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Phantaxis 6

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Superbly crafted tales of science fiction and fantasy from around the world. Previously unpublished stories that will take you to new realms, experience mystic sorcery, meet strange creatures, travel through time and visit distant galaxies! Turn the pages and let your journey begin today.

In this issue:

FOR HANNAH—Mark Bilsborough
If a virtual copy of a person falls in love with you, does that mean the real human will do so as well?

PLAYMATES—Arlen Feldman
Imagine, for a moment, a world where anything that you 3D print can come to life. And then imagine that ability being wielded by a child.

EVENS AND ODDS—Vanessa Kittle
All of us keep a darker side buried deep within. Siman was given the chance to experience his darker side when he accidentally met his clone.

THE SHIP OF THESEUS—Philip Brian Hall
If every piece of your body was to be replaced with a new one, would you still be the same person?

AN INFERNAL MALADY—Michael Haynes
There are times when a poison for some is actually a cure for another. Beware of accepting aid from those who are too eager to help...

THE HOME SECRETARY IS SAFE—C.R. Berry
One can never know what to expect when they are caught up in a secret government endeavour, especially if reality seems to bend in on itself…

DAUGHTER OF THE WESTERN WINDS—Jenni Wood
For most people, controlling their primal tendencies is rather easy when comparing it to half-breeds, because for half-breeds, controlling their animal side is the only thing that keeps them human and everyone else alive.

THE WHEEL OF FORTUNE—Matencera Wolf
The road to a new world is usually paved with the blood of others.

F-BOMBS—Allen Kuzara
As the world changes, both the laws and personal rights will change, sometimes to the point where they become unrecognizable.

URGENT CARE—Dale T. Phillips
If you believe medical care is tough today, wait ’til you experience it in the future!

A GUY WALKS INTO A BAR—Russ Watrous & Mike McHone
A fantasy tale that every person has experienced at least once in their life… If not, here’s your chance.

168 pages, Paperback

First published August 6, 2017

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About the author

Carter J. Hughes

9 books1 follower

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Cheryl .
2,421 reviews80 followers
May 4, 2019
This review is for the short story listed below with the author. The story was originally included in an anthology in the above magazine.

F-BOMBS—Allen Kuzara
As the world changes, both the laws and personal rights will change, sometimes to the point where they become unrecognizable.

This was an entertaining read that I downloaded via a giveaway from Bookfunnel. A look at the future through the eyes of a divorced Dad having access time with his daughter and having to explain the dangers of breaking rules. A surprising and very thought provoking ending!
Profile Image for Montzalee Wittmann.
5,249 reviews2,349 followers
January 2, 2018
This is an awesome collection!

I enjoyed each of these stories and the fun bits put in between. All of these stories were 5 stars! My favorite was Playthings.
Profile Image for Alesia.
42 reviews1 follower
September 20, 2017
Good Stuff

Simple sci-do fantasy fun. Some that stood out, some that didn't but nothing BAD, ya know? It was entertaining and gave me ideas.
Profile Image for Jessica Ashley.
177 reviews5 followers
June 18, 2021
Very good work

Many thanks to the authors. Mostly excellent stories with a very few that didn't make sense to me. Other people may like all.Recommend
Profile Image for Eamonn Murphy.
Author 33 books10 followers
June 22, 2020
I’m a bit late with this review of the August 2017 ‘Phantaxis Quarterly’ because I got bogged down in other reading, for which I’m sorry. Anyway, it was as good as I expected with stories covering a wide range of Science Fiction and fantasy themes.

For a wonder, there’s more Science Fiction than fantasy! The first story, ‘For Hannah’ by Mark Bilsborough, is about a voyage to the stars. Very wealthy Jim has booked very expensive passage on a starship to go to his true love. He’s forked out for a VR version of her to keep him company on the voyage. Jim is a genius with no social skills, so Hannah is his best bet for happiness. The story had many short scenes in order to cover its long time span, which made it a trifle bitty to read but the sentiments were realistic.

‘Playmates’ by Arlen Feldman is a clever riff on that old Ray Bradbury story where the family goes into a futuristic playroom and gets eaten by a lion. ‘Evens And Odds’ by Vanessa Kittle tackles the theme of created life and its rights and gives the hero a real dilemma. Another good one.

Continuing with solid Science Fiction, we get a number of dystopian futures. ‘The Ship Of Theseus’ by Philip Brian Hall has policeman Bosola investigating a pro-death cult. Usually, no one would care but a Senator’s daughter may have joined. Hall uses a hard-boiled detective narrative to explore a future where everyone has long lives and it works.

That future is not at all bad compared to ‘The Wheel Of Fortune’ by Matencera Wolf, where people are divided into Firsts, Seconds and Thirds in a strict hierarchy. It’s positively delightful if measured against ‘Urgent Care’ by Dale T. Phillips, where doctors demand cash on the nail before they’ll treat you and you have to bribe the security guard just to get into the hospital. Allen Kuzara’s ‘F-Bombs’ has a milder dystopia but it’s subtly conveyed by the conversations between a divorced father and his every-other-weekend daughter.

None of these stories raises any truly original Science Fiction themes but they do prove that there are a zillion good yarns to be made by shining a light from a different angle on the old ones, keeping the genre fresh. Romance books have been tackling the one theme for a couple of centuries now and they’re still going strong.

All the above provided fine entertainment but my favourite SF yarn came from fellow Brit C.R. Berry with ‘The Home Secretary Is Safe’. Hapless Cody Evans gets caught in a time loop on a train. This was beautifully handled and worked all the better because it had no complete explanation at the end. There was a conclusion, though, without which a story is not a story, just some words in a row.

To the fantasy, then. ‘A Guy Walks Into A Bar’ by Russ Watrous and Mike McHone is a sword and sorcery spoof delivered by two chaps chatting in a pub. One is a dwarf. The fine fantasy vocabulary helped put the joke across. Good fun but the centrepiece of this issue is ‘Daughter Of The Western Winds’ a novelette by Jenni Wood in which three half-breeds are sent to defend a city full of ungrateful humans from a howling horde of Oni, magical, troll-like creatures that sometimes rape human women. The offspring that survive, like our heroine, are sent off to a temple where they are trained to fight and defend humanity. The first two pages are a lesson for less gifted writers in how to give physical descriptions of the three main characters without stopping the narrative and from there it gets better. A really excellent fantasy story that deserves book publication.

When I first read ‘Phantaxis’, I was amazed at such quality in a magazine paying semi-professional rates. Reading it again, I’m no longer surprised but I’m still delighted. It could stand unashamed on the racks next to any of the venerable professional publications that are the gold standard of the genre.

Of course, magazines don’t feel shame. They don’t feel anything. They’re just a mix of pulped up trees and ink. A magazine with feelings? What a silly idea! Might make a good story, though. I wonder if those top-shelf magazines feel used and dirty.

Eamonn Murphy
This review first appeared at https://www.sfcrowsnest.info/
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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