Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Mondo pretendgenio

New story by Sean Brijbasi in 3am magazine: chalker

A new story by Stephen Moran for Big Bridge (2006): tither

A new story by J. Tyler Blue in Juked: And Finally an Autumnal Depression Left Us Delirious

Stephen Moran interview in Author Trek: yonder

Monday, February 06, 2006

Fish may safely drink

The publishing event of the century is imminent. Zombies are being despatched to the capitals of the world to seize control of bookshops and government buildings. Do not adjust your sets. We will control the vertical, we will control the horizontal. Resistance is futile. You will read "Fish Drink Like Us", the most shagnificent volume of fiction since the Bible.

And when you are satiated beyond pleasure nearly to death, you will still crave more. And ye (yes ye) shall have more, even to the zenith of ecstasy with such a superfluity of indescribably exquisite poetry that it defies this spatchcock system of wordles entirely, and demands a tome of its own, and it shall have a tome of its own, an thology of poetriloquism. Hear ye, hear ye! Hear ye?

Friday, October 28, 2005

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Saturday, October 15, 2005

Raymond Williams Prize 2005 shared by pG Author

LONDON Thursday October 13th: Arts Council England presented the £3,000 ($5,000) Raymond Williams Prize 2005 to the publishers of The Monkey's Typewriter (isbn 0953019551), an anthology that closes with a story by Stephen Moran.

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Laila Lailami in Seattle

MoorishGirl: Reading: Seattle

"The second stop on my book tour for Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits will be tonight, in beautiful Seattle. Here are the details:

Laila Lalami
Tuesday the 11th
7:30PM
Elliott Bay Book Co."

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

huh? whoa! where am i?

hello? apparently we're big in dublin. deaddrunkdublin.com

leave me alone. i'm going back to sleep.

Monday, May 16, 2005

Details emerge from last week's murder of Norman Mailer

Internal documents obtained by Hysterical Porpoise suggest the killing of Norman Mailer was one of a number of options discussed by company executives in response to a diminishing bottom line. (More)