by Micah Harper
Weighted by the chains of pride and knowledge he sank into the darkened world to paint his final piece. He poisoned his fellow adepts and the master who had given him the knowledge of sin's power. He wasn't like they who allow the current to pull life to purpose. He would be the new will of reality. His fist the spark of life. As he finished painting the twelve-jewelled crown the horns of the golden dawn sounded in the third realm. He watched as the painting contorted. He saw as a pale man set the crown upon his horned head.
Author bio: Micah Harper is a writer from Queens New York, primarily writing horror and fantasy. When not writing, he enjoys baking cupcakes.
Serpent is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Monday, 10 June 2019
Odyssey
by Louis Cennamo
I am an observer now, eyes gradually adjusting to the shockwave as moving images coalesce. A spaceman lost in time, alone in a bedroom somewhere at the furthest edge of endless space. Defying logic, yet here I am.
I sense the flickering light vibrations of death and rebirth, amid rousing music from a source above my dying brain's fading perception. Still formless memory-snaps persist, of an insanely misguided quest – to seek an answer in the heavenly void of outer space.
Another timeless shockwave, a spaceman returning to a home he never left.
Journeying inward, unborn to newborn... requiem to fanfare.
Author bio: Louis Cennamo is a retired British musician, poet and creative writer. His international career as a bassist, and extensive spiritual practices over many years, contribute to a rhythmic, articulate and esoteric writing style. There is often a metaphysical theme to his poems and stories, many of which have been published in online magazines and printed anthologies.
He lives in London.
I am an observer now, eyes gradually adjusting to the shockwave as moving images coalesce. A spaceman lost in time, alone in a bedroom somewhere at the furthest edge of endless space. Defying logic, yet here I am.
I sense the flickering light vibrations of death and rebirth, amid rousing music from a source above my dying brain's fading perception. Still formless memory-snaps persist, of an insanely misguided quest – to seek an answer in the heavenly void of outer space.
Another timeless shockwave, a spaceman returning to a home he never left.
Journeying inward, unborn to newborn... requiem to fanfare.
Author bio: Louis Cennamo is a retired British musician, poet and creative writer. His international career as a bassist, and extensive spiritual practices over many years, contribute to a rhythmic, articulate and esoteric writing style. There is often a metaphysical theme to his poems and stories, many of which have been published in online magazines and printed anthologies.
He lives in London.
Odyssey is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Alone
by John Xero
My love is dead, while I hurtle through space in my tin can made for one, eking out rations in defiant futility. All that remains of her is an unflattering photo, pinned to my console, blurred through a filter of tears.
I watched the asteroid pass. The computer was right and I was intentionally wrong, an entire mission flawed by mistrust of the machine. The failure all mine; the final check, the final flight corrections made, by me, to save my own life.
Earth impact was four hours ago.
My love is dead.
I killed her.
I killed them all.
Author bio: John Xero writes tiny specks of distant light, bright enough to inspire ideas of other worlds and numerous enough to fill his hard drive with galaxies.
Stardust: twitter.com/xeroverse
Visible light: instagram.com/johnxero
Universe: xeroverse.com
Alone is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
My love is dead, while I hurtle through space in my tin can made for one, eking out rations in defiant futility. All that remains of her is an unflattering photo, pinned to my console, blurred through a filter of tears.
I watched the asteroid pass. The computer was right and I was intentionally wrong, an entire mission flawed by mistrust of the machine. The failure all mine; the final check, the final flight corrections made, by me, to save my own life.
Earth impact was four hours ago.
My love is dead.
I killed her.
I killed them all.
Author bio: John Xero writes tiny specks of distant light, bright enough to inspire ideas of other worlds and numerous enough to fill his hard drive with galaxies.
Stardust: twitter.com/xeroverse
Visible light: instagram.com/johnxero
Universe: xeroverse.com
Alone is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Impressions
by Phil Dyer
“This is ridiculous,” he says, squeaking a crayon peevishly across his faceplate.
“We’re not risking interstellar crisis for your ego,” I tell him, scrawling some final curls on my own helmet. “The Naur won’t speak to someone without a face. Self-expression is very important.”
“You’re sure the radiation-”
“It’s bad. Reflective visors only out there. Your eyes would boil.”
“Fine, done. Let’s get this over with.” We stand. We look like armoured clowns.
The Naur are also big on practical jokes. I nod to the others. Behind his back, we wipe our helmets clean and follow him onto the stage.
