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Black Gate 4

On the Way

11 Back from the Printer

Black Gate 11 is back from the printer and will shortly be on its way to subscribers and quality bookstores. I know the majority of you were delighted with issue 10; well, issue 11 has even MORE heroic fiction than issue 10. It holds more adventure per square inch than Ben Hur (the story, I mean, not Charlton H in a toga). It's turned up to ELEVEN. 

If you've been curious about Black Gate there's no better time to add your name to our list of subscribers. A single issue (like, say, issue ELEVEN) will run you a mere $10.00. No other fantasy magazine is so densely packed, for our issues clock in at a whopping 224 pages, which is an awful lot of content for your dollar. First time visitors to Black Gate are pretty much astonished -- it looks more like an anthology than a magazine. A year's subscription for four issues runs a mere $29.95, which gets you four issues for the price of three.

This time around Martha Wells, James Enge, Iain Rowan, and Mark Sumner all return with big new installments building on the action in Black Gate 10. Join us for the first meeting of Giliead & Ilias, as Morlock the Maker assists a small fraternity of warriors in desperate battle against the dreaded Boneless One, Dao Shi the exorcist comes face to face with an unkillable demon deep in the Underworld, and the Naturalist returns to civilization to warn of the approach of the terror from the interior.

That's not all — Maria V. Snyder, Peadar Ó Guilín, William I. Lengeman III and many others offer exciting new stories. A dead wizard hires a thief to break into his tower and uncover a deadly secret, a man fights to save his son from a woman whose charms are literally irresistible, and a modern father is inducted into Valhalla after a particularly challenging roller coaster ride. All that plus four pages of Knights of the Dinner Table. It's 224 pages of the best in modern adventure fantasy!

Follow this link to a sneak peek of Black Gate 11, with story excerpts, artwork, and even a look at "Neglected Stories from the SF Magazines" from Rich Horton.

Hey, it's good stuff, or I wouldn't be hawking it! If you're already a fan, we hope that you'll spread the word. 

I was just posting about supporting magazines the other day on the SFReader forum. Black Gate writer Peadar Ó Guilín discovered that Adventures of Sword and Sorcery may be rejoining the print world. At this news there was much excitement among writers, who promptly sent off a number of stories to the editor of AS&S. I don't know whether or not they also sent off subscriptions, though, which is why I posted. Maybe they did -- I hope they did.  Authors (and I'm in that group myself) tend to look at magazines as PLACES THAT WILL GIVE ME MONEY FOR MY WORDS but they also oughta' look at them like the fans of the genres most of them are. John and I and all our contributors are in this because we love what we do, and we want to keep doing it. I think of Black Gate as a community, and I hope you do as well. We maintain this silly blog and no less than two discussion sites. We provide free web content every week at the Black Gate home (uploaded Sunday) so there's always plenty to talk about. 

It may be that I've drifted off topic a bit, or ranted: my point was that if you want a market to live, you ought to support it, be it Black Gate, The Effete Troll, or Golf Digest. Whatever magazine it is that ticks your clock needs your lovin'. Many of them, like Black Gate, have a warm community of folks who are always interested in talking about the kinds of things that bring you to the magazine in the first place.

While I'm on the topic, here are the links to both discussion groups:

Here's the familiar newsgroup on Sff.Net.

And here's the new one, with an interface I find easier to navigate, at SFReader. There's not as much material in our folder here, because it's new. It  can grow with your support. SFReader is one of the friendliest forums I've ever belonged to, and there are plenty of interesting discussions going on in other folders all the time.

Submissions Updates

E-submitters should shortly be finding some responses in their e-mail as I continue to work through the last e-batch of stories I received prior to us closing to submissions.

I had some writing stuff I was going to blather on about, but I'll save that for another post.

Howard

Comments

(Anonymous)

The Effete Troll

> if you want a market to live, you ought to
> support it, be it Black Gate, The Effete
> Troll, or Golf Digest.

I REALLY want to subscribe to "The Effete Troll," but Google is hiding it from me. Curse Google! I must have a copy. Tell me how.

- John

John O'Neill
Editor
Black Gate

Re: The Effete Troll

I'll second that request, especially if "The Effete Troll" is accepting short story submissions. :)

Re: The Effete Troll

I'll start taking subscriptions for The Effete Troll right now. If I raise enough in subscriptions, I'll open for submissions and begin publishing the magazine.

