Unnamed Journal Volume 4, Issue 4 | 页面 4

From the Publisher ctober is that month that should be the perfect distillation of autumn: cool but not cold weather, the final explosion of color in the leaves, apple-picking. But all of this gets swallowed up by the corporate mission-creep that involves putting skeletons and witches on display in the drugstores in the last week of August. I understand, you’re eager to have something to sell to bring the business in, but can you people understand how much I don’t want to think about Halloween when it isn’t even Labor Day? How that makes Halloween a fucking chore, rather than a good time? Nothing ruins enjoyment than being told to enjoy something. O But that at least is market-driven. It’s the Halloween nerds so eager to caper about in skeletons, that I really can’t stand. Especially since you take what could be the oddest, most memento-mori of holidays, and dilute it until it’s basically Goth Christmas. All so you can have an excuse to watch Tim Burton stop-motion darker a few weeks early. Be more brainwashed. My therapist says I’m supposed to let these petty frustrations out. I think it makes me sound like an old man who found fresh dog poop in his lawn, but whatever. I guess it helps. As per last issue’s announcement, we did in fact launch a podcast last month, Shallow & Pedantic. It was fun, and we knocked off a whole growler in the process. The next episode will be seasonally-related, and come out later this month. Check our Facebook page for further details To the issue: We have a fine exercise in Cyberpunk Noir in As Case in the Empire of New Texas. Merrily existential. Then we get the conclusion to Cantilever Jones Swings Low, a story that just keeps going. Then, a filmscript by Alfred Underhill, called Jonathon Macoon. It’s pleasantly weird. And then, Tygg and Drea return hunting mythical monsters in The Sword in the Cave, a sequel to previous stories The Dying Goddess and The Barbarian on the Shore. Enjoy. Thomas Fitz Publisher