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Flume
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23 February 2027

Brian Evenson’s fiction maps the forbidden territories of genre, innovation, transgression, and literature. With one foot in the avant-garde and the other in the pulp tradition, Evenson’s stark vision is never comfortable, always provocative, and, more often than one might think, darkly amusing.
The new novella “Flume” is a workplace comedy, of sorts. Is Flume a scientific foundation, a man, or a pair of shoes poking out from behind a curtain? Is Davies (or is it Davis?) up for a promotion, ready to end it all, or perhaps both?
“Prairie,” a prose poem about the haunted starkness of the American West, will stay with you night after lonely night.
Is literary style an illusion? Is it a dark smear marking a reader’s mind? Evenson explores these questions and more in “Anamorphosis.”
“Truth or Consequences in Non-Realist Fiction: What Are We Reading For?” is an examination of the taxonomies of genre and literary fiction, and how marketing categories influence readerly aesthetics for good…and ill.
You’ve heard of unreliable narrators, but how about unreliable writers? “A Report on Labor” is the best advice for writers you will ever read.
And featuring an in-depth Q&A with new series coeditor Nick Mamatas—topics include censorship, Mormons and Freemasons, H.P. Lovecraft, teaching writing workshops to college kids, and the pitched battle between the labor movement and artificial intelligence.
Praise for Brian Evenson
“Evenson’s stories are post-everything. They are post-human, post-reason, post-apocalyptic.”
—New York Times
“In these stories, stoniness, obduracy, harshness, madness, and violence take wing and fly, released into the air by a completely original imagination.”
—Peter Straub on Altmann’s Tongue
“Evenson distills our fascination with the gothic and how fear can be used as a lens for perceiving life.”
—Los Angeles Times
“His work will hold great appeal for fans of subtly unnerving dark fantasy.”
—Publishers Weekly starred review of Song for the Unraveling of the World
“Both on the page and as a human, Evenson is the kind of author any person could aspire to follow in the wake of; I know I have, devouring each of his books not once but multiple times as soon as I can get my hands on them.”
—Blake Butler, author of Scorch Atlas
Prairie
Interview with Nick Mamatas
Anamorphosis
Truth or Consequences in Non-Realist Fiction: What Are We Reading For?
A Report on Labor