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Bewildering Stories

The Readers’ Guide

What’s in Issue 1020

Novel Max is out looking for a missing witness to a murder. He is surprised to find that someone is looking for him.
Gary Inbinder, The Girl on the Rush Street Bridge
Novella Lemm meets a suspect. Meanwhile, Lemm and his friend are plotting ways to find out what is really going on aboard the Huntress.
Alcuin Fromm, Trust Me, part 3
Short
Stories
New contributor Anayancy Estacio shows how ostensibly friendly interactions can go wrong in the wrong hands: Cuteness Aggression.

New contributor Anna Villegas portrays a couple recalling good times while managing to live in a post-apocalyptic world: When We Were Civil, part 1; part 2; conclusion.

When I find myself in times of trouble,
Mother Mary comes to me,
Speaking words of widsom: “Let it be.”
More than 50 years later, the refrain of Paul McCartney’s and John Lennon’s song of 1970 is echoed from the other side of the world, showing what “wisdom” can mean: Huina Zheng, Just Let It Be
Flash
Fiction
How does one put up with ostentatious piety? Befriend the diety, but in private: Charles C. Cole, Althea’s Other Man

There may come a time when houseboats prove very practical: Jeffrey Greene, A Year of Rain
Poetry New contributor Bobby Cranestone, The Meadow Found Anew
Short
Poetry
Jerry Hogan, Fait accompli

Memoir
New contributor Vern Fein recalls a time when he and some friends were Easy Riders.

Departments

Welcome Bewildering Stories introduces and welcomes Bobby Cranestone, Anayancy Estacio, Vern Fein, Anna Villegas.
Challenge Challenge 1020 tales a different philosophical approach with Being and Somethingness.
The Art
Gallery
Richard Ong, The Merlin Tree
Channie Greenberg, The Reach
Ron Sanders, Vanishing Point

A randomly rotating selection of Bewildering Stories’ art
NASA: Picture of the Day
Sky and Telescope, This Week’s Sky at a Glance

Randomly selected Bewildering motto:

Randomly selected classic rejection notice:

Bewildering Stories’ official mottoes:

“Poems are not made with ideas; they are made with words.” — Stéphane Mallarmé
Ars longa, vita brevis. Rough translation: “Proofreading never ends.”

To Bewildering Stories’ schedule: In Times to Come

Readers’ reactions are always welcome.
Please write!

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date Copyright © November 6, 2023 by Bewildering Stories

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