Subscriptions

I generally don't subscribe to magazines, but I frequently pick them up at the bookstore, especially if I'm interested in submitting to that market. (Evokes Writing Rule of Common Sense #37: Don't submit your work to a periodical you know nothing about.) But I haven't been able to find BLACK GATE for a while, and I miss reading it. Guess I'll have to break down and subscribe! :)

Re: Subscriptions

Hey, thanks for your support! I think you're going to like these recent issues. Hopefully after issue 12 you'll see BG in even more stores.

I'm sorry to announce that THE EFFETE TROLL has already succumbed due to lack of support between my initial post and now. Don't let this happen to Black Gate!

Re: Subscriptions

Bummer. I was thinking Jane Austin pastiche. "Troll Brummel," or some such.
I'd subscribe to The Effete Troll in a heartbeat, as well--not to mention Golfimbul Digests (assuming that Golf Digest is an abbrev).

(Anonymous)

Howard (or John) -

I've got a weird, purposeless question:

If I dumped my subscription and faithfully purchased every issue at the newsstand, would that mean more profit or less for Black Gate, or about the same? I really don't understand how distribution works.

In any case, I wouldn't give up my subscription for three reasons: a) convenience, b) massive value and c) I tend to get thrown out of bookstores when I spend hours hovering by the newsstand, expecting next quarter's issue to magically appear, weeks ahead of the printing date.
Okay, someone has to ask: How to the booksellers KNOW you're waiting for next quarter's issue to magically appear? Are you chanting incantations? Burning candles? Sacrificing readers of vampire romance, with or without their full consent? Because it takes quite a lot to get thrown out of a bookstore.

Just wondering.

(Anonymous)

Sorry, it is a bit more banal and obvious than that.

Excessive moping, punctuated by the occasional theatrical sigh. Actually, it bugs them even when a new issue comes in. Then I swoon, and they have to clean me off the floor.

Isn't like the good old days, when newstands came equipped with fainting couches.*

Daniel

*My first attempt at alternative history.

(Anonymous)

Subscriptions vs Newstand Purchases


>If I dumped my subscription and faithfully
>purchased every issue at the newsstand,
>would that mean more profit or less for
>Black Gate, or about the same? I really
>don't understand how distribution works.

Great question, anonymous.

Here's how it works: when you buy a BG sub for $29.95, almost exactly $10 of that goes towards postage and packing (we ship media mail, at $2.13/copy, plus about 11 cents for the envelope). So that means we pocket about $19.95.

When you purchase at a newstand, about half goes to the store and the rest goes to the distributor. We get about $3.50 after returns (very roughly), so for 4 issues we pocket about $14.00, or about six bucks less than a subscription.

Just as importantly, with a subscription we get the money up front, which is important. We also have a way to send you things like renewal forms, etc. This is generally why magazine publishers prefer subscriptions over newstand sales.

Hope that helps!

- John

John O'Neill
Editor
Black Gate

(Anonymous)

Re: Subscriptions vs Newstand Purchases

Got it! So, not that the newstand dough is chicken feed, but the best use for the newstand is as a promotional rack, hoping to catch the eye of potential new subcribers, then to capture whatever leftovers you can from "one-off" readers?

In any case, I'm keeping my subscriber status for life. BG is the Tsar Bomba of literature. It'd be suicide not to stay on its good side.

By the way, I didn't mean to post anonymously, I just totally fry my mind trying to remember my account passwords, that I've resorted to doing so here and signing in the post.

I should have signed the above query:

Daniel

Excellent. I'm looking forward to receiving my copy!

-- and good news about the slush as well. Sounds like things are really moving along!

Jana
I used to buy it from B&N, but the last issue wasn't carried there--and they wouldn't order it. They told me I had to go to their larger bookstore 20 minutes down the freeway. They did offer to call ahead to make sure and hold a copy for me.

I was hugely disappointed. I thought they would at least get a copy up from the store for me, but they weren't interested.

I also tried to talk my library into carrying it, but they turned the request down (some two years ago) based on the fact that it didn't come out on schedule. I'm really hoping that as the schedule gets more reliable, I can talk them into carrying a subscription. It's such a great magazine and their is a huge young fantasy and anime audience at my local library. I think it would act as quite a promotional tool itself!

Maria
"there is a huge young fantasy..."

Not their.

Sigh.

(Anonymous)

I emerge from my self-constructed dungeon in the bowels of Black Gate 11 to issue this statement:

Somebody please tell James Enge that he's probably a literary genius.

Just in case he was wondering...

Now, I descend once more.

Daniel