Tuesday
Jul252017

"Edifice and Artifice in Buda and Pest," winner of the 2017 Micro-Fiction Prize, in Issue #98 of River Styx

Sean Gill's latest short story, "Edifice and Artifice in Buda and Pest," the winner of the 2017 Schlafly Micro-Brew Micro-Fiction Contest, has been published in the latest issue of River Styx, #98. The issue is available to purchase in print here.

River Styx is a St. Louis-based literary journal (active since 1975) that has published work by writers such as Margaret Atwood, Rita Dove, Derek Walcott, and Czeslaw Milosz.

Tuesday
Jul182017

Sean Gill Reading at The Year of Vonnegut on Governor's Island on 7/23/17

The Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library is partnering with the Empire State Center for the Book for a series of Vonnegut-related events this weekend on Governor's Island. At 1PM on Sunday, July 23rd, Sean Gill will be reading his short story "Forbidden Melodies from a Diminishing Octave," which was previously published in So It Goes: The Literary Journal of the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library. The event is free, and additional details are available here.

Thursday
Jun292017

"The Bone That Cracks the Loudest" in Crannóg Magazine

Sean Gill's latest short story, a peculiar kind of ghost tale called "The Bone That Cracks the Loudest," has been published in the latest issue (No. 45) of Crannóg Magazine, a literary journal based out of Galway, Ireland. It is available for purchase in print here.

Monday
Jun192017

"The Dead Woman's Cubicle" in Fourteen Hills

Sean Gill's latest short story, "The Dead Woman's Cubicle," is now available in the latest issue (Volume 23, No. 2) of Fourteen Hills, the literary magazine of San Francisco State University. Fourteen Hills has published notable fiction, poetry, and short plays since 1994, including work by Mary Gaitskill and Bill Roorbach.

Thursday
May252017

"In the Cutting Room" in Fiction Southeast

Sean Gill's latest story, "In the Cutting Room," has been published online in Fiction Southeast, an online literary journal of short fiction. Fiction Southeast has previously featured work by Joyce Carol Oates, Aimee Bender, and Robert Olen Butler.