Author bio: Phil Dyer does medical research in Liverpool and writes spec fic on the side. His stories have appeared in Unfit Magazine, 101 Words and The Drabble. He retweets animal videos @ez_ozel.
Impressions is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
“This is ridiculous,” he says, squeaking a crayon peevishly across his faceplate.
“We’re not risking interstellar crisis for your ego,” I tell him, scrawling some final curls on my own helmet. “The Naur won’t speak to someone without a face. Self-expression is very important.”
“You’re sure the radiation-”
“It’s bad. Reflective visors only out there. Your eyes would boil.”
“Fine, done. Let’s get this over with.” We stand. We look like armoured clowns.
The Naur are also big on practical jokes. I nod to the others. Behind his back, we wipe our helmets clean and follow him onto the stage.
Author bio: Phil Dyer does medical research in Liverpool and writes spec fic on the side. His stories have appeared in Unfit Magazine, 101 Words and The Drabble. He retweets animal videos @ez_ozel.
Impressions is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Thousand
by A.F.E. Smith
From the shop window, it speaks to me: love and loss, beauty and despair, all caught on a single canvas.
A bell jangles as I walk in.
"How much for the painting in the window?" I ask.
The shopkeeper smiles. "It's worth what every picture is worth."
I hesitate, before nodding. It's a small price to pay.
He raises his hands to my temples, taking the thousand with a touch.
When I get home, I hang the painting on the wall. So perfect, the way it captures… those feelings…
But I can't name them. I no longer have the words.
Author bio: A.F.E. Smith is a fantasy author. You can find her on Twitter @afesmith or visit her website, www.afesmith.com.
Thousand is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
From the shop window, it speaks to me: love and loss, beauty and despair, all caught on a single canvas.
A bell jangles as I walk in.
"How much for the painting in the window?" I ask.
The shopkeeper smiles. "It's worth what every picture is worth."
I hesitate, before nodding. It's a small price to pay.
He raises his hands to my temples, taking the thousand with a touch.
When I get home, I hang the painting on the wall. So perfect, the way it captures… those feelings…
But I can't name them. I no longer have the words.
Author bio: A.F.E. Smith is a fantasy author. You can find her on Twitter @afesmith or visit her website, www.afesmith.com.
Thousand is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Understudies
by Graham Scott
Carol’s husband left her for a hairdresser just before her daughter went to camp.
"I'm okay," Carol told May. "I'm fine. Go have fun."
But when May looked out the bus window, her mother was shaking.
The camp's rec room has a box of stubby old crayons. May draws animals she sees and sends them home, touched by tears and kisses. These, Carol posts on the fridge.
Every night, the animals scamper down, and for two weeks, they do dishes, bring Carol breakfast, nestle with her on the couch.
They keep all of May’s spots warm until she’s home again.
Author bio: Graham Robert Scott has published science-fiction in Nature, horror in Barrelhouse, and tiny stories in 50-Word Stories and on his Twitter feed (@graythebruce). His personal website, hemicyon.wordpress.com, takes its name from the prehistoric bear-dog, a toothy hunter that couldn't make up its mind what it was. As a college professor by day and creative writer by night, Graham identifies.
Understudies is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Carol’s husband left her for a hairdresser just before her daughter went to camp.
"I'm okay," Carol told May. "I'm fine. Go have fun."
But when May looked out the bus window, her mother was shaking.
The camp's rec room has a box of stubby old crayons. May draws animals she sees and sends them home, touched by tears and kisses. These, Carol posts on the fridge.
Every night, the animals scamper down, and for two weeks, they do dishes, bring Carol breakfast, nestle with her on the couch.
They keep all of May’s spots warm until she’s home again.
Author bio: Graham Robert Scott has published science-fiction in Nature, horror in Barrelhouse, and tiny stories in 50-Word Stories and on his Twitter feed (@graythebruce). His personal website, hemicyon.wordpress.com, takes its name from the prehistoric bear-dog, a toothy hunter that couldn't make up its mind what it was. As a college professor by day and creative writer by night, Graham identifies.
Understudies is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Itch
by Lucy Billington-Murphy
She admired her new tattoo: a black wolf, fangs bared, eyes blood red.
“It’ll itch,” he said. His tattoos were all predators, bloody-jawed after the hunt.
She woke that night with an itch in her arm that practically burned but when she looked at it her skin was clean like the needle had never been there. Across the room, red eyes glowed and something in the shadows moved so suddenly she never even blinked.
