Thursday, February 20, 2025

“(re)Visions in the Jar” • by Sophie Sparrow

Continuing with this week’s theme, two weeks ago we published “Visions in the Jar,” a beautiful and heartbreaking little story by Sophie Sparrow. Unfortunately we did this during the period when we were temporarily unable to access our Facebook, X/Twitter, or Bluesky accounts, so we were unable to promote the story, and thus the readership numbers were not what we feel this story deserves.

» Read it now: “Visions in the Jar” • by Sophie Sparrow

Sophie is an author you probably should be following, as she writes fantasy fiction and humour. Her work has appeared in PseudoPod, Arsenika, Mad Scientist Journal, (Dis)Ability: An Anthology, and previously in Stupefying Stories, in “Angels,” “The Ghost of Moscow,” and “Dangerouser and Dangerouser.”

Sophie has worked as a content writer, transcriptionist, and software tester, speaks Russian and French, has previously been paid to wander around film sets, and is now quite tired of writing about herself in the third person. She likes cats and red wine, though not in the same glass. Keep up to date with what she's doing at www.writersophiesparrow.com

 

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But if you’ve already read this story, why not take a look at this new book we just released, also during the period when we were unable to access our Facebook, X/Twitter, and Bluesky accounts?

Heart of Dorkness & Other Stories, a chapbook of short stories by best-selling author Henry Vogel, is a fun and lively little collection you should get just to read the cover story, “Heart of Dorkness”…

If this book does well, though, you should know that it’s just the first in a series of little book projects we have in the works for release in 2025.

Check it out! Convince us it’s a good idea to release more books like this and Privateers of Mars!

 


 

In the meantime, I’m back in the shop today, for more follow-up work made necessary by things discovered during my 1-year post-surgery eye exam. So as much as I’d like to be able to say, “See you later,” I probably won’t be able to. 

Maybe tomorrow.

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

A puzzling thing happened…


…during our span without access to Facebook, X/Twitter, or Bluesky. Christopher Degni is usually one of our most popular writers. We’ve been publishing his work for years, beginning, I think, with “Life and Jacq and the Giant and Death.” 

(Actually, going strictly by chronology, we published “Merry-Go-Round” first, but I believe we accepted “Life and Jacq…” for publication first.)

New stories by Christopher Degni typically draw hundreds of readers. For a long time his story, “The Infinite and the Infinitesimal,” remained near the top of our all-time most-read list, having drawn close to a thousand discrete readers.

But when we published his most recent story, “A Visit to the Recycling Center,” two weeks ago, it struggled to reach a hundred readers, stalled out at 102, and has been stuck on that plateau ever since.

Therefore, for today’s post, we’re going to reintroduce you to “A Visit to the Recycling Center,” and then present a handy index of all the Christopher Degni stories we’ve published in recent years. Personally, I think my favorite is “Upgrade,” but read them all, and decide for yourself.

_____ADVERTISEMENT_____

But if you’ve already read all these stories, why not take a look at this new book we just released, also during the period when we were unable to access our X/Twitter and Bluesky accounts?

Heart of Dorkness & Other Stories, a chapbook of short stories by best-selling author Henry Vogel, is a fun and lively little collection you should get just to read the cover story, “Heart of Dorkness”…

If this book does well, though, you should know that it’s just the first in a series of little book projects we have in the works for release in 2025.

Check it out! Convince us it’s a good idea to release more books like this one and Privateers of Mars!

_____________________

“A Visit to the Recycling Center”
If you’re old enough to join AARP,
this story should make you shudder.


“A 125-Word Story About Writer’s Block in the Style of Italo Calvino”

 

“The Six Stages of Grief”

 

“Jimboree”

“Signs of Life”

 

“Upgrade”

“Green Shoots”


“Life and Jacq and the Giant and Death”

“Merry-Go-Round”

 

“Reflections on Carnival-by-the-Sea”

 

“Treasure Hunting in the Old City”

 

“The Infinite and the Infinitesimal”


“My Name is Static”


_____ADVERTISEMENT_____

But if you’ve already read all these stories, why not take a look at this new book we just released, also during the period when we were unable to access our X/Twitter and Bluesky accounts?

