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In an interview published in 1987, Russell Hoban, who collaborated with Impact on The Carrier Frequency, said he had responded to a question (from Fiction Magazine in 1983) about the best piece of fiction he had seen that year, by talking about Impact's No Weapons for Mourning.
She also edited the anthologies Between C and D: New Writing from the Lower East Side Fiction Magazine (1988) and Love is Strange: Tales of Postmodern Romance (1993), both with former spouse Joel Rose.
He published three issues of a science fiction magazine called The Satellite which he co-edited along with J. F. Burke.
Gasco's work has appeared in American and Canadian literary magazines, including The Little Magazine, Western Humanities Review, Canadian Fiction Magazine, PRISM international, Grain, and The Malahat Review.
The first two books are collections of short stories originally printed in the short fiction magazine Inferno!, published by the Black Library.
Vincent’s writing career began after he began reading Hugo Gernsback’s pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories.
The award is named after Hugo Gernsback, the founder of the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories, and was once officially known as the Science Fiction Achievement Award.
In the 1990s he was joint editor of The Lyre science-fiction magazine, which published work by authors like Eric Brown, Stephen Baxter, Gwyneth Jones and Peter F Hamilton.
For example, blind detective Thornley Colton appeared in some short stories in People's Ideal Fiction Magazine in early 1913, that weren't collected in book form until 1915, while Max Carrados by Ernest Bramah reached the periodicals in 1913, but anthologization in 1914.
She received her M.A. in fiction from the University of Houston, where she was the co-editor of the literary fiction magazine, Gulf Coast.
When Hugo Gernsback founded the first science fiction magazine, Amazing Stories, Breuer began writing and submitting stories, publishing his first, "The Man with the Strange Head", in the January 1927 issue.
Robert P. Mills (1920–1986), American crime and science fiction magazine editor
Shimmer Magazine, or Shimmerzine, a speculative fiction magazine