Please click on the image below for details of our “fakelore” call for submissions.
Fakelore Call for Submissions
Previous post: Issue #4
Next post: Call for Submissions, Riddle Fence #7
A journal of arts & culture
by markcallanan on February 3, 2010
Previous post: Issue #4
Next post: Call for Submissions, Riddle Fence #7
Current Issue:
Riddle Fence #11
Cover:
Reverse Cover:
Issue #11 is a two-headed beast – not the sort who chased you out of the basement when you were only a sleeping child, but the sort you want to get to know a bit better, maybe even share a picnic table beer with and find out who the beast really is, inside.
Riddle Fence #11 presents you with two covers – two distinct and inventive sections. On our main cover, Dave Sheppard’s The Wound foretells the struggle to survive that many of our characters face in our fiction section. And on the reverse cover, Rhonda Pelley gives us the green wings of Migration as we travel to Ireland for our special Irish poetry feature.
Our Irish Poetry special feature section was curated and is introduced by Patrick Cotter of the Irish literary journal, Southword. Cotter himself writes, “Any effort to corral Irish poets into ‘schools’ is fraught with ‘issues.’ … If this cross-generational selection of Irish poets has any cohesion it may be more visible to an outside eye, an eye in Canada than to one at home.” So, you will have to read through these wonderful 26 poems by 26 Irish poets and find out yourself.
The Irish Poetry is accompanied by Newfoundland artists, Darren Whalen, finishing winter with Sheilagh’s Brush, and Jacob Rolfe, piecing together A Dream in three parts.
Concurrently, Southword has published a feature on Newfoundland poetry chosen by Riddle Fence editors Mark Callanan, Leslie Vryenhoek, and Shoshanna Wingate. You can view the Southword issue here.
On the fiction side of Riddle Fence #11, we hit you first with the First Prize Winner of the Riddle Fence 2011 Short Fiction Contest – Caitlin Laura Galway’s Dog Fights in Dresden, which passes from beautiful city to fearful dog fight.
Then we get you with three more short fiction pieces of an horrific nature:
Matthew Heiti abandons you in a broken down police van, freezing, and no one around but your partner and a body in the back.
Andrew MacDonald then sends your parents into the blue and only the balloon returns.
And finally, you lose yourself with Ryan Paterson.
The short fiction is bejeweled with stunning visual art. Colette Urban’s classic car; Dave Sheppard’s integrations of human, animal and survival; Brendan George Ko’s good book; the flowery lady of Robyn Cumming; a nightmare’s re-creation by Jan Avendano; into a suffering forest with David Kaarsemaker; and Tekar’s installation of aerosol artwork.
Don’t miss out!
For more details about Riddle Fence #11 and all of our back issues, click here.
Available across Canada at Chapters and other fine book and magazine shops.
Riddle Fence has gone digital! You can now subscribe to our digital edition for only $20 per year or $11 per issue.
We’re still a print journal. Sometimes you just need to go paper free. Maybe you want to carry Riddle Fence with you wherever you go. Maybe you want to save trees. Maybe you want a half-price digital subscription. Or maybe you want to try a single issue of Riddle Fence to see what all the hub-ub is about. Go ahead. It’s easy.
Subscribe to the digital edition here.
Purchase Single Issue Number 10 digital edition here.
You can subscribe to the print edition here
Your shopping cart is empty
Get smart with the Thesis WordPress Theme from DIYthemes.
