Letter From The Editor - Issue 39 - May 2014
Welcome to Issue 39 of IGMS. It's a busy, busy time, with a boatload of exciting new
developments to tell you about.
First, our cover story this issue is "Foreign Bodies" by Melinda Brasher. A colony on an alien
world is functioning as best it can with limited resources when an infection causes hallucinations
that could prove as deadly as the infection itself -- and the doctor who was supposed to deal with
it died on board the ship before it ever reached the planet in the first place, leaving one
resourceful young lady scurrying to figure this mess out before time runs out.
In Kate O'Connor's "Salt and Sand," the beaches of the afterlife are the unusual setting for a
confrontation between an entity whose sole purpose is to consume the dead (so as to return their
memories to the world), and the unexpected stowaway on one of the ships that deliver them, a
woman not ready to let go yet, much less see her daughter's body eaten before her very eyes.
Jacob Boyd's "Memory of Magic" is a mystical Americana story of young girl who's lost her
father in a mining accident in an alt-history old-West. She finds a baby wizard and, while waiting
for said wizard baby to grow up and restore her father, must contend with a truly unique group of
characters and tribulations.
"Rapture Nation," penned by Jennifer Noelle Welch, is a very brief but somber look into a
community of people convinced that the end times are coming . . . any moment now.
Proudly co-sponsoring the 2nd Hydra Contest (spotlighting the best of Brazilian spec fic), IGMS is
thrilled to present this year's winner, "The Other Side of the River" by Camila Fernandes. This
fablesque fantasy follows a young man and the life-changing moments leading up to his arranged
marriage. To showcase the Hydra Contest, we've also made this story our audio piece for the
issue, read in spectacular fashion by Princess Alethea Kontis.
Also in this issue, Darrel Schweitzer's InterGalactic Interview with multiple-award-winning
author Damien Broderick. With this issue we're launching something brand new: Vintage
Fiction, featuring a reprinted story from the interviewed author, selected by the author him or
herself. In this issue we bring you Damien Broderick's "A Passage in Earth," along with a brief
introductory essay about why he selected this particular story.
Additionally, you'll find the third installment of our other new feature, "At The Picture Show:
Extended Cut," an in-depth article by film critic, Chris Bellamy.
Not enough goodies yet? Then here's the list of this year's winners of our own IGMS Reader's
Choice Award, celebrating reader's favorite works from 2013. Winning authors and artists
receive fame, glory, and a bit of bonus cash:
Stories:
1st place - "The Cartographer of Dreamland" by Robert Howe
2nd place - "Explaining Cthulhu to Grandma" by Alex Shvartsman
3rd place (tie) - "Notes on a Page" by Barbara A. Barnett
3rd place (tie) "The Temple's Posthole" by M.K. Hutchins
Interior Art:
1st place - "Note on a Page" by Nick Greenwood
2nd place - "At the Old Folk's Home at the End of the World" by M. Wayne Miller
3rd place - "Last Resort" by R.L. Carter
Cover Art: "What the Sea Refuses" by M. Wayne Miller
Also, everyone who voted during the poll was entered into a drawing for a free copy of Earth
Awakens, the third book in the First Formic Wars series by OSC and Aaron Johnston. It will be
autographed by both authors. Congratulations to the lucky winner, Terry Maulhardt.
And last but light years away from least, one more tidbit to share with you -- and for you to
share with your friends: Starting this month, IGMS will make the most recently published
previous issue free on a rotating schedule. This means that from now on, during the same time
that the current issue is live, the entire issue that was published right before it will be free for
anyone and everyone to read. For as long as Issue 39 is the latest one out, Issue 38 will be
available for free. Then when Issue 40 is published, Issue 39 will be free, and so on. You still
need a subscription to read the latest issue, and you still need a subscription to have full access to
our entire archive of issues and all the stories contained therein, but we believe in the authors and
stories we publish and we want a wider audience to have a chance to sample them. So tell your
mother, tell your best friend, tell that co-worker of yours who's a closet SF-fanatic but doesn't
want the boss to know; tell everybody: free fiction from IGMS!
Enjoy.
Edmund R. Schubert
Editor, Orson Scott Card's InterGalactic Medicine Show
http://www.intergalacticmedicineshow.com/cgi-bin/mag.cgi?do=issue&vol=i39&article=_fromeditor