Heart of Dorkness & Other Stories, a chapbook of short stories by best-selling author Henry Vogel, is a fun and lively little collection you should get just to read the cover story, “Heart of Dorkness”…

If this book does well, though, you should know that it’s just the first in a series of little book projects we have in the works for release in 2025.

Check it out! Convince us it’s a good idea to release more books like this one and Privateers of Mars!

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

A funny thing happened…


I thought I’d made adequate plans for the possibility that I might be knocked offline once the destruction/reconstruction project began. We had eight new Pete Wood Challenge flash fiction stories all set up in the queue and ready to be published automatically; no further editorial intervention required. All I had to do was let the cron jobs run.

But…

In keeping with the principle that if it ain’t advertised, it never happened, the readership numbers for these stories absolutely tanked. The first day’s stories drew decent numbers, with Karin Terebessy’s story, “Do Not Go Gentle,” getting the most reads and the most comments, as expected.

But after that, the readership numbers just fell off the cliff, to perish miserably on the rocky shore below. We didn’t even get a dead cat bounce from any of the subsequent stories.

What happened? 

I have two theories. The first is so cynical I’m keeping it to myself for now, but the second stems from the fact that the first day’s stories were the only ones I was able to cross-promote on X/Twitter and Bluesky. After that, I was knocked offline and had no access to our X or Bluesky accounts until yesterday. Therefore, to test this theory, this week I’m going to try to draw your attention back to these eight stories, in hopes of seeing an increase in the number of readers. 

Today, we begin with the Honorable Mentions.

“Panne d'Essence” • by Andrew Jensen

 

“Once With a Blue Moose” • by Lori Jensen

 

“Parting Ways” • by C. L. Sidell

 

“What Fuels Us” • by Richard Zwicker

 

 “Do Not Go Gentle” • by Karin Terebessy


______________________________

 

But if you’ve already read these stories, then why not take a look at this new book we just released, also during the period when we were unable to access our X/Twitter and Bluesky accounts?

Heart of Dorkness & Other Stories, a chapbook of short stories by best-selling author Henry Vogel, is a fun and lively little collection you should get just to read the cover story, “Heart of Dorkness”…

If Heart of Dorkness does well, though, you should know that it’s just the first in a series of little book projects we have in the works for release in 2025.

Check it out! Convince us it’s a good idea to release more books like this one and Privateers of Mars!

Monday, February 17, 2025

Status Update: 10:15 AM 02/17/2025 -15°


Kind thanks to everyone who has written to express their concern about how I’m doing. 

Yes, January began on a back-to-back pair of extraordinarily painful notes, but neither are the reason I’ve been offline for about a month. The primary cause is that the contractor returned to finish the repair and remodeling work that was made necessary by last summer’s destructive hailstorm, and the project has, pardon the expression, snowballed.

As you can see from this photo I shot just a few minutes ago, despite the original “It’ll take two, maybe three days tops” estimate, the project still is nowhere near to being finished.

I also did not realize that this work would essentially require me to move out of the front half of the house for the duration, and living in and around everything that had to be moved has been a challenge. I was physically unable to get into my office for about two weeks, and despite what Internet evangelists would have you believe, working “wherever” with a laptop and a cuppa coffee is not the same—especially if the construction workers accidentally tear out your cable modem and knock out your Wi-Fi. (“I hate to complain, but did it occur to you that there might be something on the other side of the wall that was connected to that coax, before you decided to give the cable a sharp tug?”) For a time I was reduced to trying to work using my cell phone and a Bluetooth keyboard, which was really limiting. It knocked me completely off X/Twitter and Bluesky for about two weeks. 

To be honest, that was very therapeutic. You should try it.

