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Weathering the Maddening Winds in the Alps

Weathering the Maddening Winds in the Alps

 

Location: Balzers, Liechtenstein and various villages at the foot of the Alps

For fans of: Ecological horror and psychological thrillers

To read: “The Wind” by Ray Bradbury (1943)

 

On various days from the middle of March to the end of April, the Foehn wind roars down the lee side of the Alps at up to 130 km (80 miles) per hour, bringing all manners of malady upon the northern border of Italy, some southern parts of France, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, and Slovenia, and the entirety of Liechtenstein – from headaches and breathlessness to suicides and hauntings. This month, I will highlight the darker forces that some believe to be at work through the Foehn, or, the Snow Eater, as the locals call it, and encourage you to read Ray Bradbury’s classic short horror story “The Wind” as you tour the Alpine villages of Liechtenstein for yourself. Bradbury’s work tells the story of a stormchaser in 1940s America who believes the winds he has encountered over the years have, finally, come together on his doorstep seeking revenge. I would have recommended something longer (such as JG Ballard’s sci-fi novel The Wind From Nowhere, for example); however, given that dizziness, fatigue, and complete psychosis are common symptoms of the Snow Eater, anything novel-length may admittedly be hard to get through out here. 

The Snow Eater and its kin winds, in fact, appear often in classic literature from all over Europe. Voltaire wrote about the Foehn’s effects in France. Edmund Spenser and Shakespeare both refer to England’s similarly-behaved Helm Wind; the former describing it as “bitter, black, and blustering” and the latter accusing it of causing “gout, the falling evil, the itch, and the ague.” Gabriel Garcia Marquez describes the Tramontana winds of Italy as “harsh, tenacious land wind that carries in it the seeds of madness” which “blows without pause, without relief, with an intensity and cruelty that seemed supernatural.”  

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Taking Submissions: HamLit Issue #9

Deadline: May 15th, 2025
Payment: $5
Theme: Flood Memory
Note: Must live in: Washington, Oregon, Idaho, or British Columbia

The theme for our Monsoon Issue is Flood Memory. Our original inspiration comes from a river that is straightened for the ease of those who live around it. When the river floods, however, it reclaims its original pattern. The water remembers. What else is water trying to tell us these days? What memories rush forward when the dam can no longer hold? Most importantly, how will you bend and mold and reclaim this theme for your own?

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Ongoing Submissions: Memento Mori Ink Magazine

Payment: Feature Articles (200 words): $20, Essays (300 words): $40, Reviews (Anything but book reviews) (100-200 words): $30, Columns/Op-Eds (500 words max): $35-$40
Themes: Non-fiction – Mortality and Death, Gothic Culture, Dark Aesthetics, True Crime, Psychological Exploration

THINK YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES?

HOW TO SUBMIT

ANYTHING NOT SUBMITTED PROPERLY WILL NOT BE READ. IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO READ THESE REQUIREMENTS THOROUGHLY.

What We’re Looking For:

Memento Mori Ink Magazine seeks thought-provoking, non-fictional articles that explore the darker aspects of life, death, culture, and the human experience. We are particularly interested in pieces that delve into:

  • Mortality and Death: Essays that examine cultural, philosophical, or personal perspectives on death and the rituals surrounding it.
  • Gothic Culture:Analysis of gothic literature, art, fashion, and the lifestyle that embraces the macabre.
  • Dark Aesthetics: Articles exploring the beauty and significance of dark aesthetics in various forms of media, including art, film, and music.
  • True Crime: In-depth, well-researched articles on historical or contemporary true crime stories, with a focus on lesser-known cases.
  • Psychological Exploration:** Essays that analyze the darker side of the human psyche, such as fear, grief, or the allure of the unknown.

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Writing Prompt Wednesdays: The Diary

Writing Prompt Wednesdays: The Diary

Welcome to “Writing Prompt Wednesdays,” a haven where your imagination can roam free in the realms of speculative fiction. As we embark on this weekly journey, it’s thrilling to think about the untold stories waiting to be penned in the domains of horror, science fiction, and fantasy. Whether you’re a seasoned author or a budding wordsmith, these prompts are your gateway to unexplored worlds and untapped potentials.

Every Wednesday, we’ll serve up a fresh, thought-provoking prompt designed to ignite your creative spark and challenge your storytelling prowess. Think of these prompts as a key, unlocking the doors to uncharted territories where your creativity is the only limit. From eerie, shadow-laden corridors of Gothic horror to the farthest reaches of interstellar space, and the mystical depths of high fantasy, our prompts are a kaleidoscope of possibilities.

Remember, there’s no right or wrong way to approach these prompts. They are mere stepping stones, guiding you towards the vast landscapes of your imagination. Use them to break free from writer’s block, to experiment with new ideas, or simply as a fun exercise to keep your writing skills sharp.

This week’s writing prompt:

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Taking Submissions: Bizarro Circus of Madness

Deadline: June 30th, 2025
Payment: $100
Theme: Bizarro

Do you write odd misfit stories that no publisher ever wants to touch? You’re in luck—the Bizarro Circus of Madness is in town!

I am seeking bizarro stories in the range of 2,000 to 5,000 words and will pay 100 dollars plus a contributor’s copy for each accepted work. What is bizarro? Simply put, it’s the genre of really weird stuff. Matt Clarke, publisher at Planet Bizarro Press, describes it this way: Think of the weirdest thing you’ve ever read, then times that by potato. Bizarro can be comedy, it can be horror, it can be romance—there’s really nothing it can’t be, as long as it’s bizarre.

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Taking Submissions: Archive of the Odd #7

Deadline: May 15th, 2025
Payment: 1.5 cent/word USD + a share of royalties
Theme: 500-8000 word Speculative fiction

Archive of the Odd is a biannual magazine of found fiction—stories told in the style of found footage, also known epistolary, neo-epistolary, found file, or found document fiction. Essentially, stories told in the form of other documents.

All submissions must be found fiction. We realize this is oddly specific, so if you’re not sure what we’re looking for, the best way will be to look at the stories on our website, or buy an issue to see the full zine treatment (in fact, if you email us or DM us on Twitter we’ll give you a coupon code for being a savvy author… just saying). Alternately, think about all the things you read on a daily basis that aren’t fiction. Newspapers? Emails? Product support guides? …Submissions calls?

If you read all of this and still have questions, please refer to our FAQ, or query!

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‘Skin’ Blog Tour – The Body in Fear

The Body in Fear

By Kathe Koja

 

If you write things that cause fear, you know how to describe the deliberately unseen, know how to go where the rational deserts us, and no one will help us, and flight or violence might be our only options for survival: you know what it feels like to be afraid.   

 

But then the day’s work is over, and you leave that fearful place behind.

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Taking Submissions: Cthulu: Dreams

Deadline: July 31st, 2025
Payment: Royalties
Theme: Lovecraftian horror

Cthulu: Dreams – our Lovecraftian anthology

Cthulu: Dreams

This is horror.
Express yourself as the theme moves you.
Incorporate the Lovecraftian theme as you will into your horror story. Not all need contain an eldritch horror, remember The Alchemist. Good writing will triumph over concepts tightly aligned to a perception of the theme. We encourage you to weave the theme into an engaging story with well-developed characters and deep emotion.
Stories that contain infanticide, or rape will not be accepted. Consideration might be made for gratuitous gore, if the story calls for it.
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