The tattooist slept. An image stalked across his arm, like ink on wet paper. A black wolf with red eyes, clutching a head in its jaws.
Author bio: Lucy loves to write and is starting to explore micro-fiction, which she finds an interesting challenge. She has been published at The Story Seed Vault and amongst other things, likes photography, tea, cats and mythology. She can be found on twitter @Tea_Faerie
Itch is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
She admired her new tattoo: a black wolf, fangs bared, eyes blood red.
“It’ll itch,” he said. His tattoos were all predators, bloody-jawed after the hunt.
She woke that night with an itch in her arm that practically burned but when she looked at it her skin was clean like the needle had never been there. Across the room, red eyes glowed and something in the shadows moved so suddenly she never even blinked.
The tattooist slept. An image stalked across his arm, like ink on wet paper. A black wolf with red eyes, clutching a head in its jaws.
Author bio: Lucy loves to write and is starting to explore micro-fiction, which she finds an interesting challenge. She has been published at The Story Seed Vault and amongst other things, likes photography, tea, cats and mythology. She can be found on twitter @Tea_Faerie
Itch is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Appropriation
by Laila Amado
The artist came to town in September. He was quite a celebrity, his work evocative of early Picasso with its dancing shadows and splashes of ethereal light.
In the Arts School auditorium students crowded the stage, asking for autographs, offering to pose. She was thrilled when he chose her to sit for a portrait. After the first session, her roommate said she looked pale. After the second, the colour of her eyes dulled.
At the vernissage, the viewers praised the painting for its vibrant colours, its unique palette. Rumours were that the model had gone missing. Disappeared without a trace.
Author bio: Laila Amado has lived in four countries on two very different continents and is now settling into her new island life. A scientist by day, she is a writer of fiction and poetry by night. You can find her work in 365 Tomorrows, 101 Fiction, Enchanted Conversation Magazine, Gyroscope Review, and other publications. Follow her on Twitter at @onbonbon7
Appropriation is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
The artist came to town in September. He was quite a celebrity, his work evocative of early Picasso with its dancing shadows and splashes of ethereal light.
In the Arts School auditorium students crowded the stage, asking for autographs, offering to pose. She was thrilled when he chose her to sit for a portrait. After the first session, her roommate said she looked pale. After the second, the colour of her eyes dulled.
At the vernissage, the viewers praised the painting for its vibrant colours, its unique palette. Rumours were that the model had gone missing. Disappeared without a trace.
Author bio: Laila Amado has lived in four countries on two very different continents and is now settling into her new island life. A scientist by day, she is a writer of fiction and poetry by night. You can find her work in 365 Tomorrows, 101 Fiction, Enchanted Conversation Magazine, Gyroscope Review, and other publications. Follow her on Twitter at @onbonbon7
Appropriation is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Airbrushed
by A.F.E. Smith
I stare at the photo. You. Her. Eyes creased in sunlight. Matching smiles.
My replacement is young. Beautiful. As flawless as a cover model.
Save. Open. Edit. A frenzy of clicks. She may be lovely, but I can make this picture perfect.
First her face. Erase. Replace with sky.
Extend the wall, one brick at a time, to conceal her body.
Reconstruct your arm, occluded by her shoulders. Try not to remember the strength of it. The safety.
Finally, I've finished. The photo shows you, alone. Happy. Embracing empty air.
Elsewhere, you wake with a start to find her gone.
Author bio: A.F.E. Smith is a fantasy author. You can find her on Twitter @afesmith or visit her website, www.afesmith.com.
Airbrushed is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
I stare at the photo. You. Her. Eyes creased in sunlight. Matching smiles.
My replacement is young. Beautiful. As flawless as a cover model.
Save. Open. Edit. A frenzy of clicks. She may be lovely, but I can make this picture perfect.
First her face. Erase. Replace with sky.
Extend the wall, one brick at a time, to conceal her body.
Reconstruct your arm, occluded by her shoulders. Try not to remember the strength of it. The safety.
Finally, I've finished. The photo shows you, alone. Happy. Embracing empty air.
Elsewhere, you wake with a start to find her gone.
Author bio: A.F.E. Smith is a fantasy author. You can find her on Twitter @afesmith or visit her website, www.afesmith.com.
Airbrushed is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Regret
by E. M. Eastick
The grown children greeted him cordially, curiously; a long-lost relative come to pay respects to their father, the family resemblance unmistakeable – a familiar stranger.
The widow paled and reached for the photo frame perched on the coffin. Every detail was the same: the hair, the clothes, the casual smile. She remembered the day, a week before their wedding. They were young, in love and shamefully naïve.