The day they accidentally knocked out the AC power was the most exciting, though, given that it was about 10° outside that day and the natural gas furnace will not run without electric power for the control circuits.

Oh yeah, this project also required putting six huge holes in the south and east sides of my house. The seventh hole, which they put in the laundry room wall right next to where the water main enters the house, was a bonus. It took me nearly two weeks to find it, as I couldn’t even get into the laundry room for more than a week, and once I could get into it again I could do so only during the evening hours. It wasn’t until the day I finally got into the laundry room in the morning that I noticed daylight streaming in where there wasn’t a window, and thought, “Hmm. That ain’t right.”

I packed the wound with bubble wrap secured by duct tape. I hope I found it before the field mice did. 

A Nature Note: Field mice, in case you’re curious, do not hibernate. They remain active throughout the winter. You just don’t notice them because they’re usually active in tiny tunnels under the snow, but they are constantly searching for anything they can eat and any place to live that’s warmer than being in a tiny tunnel under the snow. They may be adorable, but they are also very destructive little pests.

“Victor” brand snap traps work. D-Con leaves you with tiny mummified mouse corpses you will be discovering in out-of-the-way places for years to come. Practicing “live trap & release” may make you feel virtuous, but all it does is leave the mice thinking, “Crap, that didn’t work. Okay, what’s the next plan for breaking into this joint?”

§

There are many ancient questions that humanity has been asking since time immemorial. “Why is the sky blue?”* “Does a bear poop in the woods?”** “Is the Pope Catholic?”*** “If a tree falls in the woods and there’s no one to hear it, does it make a sound?”**** “If something happens but it’s not on the Internet, did it really happen?”*****

The question most on my mind right now is, “Will the contractors ever show up to finish this @#$(*&!!! job?” Well, maybe next week. Maybe the week after. It depends on the weather. It depends on the phase of the moon. It depends on…

But I suppose the question most of you are wondering is, “What’s going on with Rampant Loon Press and Stupefying Stories?” Well, we did actually release a new book this month: Heart of Dorkness, & Other Stories, a chapbook of short stories by best-selling author Henry Vogel. It’s a fun little collection—you should get it just to read the cover story, “Heart of Dorkness”—

It’s also just the first in a series of book projects we have in the works for release later this year.

But I’ve been off the Internet for a few weeks, and as a consequence, almost no one knows the book release happened. “If it isn’t on the Internet, it didn’t happen.”

Going forward, we’ve got to change that.

Answers:

* Because it’s -15°F  and every bit of water vapor has frozen out of it. Otherwise it would be gray.

** Not by choice. As with field mice, bears prefer to poop indoors, where it’s warm.

*** As regards Pope Francis, that is a topic of considerable debate right now, but this is not the place for that conversation.

**** Only if it falls on a bear while he’s taking a poop.

***** It might be better to ask, if it’s on the Internet, especially on bluesky or reddit, is there a reliable source that can confirm that it happened?

Friday, February 7, 2025

“Scavenger Hunt” • by Jeff Currier

A Buchladen in Brighton yielded Darien his first Magna Carta. 

“Hidden just before the SS pillage of 1943,” the proprietor said, praying Darien was not Gestapo. Darien checked nearby universe branches. Nazis had burned it in every one.

His second, he pilfered from a slow-verse where now was 1215. Cost him a crossbow bolt through the arm.

He came up empty where Rome was eternal, velociraptors reigned, or water drowned the Earth. Einstein-Rosen generator overheating and almost out of gas, he found his last behind dusty museum glass in an eerily empty world, its rad-count through the stratosphere.

Soaking wet, bleeding, arm festering, yet triumphant, Darian returned to universe alpha. He found Sarah sipping free bourbon and three pristine charters adorning the pub’s wall.

“How?” he asked, before popping another anti-rad pill.

“Easy, darling. A 1215-now branch, a little gold, and Johnny happily affixed his seal to three more copies.”

