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Worlds of Strangeness No. 4

Worlds of Strangeness [#4, Spring/Summer 2021] ed. Nigel Taylor ($6.87, 68pp, digest) Cover: The Vault of Horror
1 • Contents
2 • The Stranger Speaks • The Stranger • ed
3 • The Curse Club • “Doc” Clancy” • nv
23 • Brain Waive • Graham Andrews • ss
27 • A Farce in Metropolis • The Stranger • nv
45 • Micronicles No. 10: Imperfect Muder • ff
46 • By the Light of the Worm Moon • Richard Toogood • ss
59 • Micronicles No. 11: The Last Trainspotter • ff
60 • It’s a Strange, Strange, Strange, Strange World • Mister Gogue • ar
62 • A Noteworthy Comic Strip • Anon • ar
BC • Micronicles No. 12: Dysmorphia • ff

World of Strangeness website

Contents formatted for inclusion in Phil Stephensen-Payne’s Galatic Central reference website.
FictionMags Index Family Item Types & Other Abbreviations key.

Worlds of Strangeness No. 4
Worlds of StrangeneSS No. 3

Nigel Taylor’s Worlds of StrangeneSS No. 3: The Monster Issue
Contents
The Stranger Speaks (Editorial)
Ferrell Rosser “Black Lagoon”
Maharg Swerdna “The Mummy from Blood’s Tomb”
Mister Gorgue’s It’s a Strange, Strange, Strange, Strange World
The Stranger Presents: Borderland
Graham Andrews “Shell Suit”
Micronicles No. 7 “Through Others’ Eyes”
“Doc” Clancy “Cult of the Shark God”
Book Review: The Stopgap Spaceman by Graham Andrews
The Stranger’s Homage to Harryhausen
Micronicles No. 8 “This Bender Earth”
The Stranger Investigates: The Invisible Made Visible
Strange Mails
Micronicles No. 9 “Golem II”

Worlds of StrangeneSS No. 3: The Monster Issue
April 2019
Editor: Nigel Taylor
5.5” x 8.5” 68 pages
POD only $6.60
Worlds of StrangeneSS website

Worlds of Strangeness No. 2 pageWorlds of StrangeneSS No. 2 review part 7 of 8:

Not much longer than the magazine’s Micronicles, at two-and-a-half pages, is the issue’s final story, “The Lights in the Sky Aren’t Stars,” by Graham Andrews. It’s stocked with alien factions like Klarts and Emetians, and charismatic characters like Hardball Hannigan and Anna Liffey, but sadly, I wasn’t able to connect the dots of its abrupt ending. My bad.

This review concludes on June 13 . . .