Issue Thirteen Now Online

Ladies, gentlemen, and spam-bots. It is our pleasure to welcome you to Issue Thirteen of Jersey Devil Press, the First Anniversary Invitational. And like the 13th child of Mrs. Leeds, this issue is going to live on forever. Why? For the same reason anything becomes legendary: It’s fucking awesome.

We sent out the call to five of our favorite contributors to come up with something new specifically for Jersey Devil Press and they did not fail to deliver, starting with Danger_Slater’s brilliant “A Robot’s Sonnet.” We follow it up with the dark “Hole in the Garden” by the always wonderful yt sumner, and then catch a ride with Craig Wallwork’s ingenious tale of love, devils, and British transportation, “Morning Birdsong and the Hell Demons.” Then it’s back across the pond for “Brave Young Americans: Some Assembly Required,” by the magnificent Jenny Ortiz, and, finally, Jersey’s own Mike Sweeney and the truly epic “Captain Neptunium and Lady U-boat.”

Check out the issue (both individual stories and our fancy new .pdf reader) by clicking here. And, since we loved this one so much, you can download it on your Kindle, too. We wanted to make it free, but Amazon apparently doesn’t allow that.

While you’re at it, feel free to dig around the site. We cleaned the place up a bit. All our older stories are still here, but the links have changed, so you may need to update your sites/bookmarks accordingly. Comments work now, too!

We could keep going on and on and get all sentimental about this being our one year anniversary, but instead we’re going to stick with a simple “Thanks.” If you weren’t reading and writing, we wouldn’t be here, and that would make us very sad. So thanks. And keep it up.

Breathing New Life Into the Written Word

In case you missed it the other day, there’s a nice little article about electronic magazines and how the internet is actually helping literature.

Literature lovers are using the web to break down barriers to both reading and writing. Netizens are hooked on E-zines that feature both amateur and established writers.

Not to mention, they pimp Short, Fast & Deadly in the same paragraph as the New Yorker.

If you have less than a minute to spend on reading, Short Fast and Deadly, a project by Joseph Quintela offers you poetry that could fit into a Twitter message (140 characters or less) and prose that doesn’t extend beyond a paragraph. Pressure of this sort does wonders for creativity and Quintela releases a fresh virtual issue every week.

Way to go, Joseph.

Interview at Literary Lollipop

Looks like we got our act together just in time. There’s an interview with us — both of us, for once — up at the Literary Lollipop. Click here to read it.

I’m just glad we were finally able to get Monica into the conversation. She’s far more interesting than Eirik!

Speaking of more interesting than Eirik, happy 61st birthday Bruce Springsteen! We launched our magazine last year on the same day we went to one of his concerts. Clearly fate has brought us together again.