her job differently than a doctor, which is different still from a barista. Only a word or two is necessary for the reader to catch those differences.

Manhunt No. 12 Dec. 1953

Contents Page
David Goodis “Black Pudding” art by Ray Houlihan
Richard Marsten “Switch Ending”
Charles Beckman, Jr. “Killing on Seventh Street”
Craig Rice “Murder Marches On!” (John J. Malone)
Hunt Collins “Sucker”
Dan Sontup’s Portrait of a Killer No. 7: Tillie Gburek
Evan Hunter “The Wife of Riley” art by Tom O’Sullivan
Harold Q. Masur “Richest Man in the Morgue” (Scott Jordan)
Jonathan Craig “The Quiet Room”
David Chandler “The Coyote”
Roy Carroll “Wife Beater” art by Tom O’Sullivan
Frank Kane “The Icepick Artists” (Johnny Liddell)
Vincent H. Gaddis’ Crime Cavalcade
R. Van Taylor “The Insecure” art by Ray Houlihan
Coming Up Next Month
Mugged and Printed: Frank Kane, Harold Q. Masur, David Goodis, David Chandler

Manhunt Detective Story Monthly Vol. 1 No. 12 Dec. 1953
Flying Eagle Publications, Inc,
Editor: John McCloud
Managing Editor: Hal Walker
Art Director: Chas. W. Adams
Business Manager: R.E. Decker
Cover: Frank Uppwall
144 pages, 35¢

Peter Enfantino’s story-by-story synopses of Manhunt is featured in The Digest Enthusiast No. 6–10.

X Marks the Dot

An excerpt from Steve Carper’s series “One-and-Dones” that appears in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7–9:

Guinn Company
Muriel Stafford
had a syndicated newspaper column that did handwriting analysis of the stars, and not surprisingly X Marks the Dot stars a newspaper columnist solving a murder using handwriting analysis. Not only was Stafford enough of a name for her picture to fill the back cover, but as the ultimate gimmick, each of the suspects’ handwriting was reproduced inside the book so the reader could play along.

Now Available from McFarland: Steve Carper’s Robots in American Popular Culture, a comprehensive reference volume that includes a companion website: robotsinamericanpopularculture.com.

Switchblade No. 11

Brian Beatty “The Husband” (verse)
Contents Page
Scotch Rutherford’s Editor’s Corner: Dysfunctional Relationships

Sharp & Deadly Short Fiction
George Garnet “Exotic”
Misha Burnett “Whatever Lola Wants”
Serena Jayne “Garden Variety Creeper”
John Timm “Strangers, Perfect Strangers”
J.D. Graves “Amid the Noise & Haste”
Alec Cizak “The Radical Mr. Bogota”
Robb T. White “The Alibi”

Quick & Dirty Flash Fiction
Jim J. Wilsky “A Brand New Outfit”
David Rachels “The Lady Urologist”

Switchblade Person of Interest: Alec Cizak
Author Bios & Acknowledgements

Switchblade No. 11 back

Switchblade: An Anthology of Noir No. 11 November 2019
Caledonia Press
Editor: Scotch Rutherford
Cover photos: Scotch Rutherford
5” x 8”, 136 pages
POD $6.99 Kindle $2.99

Switchblade Magazine website
Switchblade Merchandise

Rooftop Stew by Max Clotfelter

Most of the comics in Rooftop Stew originally appeared in Seattle’s comics tabloid The Intruder. So if you’re not a local, everything here is new. Max Clotfelter’s work harkens back to the underground comix of yesterday—gross, rude, rough, and hilarious.

Published by J.T. Yost’s Birdcage Bottom Books, Rooftop Stew is 120 pages of depraved fictional and autobiographical antics, blending ‘60s psychedelic underground comic sensibility with Southern style debauchery.

