"Review of D. Foy's Absolutely Golden" in The Brooklyn Rail
Sean Gill's latest essay––a book review of D. Foy's novel, Absolutely Golden––has been published and may be read online in the December issue of The Brooklyn Rail.
Sean Gill's latest essay––a book review of D. Foy's novel, Absolutely Golden––has been published and may be read online in the December issue of The Brooklyn Rail.
Sean Gill's surrealistic horror short story "The Movie" is one of eleven weird tales featured in the new British anthology Dream City Blues: Dystopian Utopias. The collection is edited by Mark Howard Jones (a Welsh horror author and frequent contributor to S.T. Joshi's Cthulhu anthologies), and is described thusly: "From shining towers to filthy back alleys; from bright sunlit parks to dingy, cramped basements; this misguided tour through our dream cities is beset with dangerous pitfalls. Here are eleven diverse visions of cities that are unsettling, horrific, outlandish and bizarre in turn. Come and visit...but don't forget your return ticket." It is available for purchase in print here.
UK-based publisher The Fiction Desk has just announced that Sean Gill's short story "The Computer Man" has been chosen as one of the winners of their 2017 Flash Fiction Competition. It will appear in print in their next anthology, due out in early 2018.
Sean Gill's latest short story, "The Subtle Difference," has been published in Monkeybicycle's latest collection of one-sentence stories.
Monkeybicycle is a Seattle-based literary journal (active since 2002) that has published work by writers such as Sarah Silverman, Patton Oswalt, and Charlie Jane Anders.
Sean Gill's latest essay, a heavily-footnoted critique of the Freddy Vs. Jason movie tie-in novelization (entitled: "The Free Thinker and the Automaton: Polarity and Duality in Stephen Hand's Freddy Vs. Jason: The Novelization of the Screenplay by Damian Shannon and Mark J. Swift"), has been published online at Barrelhouse Magazine, as a part of their "Barrelhouse of Horrors" series this October.