Contributors
Jeremy Cavin works in many media. He is living off the proceeds
from his series of What Would Jeremy Cavin Do products somewhere in
the South Seas.
Jack Cheng's drawings once graced the interior of this magazine.
Congratulations go out on his recent engagement. Sadly, he no longer
sleeps on a deskbed. He has a rather nice musical instrument collection,
pictures of which cannot be seen at this time on his rather neat website.
G.O. Clark lives in Davis, CA, a city with an above average
population of good writers.
Electric Eel Embroidery Club, The The editor wishes
to thank the members of the Club for their generosity.
Jeffrey Ford is the World Fantasy Award winning author of
the novels Physiognomy, Memoranda andThe Beyond.
His short fiction is worth searching for-we'll give you warning when
a collection comes out. You can find his stories in the pages of many
magazines and online at scifi.com
& Event Horizon.
Gavin J. Grant always wanted to.
Ellen Klages is a writer on sabbatical from the Exploratorium
museum in San Francisco. Her story, "Time Gypsy," (Bending
the Landscape: Science Fiction) was nominated for the 1999 Hugo and
Nebula Awards. She is well known in her alternate career as the auctioneer
of the James Tiptree Award.
Dora Knez's first chapbook, Five
Forbidden Things, has just come out from Small Beer Press.
Her poetry has previously appeared here and in Tesseracts.
Kelly Link is troubled by her neighbors in the village. They
seem trustworthy until she examines them a little closer. As the evening,
for it is inevitably evening, wears on, she becomes more and more
convinced that they are not what they seem.
James Sallis' story
"Faces, Hands" first appeared in Nova 1 (as "Faces
& Hands"), then in his collection A Few Last Words.
It has been hard to find but with short fiction collections appearing
in the U.K. and the U.S.A. it will now be easier. The second part
of this story will appear in LCRW no.8. Read his Lew Griffin
series of mysteries.
Lucy Snyder's writing can be found in such places as Midnight
Zoo, Cosmic Visions and Snow
Monkey. She also runs the Dark
Planet web site.
Margaret Thatcher has given up her attempts to communicate
with humanity which alone explains her absence from these pages. A
determined fantasist of the social-experiment genre, her work was
not always successful. Examples can still be found in the dole queues
throughout Scotland, England, Ireland, and Wales.
Naoko Takahashi (NT1) did in fact win the Olympic Gold Medal
in Sydney for the women's marathon. The Naoko Takahashi (NT2) that
we know, however, did not. NT2 paraphrased and invented this from
translations of the winner's (NT1's) speeches. Thanks go to NT2 and
NT1 for their sense of humor. (We hope).
John Trey is an editor and writer living in a suburb in the
Midwest. This is the second appearance of his fiction in print thus
far. A fast-talking Midwesterner, he can be found at a range of conventions
pulling bar duty, selling patio furniture and leading tours of The
House on the Rock, in Spring Green, WI. Despite all this, he still
manages to run a decent website and write more than decent stories.
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, No.7, October
2000. LCRW appears twice a year as if by magic from Small Beer Press.
info@lcrw.net www.lcrw.net $5 for a sample issue or $16/4. Contents
© the authors. All rights reserved. Submissions, checks (made
out to Gavin Grant), books, zines, stock certificates, music, chocolate
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above. As always an SAE-or at least an email address-will speed up
our reply. The comments in this portion of numerous comics, books,
and magazines have been so overwhelmingly witty in recent months that
none were thought necessary here.