STORYHACK
Action & Adventure – Issue # 5
Edited by Bryce Beattie
Baby Katie Media LLC
112 pgs
As you’ll never see this on any magazine wrack, we hesitate
to call such. Rather it is a pulp anthology in the guise of old fashion
monthly. It features nine new stories by talented writers and the subject
matter is as far reaching as those old golden age titles. So a tip of the pulp
fedora to Editor Bryce Beattie. This is a handsomely designed package with a
terrific cover by Zefanya Maega and nine interior illustrations by seven other
skilled artists.
“The Last Word” by H.A. Titus opens the book with a bang. A
private eye actioner in a world of magic and wizards and orcs. It’s fun and we
liked it a great deal.
“The Singer’s Tale” by Jon Mollison is a touch of noire with
a sultry femme fatale who’s charm pack an extra magic wallop. The ending was a
nice surprise.
“The Lair of the Old Ones” by Stanley W. Wagenaar is nothing less than a
rip-roaring, broadsword wielding Conan-like adventure that moves at hyper-speed.
Wagenaar’s flair for head-on action sequences is terrific and we hope to lots
more of his work in the future.
“Acme Denton
– Out of Time” by Michael Hayes is the story of a luckless private eye with too
many bills and a wife a small child to support. When he’s thrown into the Wild
West past of Arizona,
things start to get crazy. This looks to be the first installment of a proposed
series.
“The Last Contract” by Dominka Lein is an old fashion space
opera with a futuristic assassin and his alien girlfriend taking on assignment
that might prove to be their own undoing. It was well done, though the pseudo
technical jargon was overused a wee bit much.
“Makani and the Vulture God” by Paul R. McNamee was set on a
South Sea island and centered around a downhill surfing-like contest between
the men of the tribe. When an evil Vulture god becomes involved, it is left to
the local ka-man, Makani, to save the day.
“Night of a Thousand Eyes” by Deborah L. Davitt has a
downloaded detective investigating the disappearance of fellow agents on a
manufacturing world. He’s aided by a sassy AI and the chemistry Davitt infuses
these characters with is much fun.
“Black Dog Bend” by JD Cowan is a nice little time-travel
ghost story skillfully delivered.
“Swimming with the Devil” by William Eckman has the dubious
distinction of being the last story in the book and thus the one that will tend
to influence your average reader as the reads the last page. Often times a
great deal depends on one’s exist as well as one’s entrance. In this case it is
a real gem. Whereas the story revolves around a Persian pearl diver, pun
totally intended. We enjoyed the way the story was presented in a relaxed,
informal style and the ending innovative and charming. Easily one of the top
two entries in this wonderful collection.
Final thoughts. Come next year’s nominating for the Pulp
Factory Awards, we can see ourselves offering up “Storyhack # 5” in the Best
Anthology/Collection category, while several of the stories will most likely
get nods in the Short Story category. Yes, my friends, it’s that good.
2 comments:
What a great review! I think this series has a great future and says a lot about pulp fiction in general; the readers want it! I would be honored if Bryce selected another of my Gunnolf tales for a future issue. Regardless, I’ll continue to chronicle the adventures of my wandering Northern swordsman for the foreseeable future. It’s great fun to read and write pulp adventure.
Regards,
Stan Wagenaar
I'm glad you enjoyed my story. This is the first work I've had published, and I'm proud to be in StoryHack with several authors I admire. I have some additional ideas I'd like to get down on paper once I get my professional life settled down.
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