 



Jeff Currier works too many jobs so has little time to write, but the words kept screaming for release. Jeff finally relented and set them free, in very small batches. Now they’ve run amok with no telling what mischief they’ve caused. You can find them roaming in various anthologies or in Sci Phi Journal, Stupefying Stories, Dark Moments, and Flash Point SF.

If you enjoyed this story, you might also want to read:




The Pete Wood Challenge is an informal ad hoc story-writing competition. Once a month Pete Wood spots writers the idea for a story, usually in the form of a phrase or a few key words, along with some restrictions on what can be submitted, usually in terms of length. Pete then collects the resulting entries, determines who has best met the challenge, and sends the winners over to Bruce Bethke, who arranges for them to be published on the Stupefying Stories web site.

You can find all the previous winners of the Pete Wood Challenge at this link.
 

This time the challenge was to write a flash fiction story of no more than 150 words in length, inspired by and using the phrase, “out of gas.”

Special Thanks to Paul Celmer: for going above and beyond to help with this challenge

Thursday, February 6, 2025

“Visions in the Jar” • by Sophie Sparrow


The air is thick, smells green and hopeful somehow, the day I visit the swamp witch.

She collects marsh gas for me in a jar; curling tendrils of vapour spill and twist inside the glass like smoke.

“You can see portents in there? Visions of the future?” I ask in earnest.

She nods, places a hand on my swollen belly. I shift, protectively.

She peers into the jar, watching the gases swirl, seeing things that I cannot.

Bright colours coalesce and I hear the sound of children’s laughter. Then the gases flicker out, as though they were never there.

“Born dead, just like the others,” the witch imparts, shrugging.

That’s it, then. The ritual’s over, out of gas and out of hope, and my heart’s as empty as the jar.

 


 


Sophie Sparrow writes fantasy fiction and humour. Her work has appeared in PseudoPod, Arsenika, Mad Scientist Journal, (Dis)Ability: An Anthology, and previously in Stupefying Stories, in “Angels,” “The Ghost of Moscow,” and “Dangerouser and Dangerouser.”

She has worked as a content writer, transcriptionist, and software tester, speaks Russian and French, has previously been paid to wander around film sets, and is now quite tired of writing about herself in the third person. She likes cats and red wine, though not in the same glass. Keep up to date with what she's doing at www.writersophiesparrow.com

 

 

The Pete Wood Challenge is an informal ad hoc story-writing competition. Once a month Pete Wood spots writers the idea for a story, usually in the form of a phrase or a few key words, along with some restrictions on what can be submitted, usually in terms of length. Pete then collects the resulting entries, determines who has best met the challenge, and sends the winners over to Bruce Bethke, who arranges for them to be published on the Stupefying Stories web site.

You can find all the previous winners of the Pete Wood Challenge at this link.
 

This time the challenge was to write a flash fiction story of no more than 150 words in length, inspired by and using the phrase, “out of gas.”

Special Thanks to Paul Celmer: for going above and beyond to help with this challenge!

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

“A Visit to the Recycling Center” • by Christopher Degni

Katherine approached the rows of pristine white pods, the place the kids called the “compost heap.” 

But what better way to use her remaining energy than to nurture additional life? She’d had her run. She was out of gas.

She chose an empty pod. The door swished behind her. She pressed the single green button on the display.

Nothing happened, at first. Then her adrenaline surged: that same feeling as her first kiss, her first job, playing with her children, watching a sunrise… she thought: this is it, my life flashing before me, this is the end.

A knock at the door! It opened, revealing a woman wearing the center’s uniform. “I’m so sorry. The units are usually well-charged, but… We’ll fix it right away.”

“You know,” said Katherine, pushing past the woman, “I might have a little bit left after all.” She walked out of the pod and back into her life.