“How?” she whispered, conscious of her age-torn face.
“Forgive me, dear.” He smiled sadly and turned for the door.
In her hands, the picture faded. Tears streaked the glass of wasted years. “I do.”
Author bio: E. M. Eastick is an Australian writer of no-fixed form or genre, whose creative efforts have appeared in The Literary Hatchet, Space Squid, and many fine anthologies.
Regret is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
The grown children greeted him cordially, curiously; a long-lost relative come to pay respects to their father, the family resemblance unmistakeable – a familiar stranger.
The widow paled and reached for the photo frame perched on the coffin. Every detail was the same: the hair, the clothes, the casual smile. She remembered the day, a week before their wedding. They were young, in love and shamefully naïve.
“How?” she whispered, conscious of her age-torn face.
“Forgive me, dear.” He smiled sadly and turned for the door.
In her hands, the picture faded. Tears streaked the glass of wasted years. “I do.”
Author bio: E. M. Eastick is an Australian writer of no-fixed form or genre, whose creative efforts have appeared in The Literary Hatchet, Space Squid, and many fine anthologies.
Regret is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Dearest
by Susi J Smith
The scars deforming me don’t show, but I feel them, encasing my soul.
Each night hatred, revulsion, regret, battles fear, need, love. I watch out of uncurtained windows as night scurries into cracks and crevices. Constant nausea slims my frame, my clothes hang loose, unwashed. Photos of happy times mock me from my bedside and I rise to forage the empty kitchen.
In the living room my mother lies unconscious, her crack pipe on the bare floor. Her body jerks. Foam froths at her mouth then she stills. I pick up my school bag and head for the door, hopeful.
Author bio: Susi J Smith has been writing for over ten years and enjoys writing short stories and flash fiction. She is also a member of a local writing group. Susi has previously been published in 101Words.org, Zeroflash, and McStorrytellers. For more information, follow her on Twitter: @susi_moff or check out her Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SusiJSmith/
Dearest is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
The scars deforming me don’t show, but I feel them, encasing my soul.
Each night hatred, revulsion, regret, battles fear, need, love. I watch out of uncurtained windows as night scurries into cracks and crevices. Constant nausea slims my frame, my clothes hang loose, unwashed. Photos of happy times mock me from my bedside and I rise to forage the empty kitchen.
In the living room my mother lies unconscious, her crack pipe on the bare floor. Her body jerks. Foam froths at her mouth then she stills. I pick up my school bag and head for the door, hopeful.
Author bio: Susi J Smith has been writing for over ten years and enjoys writing short stories and flash fiction. She is also a member of a local writing group. Susi has previously been published in 101Words.org, Zeroflash, and McStorrytellers. For more information, follow her on Twitter: @susi_moff or check out her Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SusiJSmith/
Dearest is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Disfigured
by Bob Thurber
This is Lola in black and white. The turtleneck accentuates the sharpness of her birdlike bones while concealing her bruised throat.
Here she is in colour with her hair pinned up, minus the shirt.
That blotchy discoloration runs ear to ear.
A physician informed us the ruptured blood vessels may never recover.
So Lola uses makeup to hide the fact I took too long to rescue her.
My penknife was sharp but the rope, fisherman grade, was coarse and thick. I had to work at an impossible angle, one-handed, while shouldering her weight.
Lola’s lighter than a shadow.
But still…
Author bio: Bob Thurber is the author of "Paperboy: A Dysfunctional Novel" and the recipient of a long list of awards for short fiction.
Visit his website at www.BobThurber.net
See his books at: https://www.amazon.com/Bob-Thurber/e/B004XPMPCO
This is Lola in black and white. The turtleneck accentuates the sharpness of her birdlike bones while concealing her bruised throat.
Here she is in colour with her hair pinned up, minus the shirt.
That blotchy discoloration runs ear to ear.
A physician informed us the ruptured blood vessels may never recover.
So Lola uses makeup to hide the fact I took too long to rescue her.
My penknife was sharp but the rope, fisherman grade, was coarse and thick. I had to work at an impossible angle, one-handed, while shouldering her weight.
Lola’s lighter than a shadow.
But still…
Author bio: Bob Thurber is the author of "Paperboy: A Dysfunctional Novel" and the recipient of a long list of awards for short fiction.