6” x 8” print only $12.00
Rooftop Stew

Analog Nov/Dec 2019

Contents Pages
Trevor Quachri’s Editorial: Odd & Ends I
Jerry Oltion “An Eye for an Eye” art by Tomislav Tikulin
Cristina De La Rocha’s Geoengineering: Coming Soon To a Planet Near You (Science Fact)
Gary Kloster “Formless”
John Edward Uth “Moon Santa Mongo” art by Kurt Huggins
Louis Evans “The Prince of Svalbard: A Saga of the Thaw”
John G. Cramer’s The Alternate View: Quantum Entanglement Across Time
Eric Cline “Ghost of Christmas Future”
In Times to Come
Marissa Lingen “Filaments of Hope”
Michael Carroll “Just a Guy and Some Aliens”
Edward Ashton “Wolves”
Ken Poyner “Moisture” (verse)
Rajan Khanna “Binary”
Craig DeLancey “Sojourner”
Jessy Randall “Hertha Ayrton 1854–1923” (verse)
Julie Novakova “Martian Fever”
Joe M. McDermott “Keep the Line Tight But Not Too Tight, or Esteban And the Moon”
Stephen R. Wilk “Yamadori”
Mark W. Tiedemann “Follow, Past Meridian”
Jay Cole “Solve for X”
Allison Mulvihill “Empty Box”
Matt Dovey “The Movements of Other Starfish”
Richard A. Lovett’s Guest Alternate View: Smartphones, Earthquakes, Stealth Cars & Sniper Attacks
Aimee Ogden “The Quarantine Nursery”
Guy Stewart “Kamshamnida, America” art by Vincent DiFate
Jay O’Connell “You Must Remember This” art by Eldar Zakirov
Don Sakers: The Reference Library
The City and Cygnets by Michael Bishop
Ode to Defiance by Marc Stiegler
Recursion by Blake Crouch
Wanderers by Chuck Wendig
The Girl With Kaleidoscope Eyes: Analog Stories for a Digital Age by Howard V. Hendrix
Million Mile Road Trip by Rudy Rucker
Zion’s Fiction: A Treasury of Israeli Speculative Fiction edited by Sheldon Teitelbaum and Emmanual Lottem
Waste Tide by Chen Qiufan
Keepers by Brenda Cooper
Alien Archives by Robert Silverberg
The Eagle Has Landed: 50 Years of Lunar Science Fiction edited by Neil Clarke
Stellaris: People of the Stars edited by Les Johnson & Robert E. Hampson
The Fandom Fifty: 50+ Fascinating People of the Maryland Science Fiction Conventions edited by Diane Lee Baron
Brass Tacks (Letters)
Classified Marketplace
Anthony Lewis: Upcoming Events

Analog Nov/Dec 2019 back

Analog Science Fiction and Fact (Astounding) Vol. 139 No. 11 & 12 Nov/Dec 2019
Publisher: Peter Kanter
Editor: Trevor Quachri
Managing Editor: Emily Hockaday
Editorial Assistant: Deanna McLafferty
Senior Art Director: Victoria Green
Cover: Tuomas Korpi
208 pages, $7.99 on newsstands until December 17, 2019
Analog website

SF Value Pack-8 $7.95
SF Double Issue Value Pack-12 $15.95
SF Value Pack-16 $12.95

Mulmig 2

Marc Myers, frequent contributor to The Digest Enthusiast, has released Mulmig 2, a 16-page pocket-size collection of unsettling collage images. Its indicia indicates it’s a tribute to Abcess Grenk No. 4, another collage-zine published 36 years ago.

The Cambridge Dictionary translates the German word “mulmig” as “An uneasy feeling about the matter from the start.”

Marc created several pieces to illustrate “The Good Soldier” by Vince Nowell, Sr. for The Digest Enthusiast No. 11 due in January 2020.

Mulmig 2 is available for $2.00 postage-paid. Click on the link: Marc Myers to arrange purchase.

Mulmig 2 back
Ellery Queen Nov/Dec 2019

Contents Page
Charlaine Harris “A Little Happy Hunting” (Anne DeWitt) art by Mark Evan Walker
David Dean “The Breakfast Club” (Julian Hall)
Elizabeth Zelvin “The Island”
Matt Coleman “Stray Dogs” (Black Mask)
Steve Steinbock: The Jury Box
Gallows Court by Martin Edwards
The Murder List by Hank Phillippi Ryan
Primary Target by John Billheimer
Bluff by Michael Kardos
The House on Hallowed Ground by Nancy Cole Silverman
And Then They Were Doomed by Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli
They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall
Hitchcock and the Censors by Jim Billheimer
Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John Buchan by Ursula Buchan
Amy Myers “Death and the Donkeys” (Nell Drury)
Joseph Goodrich “The Beige Skirt”
Richie Narvaez “None of This Is on the Map”
Joseph Goodrich’s On the Road With Manfred B. Lee: “The Most Profound Mysteries”
Elizabeth Elwood “The Chess Room”
Kristopher Zgorski: Blog Bytes
Angelique Fawns* “Three Calendars” (Dept. of First Stories)
John Lantigua “The Underground Man” (Willie Cuesta)
Dean Jobb: Stranger Than Fiction (preview)
Roger Torrey “Private War” (Black Mask)(George Killeen)
Ingred Oonincx “The Final Stage” (Passport to Crime) translated from the Dutch by Josh Pachter
A.M. Porter “The Drawings” (Dept. of First Stories)
Doug Crandell “Wrangled”
Christine Poulson “Fiction Addiction”
Twist Phelan “Fathers-in-Law”
Doug Allyn “The Dutchy” art by Jason C. Eckhardt
Anna Scotti “That Which We Call Patience”
Classified Marketplace
Index to Volumes 153 & 154—2019
Indicia
2019 EQMM Readers Award Ballot

*Appears in Pulp Modern: Tech Noir

Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Nov/Dec 2019 Vol. 154 No. 5 & 6, Whole No. 938 & 939
Publisher: Peter Kanter
Editor: Janet Hutchings
Managing Editor: Jackie Sherbow
Senior Director Art & Production: Porter C. McKinnon
Senior AD: Victoria Green
Cover: Dave Calver

192 pages
$7.99 on newsstands until Dec. 17, 2019
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine website
Dean Jobb’s Stranger Than Fiction

EQMM and AHMM Mystery Value Pack-8 $7.95
Mystery Double Issue Value Pack-12 $15.95
EQMM and AHMM Mystery Value Pack-16 $12.95