 




Christopher Degni writes about the magic and the horror that lurk just under the surface of everyday life. His short work may be found in 99 Tiny Terrors99 Fleeting FantasiesDeadman Humour: Fears of ClownSherlock Holmes and the Occult Detectives, and right here on Stupefying Stories, and his debut novella, Ghostshow Live!about a reluctant reality show ghost hunter, is now available from your favorite online bookseller. He was part of the editorial team for the Stoker-nominated MOTHER: Tales of Love and Terror and the music-horror anthology Playlist of the Damned, and he is a graduate of the Odyssey Writing Workshop. He currently lives south of Boston with his wife. You can follow him on FB and Instagram.

For reasons unknown the search function on this web site has lately decided to sort search results by “relevance,” whatever that means, and while we have published quite a few of Christopher’s stories in the past two years, the search function likes to hide them. Therefore, here’s a quick guide to the Christopher Degni stories we’ve published, sorted by… some arcane criterion we don’t understand.   


“Jimboree” • by Christopher Degni

“Morning, Jim.”“Morning!” Full house today at the copy shop, two guys working the front, three in the back. “Who closed last night?” asks Jim. “They left the lights on.” “I know who it was,” comes a voice. It’s Jim. “It was Jim.” “Team meeting, now.” Jim sounds mad. The five gather in the back. “Do we need some new blood around here?” says Jim. Jim scratches his head,...

“Green Shoots” • by Christopher Degni

They give us all false hope: tickets, with barely one in a hundred making the punch line. I focus on the screen flashing the winning numbers—I’ve already memorized my daughter’s and my own. The prize? A new life, away from here. There! The afterimage lingers: my daughter’s number. While I concentrated, she slipped away into the crowd. “Chloë!” “Daddy!” She comes running....

“A 125-Word Story About Writer’s Block in the Style of Italo Calvino” • by Christopher Degni

You sit down to write “A 125-Word Story About Writer’s Block in the Style of Italo Calvino,” but you have no ideas, so you turn to WiLLiaMs. You: Write a 125-word story about writer’s block in the style of Italo Calvino. WiLLiaMs: I cannot write in the style of Italo Calvino, because I am a large language model and my code has a writer’s block on specific authors. You:...

“Signs of Life” • by Christopher Degni

“Are you kidding me?” said Emmy. “The Perseverance is our last chance off this dying rock.” The spaceport around us bustled with life: people running and shouting, coughing and laughing. “I’m sorry,” I said. “I shouldn’t have even come here. Dad—” “—has days. He might already be gone. Sweetie, I’m sorry, but—” “I can’t.” “They won’t hold our spots.” Emmy looked down. “Your...

“Upgrade” • by Christopher Degni

My wife smiles after handing me a silver capsule the size of an egg. My back hurts; I’m tired; I don’t know what this nonsense is, but I just want to relax. “It’s our second anniversary,” she says. Ah. Has it been that long? She’ll be due for an upgrade soon, or maybe I’ll trade her in for a new model completely. A quieter one. Less independent. The capsule hisses open. It’s...

“The Six Stages of Grief” • by Christopher Degni

I live with the ghost of my mother. Every morning I hear her practice her ritual: making the coffee, straightening my apartment, sitting at the kitchen table. Strange, as she never did those things when she used to visit me. Perhaps maintaining a routine helps her accept her new lot. My father calls often. I miss her, he says, and I agree. We all miss her. But, he says. I...

“Merry-Go-Round” • by Christopher Degni

The field, once Sara’s favorite haunt, stood graveled and muddy, lonely except for a “Coming Soon” billboard for a 55+ community. She didn’t love the field so much as the annual traveling carnival that had descended upon it, until twenty years ago, when it had stopped. Sara closed her eyes and reflected on that year of lasts: the last carnival, the last year of high...

“The Infinite and the Infinitesimal” • by Christopher Degni

In June of 1986, upon the death of the great Argentine mathematician Luis Davila, the sole trustee of his estate discovered a small enchiridion among his personal effects. A prominent inscription on the title page consisted of a single decimal number of 106 digits, close to ⅓, but not matching any known mathematical constants: .33263638—, along with a request for his library...

