Space & Time Spring/Summer 2022 #141
The oldest continuously published speculative fiction semi-pro magazine in print returns with Space & Time Issue #141, a Spring/Summer 2022 collection of fantasy, horror, science fiction, poetry, art, interviews, essays, and strange literary visions.
This transitional issue welcomes Austin Gragg as editor-in-chief and marks a new biannual era for Space & Time, while honoring the magazine’s long history of publishing bold speculative work since 1966. Inside, readers will find desert survival horror, cosmic catastrophe, Victorian botanical nightmares, lunar futures, folklore, sharp-edged social speculation, strange transformations, dark poetry, speculative film criticism, author memoir, interviews, and art that reaches toward the unknown.
Issue #141 features work by C. M. Barnes, L. Allen Gillick, Lorraine Schein, Marge Simon, Andrew Dibble, Blaise Langlois, A. J. Forget, Ngo Binh Anh Khoa, Lucinda Taylor, Julie Johnson, Tina Quinn Durham, Daniel M. Kimmel, Harvey L. Seibel, Pedro Iniguez, Shane Douglas Keene, Frederick Stansfield, Alyson Faye, Jamal Hodge, Jacqueline Johnson, Russell Nichols, Angela Yuriko Smith, Jessie Atkin, Lisa Timpf, Carl Taylor, Jennifer Crow, Teel James Glenn, Lia Parisyan, Mark Levine, Davian Aw, Paolo Bertoglio, and more.
Also included are Daniel M. Kimmel’s Take Two on the Movies, revisiting The Stepford Wives through questions of gender, power, desire, and control; Angela Yuriko Smith’s profile R. C. Matheson: Man of Many Talents; Memoirs for His Muse, Harvey L. Seibel’s moving account of writing, grief, love, and creative persistence; and an interview with Paolo Bertoglio.
From C. M. Barnes’s reality-bending desert tale “Dawn’s Stand” to A. J. Forget’s world-ending celestial disaster “Nemesis,” from Alyson Faye’s Gothic horror “The Glass House” to Pedro Iniguez’s luminous poem “Mexicans on the Moon,” Space & Time Issue #141 gathers work that is dark, imaginative, unsettling, humane, and beautifully strange.