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Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #55
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 234

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #55

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-07
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Issue fifty-five of Theaker's Quarterly Fiction is guest edited by the zine's long-time cover artist, Howard Watts, and includes stories inspired by his art, including competition winner "The Departure" by Mark Lewis, "Our Sad Triangle" by Len Saculla, and "The Stone Gods of Superspace" by Howard Phillips (a TQF crossover special featuring many friends from past issues), plus the more tangentially related "This Alien I" by Antonella Coriander and "The Little Shop That Sold My Heart," and finally an entire weird novella from Anthony Thomson, "My Place." Then a sixty-page review section features the work of Stephen Theaker, Douglas J. Ogurek, Jacob Edwards, Howard Watts and Rafe McGregor. The cover art is by Howard Watts.

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #52
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 104

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #52

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #52 is a little shorter than usual, but still features four great stories: Rocking Horse Traffic by Yarrow Paisley, Quest for Lost Beauty by Howard Phillips, Zom-Boyz Have All the Luck by Len Saculla, and "Surprise Thee Ranging With Thy Peers," the latest Two Husbands episode from Walt Brunston. The Quarterly Review from Douglas J. Ogurek, Stephen Theaker and Jacob Edwards includes reviews of It Follows, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Insurgent, Memory Lane, Jurassic World, Holy Cow by David Duchovny, The Dark Defiles by Richard Morgan, The Glorkian Warrior Eats Adventure Pie by James Kochalka, and many others.

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #57
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 170

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #57

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-12-14
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Issue fifty-seven of Theaker's Quarterly Fiction is one hundred and sixty-eight pages long, and features five tales of fantasy, horror and science fiction: "The Elder Secret's Lair" by Rafe McGregor, "Nold" by Stephen Theaker, "On Loan" by Howard Watts, "The Battle Word" by Antonella Coriander, and "With Echoing Feet He Threaded" by Walt Brunston. The spectacular wraparound cover is by Howard Watts, and the editorial includes exciting news about the magazine's plans for 2017. The issue also includes forty pages of reviews, and some sneaky interior art from John Greenwood. In the Quarterly Review, Stephen Theaker, Douglas J. Ogurek, Jacob Edwards and Rafe McGregor consider audios written by Colin Brake, Jonathan Morris, Justin Richards and Marc Platt, books by Cate Gardner, Erika L. Satifka, Harun iljak, Joe Dever and Karl Edward Wagner, and comics from Joshua Williamson and Fernando Dagnino, G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona, and Erik Larsen, plus the films Don't Breathe, Ghostbusters: Answer the Call, Ouija: Origin of Evil and Suicide Squad, and the television programmes Preacher season one and The X-Files season ten."

THEAKERS QUARTERLY FICTION #53
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 140

THEAKERS QUARTERLY FICTION #53

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #53 contains three stories. In "Restitution" Mitchell Edgeworth takes us back to the Black Swan, its crew double-crossed by the thief Nisha. In "Dodge Sidestep's (and Martin's) Final Dastardly Plan" regular TQF cover artist Howard Watts completes his absurdist musical trilogy. And "Rathfern's Menagerie" is a bodyswapping science fantasy from Allen Ashley. The issue also contains fifty pages of reviews by Jacob Edwards, Douglas Ogurek and Stephen Theaker.

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #60
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 152

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #60

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-09-09
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #60 contains five stories: "The Lost Testament" by Rafe McGregor, "Turning Point" by Nicki Robson, "Yttrium, Part One" by Douglas Thompson, "Amongst the Urlap" by Andrew Peters, and "Doggerland" by Jule Owen. The wraparound cover is by Howard Watts, and the editorial answers the most urgent questions from Richard Herring's Emergency Questions. The issue also includes almost forty pages of reviews by Douglas J. Ogurek, Rafe McGregor and Stephen Theaker. They review books by Martha Wells, Lisa Tuttle, Mira Grant, Gwyneth Jones, Jim Butcher, Skottie Young, Michael Turner, plus the films Alien: Covenant, Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2, It Comes at Night, The Mummy, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, Prometheus, and Wonder Woman, the album Humanz by Gorillaz, the tv shows Iron Fist and Legion, and a pair of events: Eastercon 2017: Innominate (or at least two days of it), and Into the Unknown, the exhibition at the Barbican.