Visit his website at www.BobThurber.net
See his books at: https://www.amazon.com/Bob-Thurber/e/B004XPMPCO
Disfigured is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Afterlife
by John Xero
Languid sunlight oozed like honey through stained glass panels, coating the hallway, preserving lives in amber.
An oak-mounted barometer, fascinating, useless. A grandfather clock, pendulum still swinging when all other life had ceased. A painting: old troubled skies over a churning sea, one small vessel, two indistinct figures aboard.
Arthur imagined his grandparents still in the kitchen, pottering around, preparing tea and biscuits.
Saltwater spray kissed him. Wild currents dragged him under.
Cold drenched him, stole his breath. Weathered hands anchored him, pulled him from the convulsing sea, held him close as his grandparents’ voices wrapped him like a blanket.
Author bio: John Xero believes all sorts of worlds and possibilities lie a simple sidestep away, if only you learn to step between the warp and weft of reality. After all, what are pictures if not windows, or perhaps doorways?
Thumbnails: twitter.com/xeroverse
Portraits: instagram.com/johnxero
Landscapes: xeroverse.com
Afterlife is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Languid sunlight oozed like honey through stained glass panels, coating the hallway, preserving lives in amber.
An oak-mounted barometer, fascinating, useless. A grandfather clock, pendulum still swinging when all other life had ceased. A painting: old troubled skies over a churning sea, one small vessel, two indistinct figures aboard.
Arthur imagined his grandparents still in the kitchen, pottering around, preparing tea and biscuits.
Saltwater spray kissed him. Wild currents dragged him under.
Cold drenched him, stole his breath. Weathered hands anchored him, pulled him from the convulsing sea, held him close as his grandparents’ voices wrapped him like a blanket.
Author bio: John Xero believes all sorts of worlds and possibilities lie a simple sidestep away, if only you learn to step between the warp and weft of reality. After all, what are pictures if not windows, or perhaps doorways?
Thumbnails: twitter.com/xeroverse
Portraits: instagram.com/johnxero
Landscapes: xeroverse.com
Afterlife is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Disappeared
by Tami Orendain
The portrait of my missing wife sits against our bedroom wall. It’s not quite finished yet. “It looks exactly like her,” people say, “before she disappeared.”
Whenever she looks unhappy, I’ve painted in things she likes. First, her favorite books. Then, our poodle. People think I gave the books and the dog away, but I didn't. I just painted them.
Yet she’s lonely. She cries gloopy paint tears. There’s only one thing left to add. I’ve already brought the mirror to the bedroom for reference. “I’m coming,” I whisper, stroking my brush near her cheek. She shivers. “Be there soon.”
Author bio: Tami Orendain is a Filipino-American writer who creates content for magazines (DisneyExaminer and SheLeadsDaily) and is carefully stepping into the world of fiction. By day she works for a children's hospital, and by night she stays up way too late reading and writing stories.
Disappeared is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
The portrait of my missing wife sits against our bedroom wall. It’s not quite finished yet. “It looks exactly like her,” people say, “before she disappeared.”
Whenever she looks unhappy, I’ve painted in things she likes. First, her favorite books. Then, our poodle. People think I gave the books and the dog away, but I didn't. I just painted them.
Yet she’s lonely. She cries gloopy paint tears. There’s only one thing left to add. I’ve already brought the mirror to the bedroom for reference. “I’m coming,” I whisper, stroking my brush near her cheek. She shivers. “Be there soon.”
Author bio: Tami Orendain is a Filipino-American writer who creates content for magazines (DisneyExaminer and SheLeadsDaily) and is carefully stepping into the world of fiction. By day she works for a children's hospital, and by night she stays up way too late reading and writing stories.
Disappeared is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Tuscany
by Voima Oy
Light flashed on his ruby ring. You make me look handsome, he laughed. I can see why you're the talk of Florence. Yes, I'd like another portrait. My new young wife.
The new young wife was shy and obedient. She would meet him in the afternoons. You have beautiful eyes, he said.
My husband will be pleased with the portrait, she said. Could you paint the background just for me? Paint the fields of Tuscany. Paint two lovers under a tree. Paint your name and mine in the leaves, and two birds flying free. She smiled. He will never know.
Author bio: Voima Oy lives on the western rim of Chicago, near the expressway and the Blue Line trains. Her writing can be found online at VERStype, Unbroken Journal, Molotov Cocktail – Flash Worlds, The Cabinet of Heed, Burning House Press, Paragraph Planet and 101 Fiction.
