The new Pulp Modern is out in print and digital. Editor Alec Cizak selected the the images for the cover and interior spreads along with its 12 stories. My role was design and production, which includes converting the photos into photo-illustrations.

The new issue begins with eight crime stories and concludes with four in the fantasy, horror, and Science Fiction realm.

Contents
Alec Cizak From the Editor
Russell Thayer “Buzz Me Blues”
Jim Thomsen “Black Lab”
Tom Andes “After Midnight at the C’est La Vie Lounge”
Preston Lang “Eleven Irritated People”
John Teel “Second Chances”
Robert Petyo “Sacrifice”
Charles Roland “Quick Cash Now”
Emile C. Tepperman “No Living Witness” (Classic Pulp)
Matthew X. Gomez “A Long Journey’s End”
Marc E. Fitch “Tick-Tock in the House America Built”
Susan E. Abramski “Double Jeopardy”

The second run of Pulp Modern continues to set the standard for independent, underground genre fiction journals. Read what J.D. Graves, editor of the newly-hatched Econo Clash Review (due this Spring), wrote about it here.

$6.99 POD
$2.99 Kindle
132 pages, 5.5” x 8.5”
A joint production of Uncle B. Publications and Larque Press

Contents “In Amundsen’s Tent” by John Martin Leahy (Weird Tales Jan. 1928)“Transient and Immortal” by Jim Haught“Out of the Deep” by Robert E. Howard“The Bibliophile” by Thomas Boyd (The Bookman Magazine Jan. 1927)“The Ultimate Creature” by…

A story from Justice Amazing Detective Mysteries #2, July 1955: “Drifter” by Herbert D. Kastle.“Sure, she was pretty, and a guy nearing forty didn’t get them that young—not unless he had a big office and she…

The new year has begun. Let’s make the most of it in the areas of our lives that mean the most to us. The drawing shown here is from 1979, a new year’s cartoon for a…

As featured in Marvel Science Stories May 1951: A special feature called “Amazing Science Adventures” includes three short articles. “The Problem of Atomic Waste” by H.R. Jamison presents two ideal solutions. Encase the stuff in a…

The new year starts in two days. Change is accelerating. Boomers, at least those like me, are sliding farther down the curve of technological time. That commercial with Grandparents, armed with their new gadgets, greeting their…

Contents From the Pulp Lit Pulpit: Winter Storytelling “Desdemone” by J.J. Lee Feature Interview: J.J. Lee “We Come Back Different” part one by A.J. Odasso “Sea Changes” by Matilda Berke (verse) “Devonian” by Emily Osborne (verse)…

Contents “A Sense of Crawling” by Robert Edmond Alter “The Laughing Duke” by Wallace West (Weird Tales Feb. 1932) “Dermod’s Bane” by Robert E. Howard “The Spell of the Sword” by Frank Aubrey (Pearson’s Magazine Feb.…

Contents Hello, Out There in Radioland! by Steve Darnall “A Few Moments with . . . Peggy King” (uncredited) “The Human Touch” How Jack Benny became the first true radio comedian by Kathryn Fuller-Seeley (cover story)…