“Life and Jacq and the Giant and Death” • by Christopher Degni

Once upon a future, when the Earth was spent and the sun red and swollen, a farmgirl named Jacq cared for two dying things: her father and her fields. Her father, stricken with a plague of old age and fatigue, lay in bed all day, asleep; her fields, following years of declining fertility, yielded only the most meager amount of grain. Jacq and her father were down to their...

Also look for:
   “My Name is Static”
   “Treasure Hunting in the Old City”




The Pete Wood Challenge is an informal ad hoc story-writing competition. Once a month Pete Wood spots writers the idea for a story, usually in the form of a phrase or a few key words, along with some restrictions on what can be submitted, usually in terms of length. Pete then collects the resulting entries, determines who has best met the challenge, and sends the winners over to Bruce Bethke, who arranges for them to be published on the Stupefying Stories web site.

You can find all the previous winners of the Pete Wood Challenge at this link.
 

This time the challenge was to write a flash fiction story of no more than 150 words in length, inspired by and using the phrase, “out of gas.”

Special Thanks to Paul Celmer: for going above and beyond to help with this challenge!

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

“Panne d'Essence” • by Andrew Jensen


“A ‘pan of essence’ sounds like some Existentialist French cookbook. What’s it mean?”

“‘Out of gas’.”

Mille Bornes is too French.” Jerry packed up the game. His increasing boredom sharpened his permanent edge. “We had enough français back in Montreal. Why’d you move to New Brunswick?”

I gestured at the gorgeous view from my porch overlooking the Northumberland Strait.

“Pretty, but Alberta’s magnificent. There’s action and money. We have real mountains, not these crumbling Appalachians. You’ve moved to the 1950s.”

I had been an Anglo refugee from Quebec separatism and my Acadian neighbours welcomed me to their gentle pace of life. Some created stunning art with few resources. People lingered at the store to share gossip and jokes. They cared.

“Life here is sane,” I summarized.

Jerry rolled his eyes and headed for the guest room. “Boy, you’ve changed.”

Haven’t we both. Goodbye, old friend.


________________________________________


Andrew Jensen has moved to New Brunswick with his family and too many dogs and cats. He has retired from the ministry, but of course, clergy never really retire. His stories have appeared in Canada, the USA, New Zealand, and the UK. This past summer, his work appeared in both Amazing Stories and James Gunn’s Ad Astra

If you enjoyed this story, you might also like to read his author profile, Six Questions for… Andrew Jensen, as well as these other stories.



“A Can of Piskies”

The elves’ latest plan to overthrow and conquer humanity was flawless and foolproof. All it required was the active cooperation of a large number of cats…



“Chapter 7”

There was a community uproar when the Golden Sandworm closed its doors… well, for a given value of ‘community.’ The guy with the bat’leth seemed pretty upset, but one mention of the police calmed him right down…

“Waxing Crescent”

25 years ago, the Moon disappeared. Really, is there anything more boring than commemorating something that happened to your parents? What can we do to make this interesting?


 

“Happy Anniversary?”

For some, the disappearance of the Moon was a prayer answered. For others, it was a heartache that would never go away.

“Running Away with the Cirque

Even in the far future, even on strange new worlds, some people will still find their worlds just a little too small and dull, and dream of one day leaving it all behind and running away to somewhere else that’s fun and exciting.

STUPEFYING STORIES 24, by the way, is free to read on Kindle Unlimited. Check it out!

 

 




The Pete Wood Challenge is an informal ad hoc story-writing competition. Once a month Pete Wood spots writers the idea for a story, usually in the form of a phrase or a few key words, along with some restrictions on what can be submitted, usually in terms of length. Pete then collects the resulting entries, determines who has best met the challenge, and sends the winners over to Bruce Bethke, who arranges for them to be published on the Stupefying Stories web site.

You can find all the previous winners of the Pete Wood Challenge at this link.
 

This time the challenge was to write a flash fiction story of no more than 150 words in length, inspired by and using the phrase, “out of gas.”

Special Thanks to Paul Celmer: for going above and beyond to help with this challenge!