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THE EYRIE

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Important Note—As this issue was being readied for press, we were saddened to learn of the death on June 5th of Ray Bradbury, one of America’s greatest fantasists. From 1942 to 1983, he contributed 26 short stories to Weird Tales. While our intent has been to honour the memory of H. P. Lovecraft in this edition of Weird Tales, we believe that it is also appropriate to dedicate this issue to the memory of Ray Bradbury. We have secured, with the permission of his literary agent, three examples of Ray’s writing: a movingly personal poem, a fascinating, little-known essay, and an extremely à propos short story.

—John Harlacher

Publisher

—Marvin Kaye

Editor

Weird Tales is an American trust.

Ever since 1923, for nearly four hundred issues Weird Tales has offered outstanding fantasy, mystery, science fiction, and unclassifiable weird fiction and fact, guided by a series of distinguished editors including (chronologically) Edwin Baird, Farnsworth Wright, Dorothy McIlwraith, Sam Moskowitz, Lin Carter, Gordon M. D. Darb, George H. Scithers, Darrell Schweitzer, John Gregory Betancourt, Stephen H. Segal, Ann VanderMeer, and now genre anthologist-editor-novelist Marvin Kaye, who, with John Harlacher, cofounded Nth Dimension Media, Inc., to continue the Weird Tales legacy.

Over its long life, the style of Weird Tales’s contents and appearance has evolved to reflect the expectations of its readers, as well as the taste and judgment of its editors, especially in the past few years. While some of its long-time readers have perhaps lamented the magazine’s latter evolution, its most recent incarnation has both dramatically increased its readership and won both Hugo nominations and awards.

So what’s next?

We must be Janus-faced. Some of the classic look and content of the 1930s-’40s-and ’50s will be brought back as an important part of the mix, for Weird Tales’s greatest years still capture the imagination of readers of all ages, thanks to the macabre power of such great contributors as Robert Bloch, Ray Bradbury, Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, H. P. Lovecraft, Richard Matheson, etc. But we are also keenly interested in continuing and expanding the splendid work of Stephen Segal and Ann VanderMeer.

When Nth Dimension Media, Inc., purchased Weird Tales from Wildside Press, LLC, it also acquired H. P. Lovecraft’s Magazine of Horror, which ran from 2004 through 2009 in six issues edited by Marvin Kaye.

Weird Tales’s new publisher points out that there are no plans to bring back Lovecraft as a separate magazine, but it will remain an ongoing portion of Weird Tales. In fact, the current issue (# 360) pays special homage to Lovecraft by featuring new stories about the Elder Gods.

The editor, who still has a fairly large inventory of fiction intended for publication in H. P. Lovecraft’s Magazine of Horror, plans to secure rights to as many of these stories and poems as possible for inclusion in future issues of Weird Tales.

The new Weird Tales will be open to nearly all sorts of genre fiction and poetry, including, but not limited to absurdist humor, conte cruelles, fantasy, horror, new riffs on fairy and folk tales, as well as nonsense, terror, surrealism, possibly even theatre. The only kind of story that probably won’t fit would be neo-realism, though even here the editor is willing to be convinced otherwise.

The editorial approach to the Nth Dimension incarnation of Weird Tales will be similar to the way Mr. Kaye balanced content in his thirty-plus anthologies edited for the Science Fiction Book Club and other publishers:

• Stories by well-known authors, some of whom have already expressed interest in appearing (or reappearing) in Weird Tales, among them (though not limited to) Peter S. Beagle, Carole Buggé, Parke Godwin, Ron Goulart, Alan Dean Foster, Tanith Lee, Brian Lumley, William F. Nolan, Roberta Rogow, Jessica Amanda Salmonson, Darrell Schweitzer, Michael Shea, Jay Sheckley, Jane Yolen, and many more.

• Contributions by “midlist authors,” which means excellent writers who deserve to become better known.

• Newer writers culled from online submissions, as well as those discovered and developed by the editor during twenty-plus years of teaching fantasy and science fiction writing at New York University. Among the authors discovered and encouraged by the editor are Carole Buggé, Shannon Cork, Rachel Mann, Jean Paiva, Roberta Rogow, C. H. Sherman, Kathleen Snow, Kathleen C. Szaj, Carolyn Wheat, etc.

• A small number of reprints of classic stories from back issues of Weird Tales, as well as world literature.

Each new issue of Weird Tales will feature a presiding theme, although other stories and poetry will be included along with tales that fit the governing idea.

Our current issue is devoted to the Elder Gods and begins with a new novella by the great British fantasist Brian Lumley, followed by Cthulhu-ish stories from veteran authors Darrell Schweitzer and Michael Shea, and newer author William Blake Smith.

Also in this issue is a non-themed story by renowned fantasist Parke Godwin, who is my personal friend and often collaborator. I am grieved to report that at this writing Parke is convalescent; I am waiting for word from his friend and agent Connor Cochran (“Freff”) as to the condition of Parke’s health.

Our next issue of Weird Tales—# 361—will feature fairy tales/folk tales, with new stories by Dick Baldwin, Marc Bilgrey, Tanith Lee, Jane Yolen and a new tale from the great fantasist Peter S. Beagle.

—THE EDITOR

P. S. I just saw the new movie, The Cabin in the Woods, and highly recommend it. I was fortunate in not knowing anything about it beforehand, except that The Onion gave it an A- … which is an unusually high rating for that publication.

I don’t want to commit a spoiler, but there’s a strong reason why I felt I HAD to mention The Cabin in the Woods in Weird Tales #360!

—mk

Marvin Kaye, author of sixteen novels and editor of over 30 genre fiction anthologies, has had a long personal history with Weird Tales. Fascinated by the “creepy-looking” magazine that his sister Dorothy (now Dot Miller—of Florida) brought into their Philadelphia home, he was an avid fan by the age of nine. He edited two anthologies celebrating the magazine’s distinctive brand of fiction: Weird Tales - the Magazine that Never Dies, in 1988, and The Best of Weird Tales: 1923, in 1997. He also edited H.P. Lovecraft’s Magazine of Horror, which will become integrated into Weird Tales.

No novice to the world of fantasy and horror, publisher John Harlacher is director of “Nightmare,” an interactive theatre experience widely recognized as New York’s most horrifying haunted house. Last year’s motif, a creepy rendition of familiar fairy tales, was described by Fangoria as “entirely spooky and full of nasty, nasty fun … imaginative, and yes, hilarious and repulsive.” Harlacher also wrote, produced and directed the urban horror film, Urchin.

Weird Tales #360

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