I enjoy every FSF magazine I read. Reading these stories has developed a desire for more. They don’t read like “mainstream,” or “popular” or “classical” fiction. Each story has a unique, almost amateurish feel, at first. As I continue reading my mind starts to adapt to the style, and now that I “get it,” I realize I want to follow this way. “Way” being the path of literature. How many paths, avenues, directions, especially for a person who wants to know and read everything the mind can conceive? (A personal bane: ambition.) I love the classics most: Kafka, Tolkien, Lewis, PK Dick, Hesse, Twain, Dickens. My issue: I can’t write like these people and expect to make it anywhere in 2018. Solution: Follow this magazine, and the byways and avenues opening in these pages.
I’ve found wonderful writers that I’ve already placed on my favorites list, who write for the YouTube-Google-tiny-attention-span generation. I hope I don’t sound critical, but factual. I enjoyed every story in this magazine. I’ve found two favorites and I’ve formulated a theory about a third. First, the third. I’ll go ahead and get this out of the way:
Albert E. Cowdrey, who has been published 75 times since 1999, more than any other writer. His novels and writing are little known, at least on his Goodreads account. He writes like a master writer, someone who has written for years and has found great ease and comfort in it, like breathing. He has the exact “feel” of another phenomenal writer the world knows. He uses the techniques and methods, style of this writer. So, here’s my theory. I believe Albert E. Cowdrey is Richard Bachman reincarnated, and the truth will be placed in an anthology after the Source’s death.
And Albert E. Cowdrey, if you’re not Stephen King, for the love of God, get known, write some novels. You have an incredible gift.
The other two writers I want to mention: Richard Chwedyk and Cat Hellisen.
Chwedyk wrote a story in the collection called “The Man Who Put the Bomp.” How original, prolific, cute, and hilarious. This toy company creates these genetically engineered, small, some tiny, dinosaurs, but the “saurs” were designed with too much intelligence, so they lose control. They’ve killed many, and the story centers on a refuge home for them. I loved it. Unique read!
Hellisen has made my favorite authors list. She writes with exquisite prose and style. It’s apparent she takes time and energy for poetic expression. The story takes place with two female servants who live in an abusive, misogynistic culture. She meets a river god, who becomes captured, and finds herself in a plot to set it free, at a great cost. Gorgeous writing, and storyline.
So grateful to have found this magazine and found a good path into modern literature, one that I enjoy as much as the classics.