Fairy Tale inspired paranormal short stories by Dorlana Vann and guest writers. . . .
The New Bedlam Project follows the adventures of numerous and sundry characters found in the past, present and future of one messed up little town. Originally started as a companion piece to the Courting Morpheus anthology, the webzine has taken on a life of its own. We publish several short stories and a selection of poetry in each quarterly . . .
“Bat Durstons” are welcome here. First and foremost, we publish Space Westerns: works with themes from the Western genre set in Outer-space. We border on Space Opera, Steampunk, and the Weird West. Contains fiction, poetry, music, radio-plays, and illustrated features. . . .
Pulp Engine is an online magazine dedicated to fun, character and plot-driven fiction. We don’t seek to emulate the classic pulp magazines of the ’20s and ’30s, but rather create new stories that attempt the capture the spirit of fun and adventure those stories possessed, focusing on the modern world. . . .
Crossed Genres is a monthly magazine of science fiction and fantasy. Crossed Genres puts out an issue every month that is free to read online. Each issue has (usually, with a bit of variance) 5 short stories, 1 article and cover art. The final issue of each year is double-sized. Every issue has a unique “theme” which all . . .
The Tales of Germaine, Oregon The Applegate Trail: Susie Applegate is a reporter for The Germaine Truth, the town newspaper, owned and operated by her dad, Howard Applegate. Susie chronicles the stories of the people of Germaine, and with the help of 11 year old Shaherazade Budreau, is determined to solve a 50 year old murder mystery – . . .
Note: I have yet to read the whole serial due, not to the content of the site, but my own time constraints. As such I will more than likely re-vamp this at some point in the near-distant.
The Germain Truth is a story told from the perspective of several different people. [more . . .]
I don’t recall how I stumbled across the Germaine Truth, but once I discovered it and realized what it was, I was in love.
As a web professional and web creative, it is especially dear to me when I find people who are truly telling "Net native" stories. And while one [more . . .]