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #58
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 132

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #58

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #58: Unsplatterpunk! Guest-edited by Douglas J. Ogurek, this is a special issue, an anthology featuring five founding tales of unsplatterpunk, a brand new genre! The editor describes it as "extreme horror stories [that] offer a positive message, whether blatant or subtle, within their otherwise vile contents." The issue includes "A Desert of Shadow and Bone" by M.S. Swift, "Quand les queues s'allongerent" by Antonella Coriander, "The Fisherman's Ring" by Drew Tapley, and "The Armageddon Coat" by Howard Watts. It also includes reviews from Douglas J. Ogurek, Rafe McGregor and Rose M. Rye, who look at the work of Martin Charbonneau, Joe Dever, Gary Chalk, Neil Gaiman and Daniel Egneus, as well as the films *Arrival* and *Doctor Strange*, and season eleven of the television show *Supernatural*. The issue concludes with twenty-four pages of notes and ratings for almost everything Stephen Theaker read during 2016 but didn't have time to review.

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #54
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 198

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #54

Theaker's Quarterly Fiction #54 features a new short story by Charles Wilkinson, "Septs," and an entire novella - complete in this issue! - by Patrick Whittaker, former winner of the BFS Short Story Competition. "The Policeman and the Silence" concerns a murder investigation in the weird town of Kaza-Blanka. The issue also includes a tremendously exciting editorial where Stephen (a) apologises for this issue being late, (b) discusses the conundrum of a publisher who doesn't pay their reviewers slamming people who don't pay other types of writer, and (c) looks back at his reading in 2015. The issue also includes thirty-one reviews, by Douglas J. Ogurek, Jacob Edwards and Stephen. They look at...

THEAKERS QUARTERLY FICTION #56
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

THEAKERS QUARTERLY FICTION #56

Issue fifty-six of Theaker's Quarterly Fiction is two hundred and forty pages long, and features six stories of fantasy, horror and science fiction: "Concerning Strange Events at the Manor of Sir Hugh de Villiers, Valiant Knight" David Penn (transcribed from the Middle English), "Three Bodies" by Cam Rhys Lay, "The Christmas Cracker" by Rafe McGregor, "Mr Kitchell Says Thank You" by Charles Wilkinson, "The Cutting Room" by Chuck Von Nordheim, and "Gliese and the Walking Man" by Howard Watts. They are arranged roughly in chronological order, so fantasy fans should start at the beginning, and science fiction fans should start at the end. The wraparound cover is by Howard Watts, and the emergen...

Effective Media Relations
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 164

Effective Media Relations

Expert guidance from public relations professionals on how the media works and how to deal with press and broadcast journalists to ensure the best media coverage is achieved.

The Mercury Annual
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 160

The Mercury Annual

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009-03
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  • Publisher: Unknown

And, as always, the wake of the sun caused temporal havoc. A Razalian hour passed normally enough, then shrank to ten minutes, then sneezed out a good half-day, then stabilised at an hour and a bit. Bobbing on the top of planetary time like corks in a bucket, the three moons spread out and were still - this time like kids glued to a screen. For, as the sunlight disappeared and the minutes passed more confidently, Razalia shook off its desolation. Across its face, a million torches shone under the amethyst skies: Razalian faces, each its own sun. Small, unfinished, more like a blueprint for a world than the real thing, Razalia props up one end of the Arc of the Fifteen Planets. In some places, its landscape looks like the efforts of a water-colourist suddenly called away from his easel. The Razalians live with the gaps - those spaces of unfathomable white - in many of their ridges, valleys, forests. And then the white begins to move...