The OF Blog: Weird Fiction Review launched today

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Weird Fiction Review launched today

I said in passing a few months ago that I would be help providing content for a new site.  Well, that new site, Weird Fiction Review, launched today.  Below is the press release (and links) that go with it:

WHERE DO YOU GET YOUR WEIRD?

Weirdfictionreview.com: Your Non-Denominational Source for The Weird


Weirdfictionreview.com launched today, a website devoted to The Weird and created by Luis Rodrigues. The project is the brainchild of editing-writing team Ann & Jeff VanderMeer. Hugo Award-winner Ann VanderMeer until recently edited Weird Tales Magazine and has co-edited several anthologies with her husband. Jeff’s last novel, Finch, was a finalist for the Nebula Award and World Fantasy Award. Together they edited the just-released The Weird: A Compendium of Strange & Dark Stories (Atlantic/Corvus), a 750,000-word, 100-year retrospective of weird fiction.

The site kicks off today with the following features:

---Exclusive interview with Neil Gaiman about weird fiction:


---First episode of exclusive “Reading The Weird” webcomic by Leah Thomas:


---Translation of Thomas Owen’s short story “Kavar the Rat” by Edward Gauvin:


---The full Table of Contents for The Weird compendium, with notes:

---Weird Gallery, Featuring the art of New Orleans artist Myrtle Von Damitz III:


Come back later this week and next for: “Weirdly Epic: A Century of First Lines,” exclusive interviews with Kelly Link and Thomas Ligotti, a feature on artist/writer Alfred Kubin, Kafkaesque entertainments, China Mieville’s “AFTERWEIRD: The Efficacy of a Worm-eaten Dictionary,”  and a feature on classic Weird Tales women writers. An ongoing “101 Weird Writers” feature will also begin next week.

Weirdfictionreview.com will initially focus on features related to The Weird compendium, but its primary mission over time will be to serve as an ongo­ing explo­ration into all facets of the weird, in all of its many forms — a kind of “non-denominational” approach that appre­ci­ates Love­craft but also writers like Franz Kafka, Angela Carter, and Shirley Jack­son – along with the next gen­er­a­tion of weird writ­ers and inter­na­tional weird. Writer Angela Slatter serves as the managing editor.

1 comment:

Harry Markov said...

This will be my favorite place on the Internet. I swear. :D May it be long and prosperous, cause eventually I wanna join it. Yeah, I'm pushy as fuck.

 
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