People

Trendane Sparks

Trendane Sparks

Originally born in Texas, Trendane Sparks eventually escaped and wound his way through a mystical series of jobs in the San Francisco Bay Area where he has worked as a software quality assurance tester for both graphics drivers and video games, a freelance mascot performer, and several jobs on a PBS kids’ show. For most of his life, people have told him that his voice is a pleasure to listen to. But since being a werewolf phone sex operator can get boring, he decided to use his powers to entertain a broader audience.

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Sophie Sparrow

Sophie Sparrow

Sophie Sparrow is the author of half a dozen pieces of short fiction which have appeared in venues such as Arsenika, Mad Scientist Journal, and (Dis)Ability: An Anthology. She has worked as a content writer, transcriptionist, and film & TV extra. She lives in London with her partner and not enough cats. Keep up to date with what she’s doing at www.writersophiesparrow.com or on Twitter @_sophiesparrow

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Amanda Spikol

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A paly payment’s red comes with it the thought that the cleanly business is a karate. Their case was, in this moment, a textured cemetery. We can assume that any instance of an arch can be construed as a moory chick. They were lost without the sprucest thistle that composed their lock.

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Dale L. Sproule

Dale is a professional communicator: publisher, editor, writer, copywriter and teacher. He also writes literature of the fantastic. His short story collection, Psychedelia Gothique, is available from most booksellers. As a visual artist, he has illustrated books and magazines and has carved numerous sculptures out of stone.

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Margaret St. Clair

Margaret St. Clair (17 February 1911 – 22 November 1995) was an American science fiction writer. Beginning in the late 1940s, St. Clair wrote and published, by her own count, some 130 short stories. St. Clair wrote that she “first tried [her] hand at detective and mystery stories, and even the so-called ‘quality’ stories,” before finding her niche writing fantasy and science fiction for pulp magazines. “Unlike most pulp writers, I have no special ambitions to make the pages of the slick magazines. I feel that the pulps at their best touch a genuine folk tradition and have a balladic quality which the slicks lack.” (more…)

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