Follow her on Twitter @voimaoy and #vss365
Tuscany is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Light flashed on his ruby ring. You make me look handsome, he laughed. I can see why you're the talk of Florence. Yes, I'd like another portrait. My new young wife.
The new young wife was shy and obedient. She would meet him in the afternoons. You have beautiful eyes, he said.
My husband will be pleased with the portrait, she said. Could you paint the background just for me? Paint the fields of Tuscany. Paint two lovers under a tree. Paint your name and mine in the leaves, and two birds flying free. She smiled. He will never know.
Author bio: Voima Oy lives on the western rim of Chicago, near the expressway and the Blue Line trains. Her writing can be found online at VERStype, Unbroken Journal, Molotov Cocktail – Flash Worlds, The Cabinet of Heed, Burning House Press, Paragraph Planet and 101 Fiction.
Follow her on Twitter @voimaoy and #vss365
Tuscany is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
Landscapes
by T. L. Sherwood
My grandmother was a truly gifted oil painter, exceptional. She took a necessary day job to pay the rent and purchase supplies. From her notebooks, I learned to pool saliva on my tongue, wet the bristles, then pull it out from between pursed lips with a counterclockwise twirl. She learned this from one of her fellow workers, another artist already suffering from radium exposure. They sat in a stuffy factory applying meticulous lines to the faces of clocks. Grandmother’s work lit up time in dark bedrooms, her body could trigger a Geiger counter, but her paintings, her paintings illuminated souls.
Author bio: T. L. Sherwood's work appears in Rosebud, New World Writing, and Vestal Review among other places. Her blog, "Creekside Reflections" can be found here: http://tlsherwood.wordpress.com/
Landscapes is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
My grandmother was a truly gifted oil painter, exceptional. She took a necessary day job to pay the rent and purchase supplies. From her notebooks, I learned to pool saliva on my tongue, wet the bristles, then pull it out from between pursed lips with a counterclockwise twirl. She learned this from one of her fellow workers, another artist already suffering from radium exposure. They sat in a stuffy factory applying meticulous lines to the faces of clocks. Grandmother’s work lit up time in dark bedrooms, her body could trigger a Geiger counter, but her paintings, her paintings illuminated souls.
Author bio: T. L. Sherwood's work appears in Rosebud, New World Writing, and Vestal Review among other places. Her blog, "Creekside Reflections" can be found here: http://tlsherwood.wordpress.com/
Landscapes is part of 101 Fiction issue 23.
June 2019. Issue 23. Postscript.
Make the most of the failing light, for the sun is setting and the darkness at the end of things will soon be upon us. This marks the end of issue 23. Unless you are here on Monday 10th June, 2019, in which case your eyes deceive you and this thin light is the herald of dawn, the rising of a new sun as our June issue goes live this very day. Return to us throughout the day and explore the expanding exhibition of tiny stories... entry to the gallery is always free.
If you have read issue 23 from beginning to end then there is no reason to stop there. Logic dictates there are 22 issues before this one, and logic is right (not always so in our stories...). Keep on scrolling back for more themed issues, and then keep scrolling back because before we were a quarterly we were already publishing 100 word stories one by one. We've been doing this since 2011...!
Thank you for reading, we hope you've enjoyed what you've read and that you'll come back for more.
Thank you always to everyone our amplifies our tiny signal and spreads it far and wide, all those tweets and retweets, blogs and nods. You make a tiny thing big.
And thank you, of course and most importantly, to our contributors. It's all the shades of your varied imaginations that bring this place to life, that make it a pleasure to put every issue together.
If you want to be a part of our little big dreams then watch this space or follow us on twitter for the next announced theme and submissions period.
Keep writing.
Keep reading.
Have fun.
-John Xero.
If you have read issue 23 from beginning to end then there is no reason to stop there. Logic dictates there are 22 issues before this one, and logic is right (not always so in our stories...). Keep on scrolling back for more themed issues, and then keep scrolling back because before we were a quarterly we were already publishing 100 word stories one by one. We've been doing this since 2011...!
Thank you for reading, we hope you've enjoyed what you've read and that you'll come back for more.
Thank you always to everyone our amplifies our tiny signal and spreads it far and wide, all those tweets and retweets, blogs and nods. You make a tiny thing big.
And thank you, of course and most importantly, to our contributors. It's all the shades of your varied imaginations that bring this place to life, that make it a pleasure to put every issue together.
If you want to be a part of our little big dreams then watch this space or follow us on twitter for the next announced theme and submissions period.
Keep writing.
Keep reading.
Have fun.
-John Xero.
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