Seth Harrington can be invisible or undetectable, but he is not a superhero. The ability only works in morally grey situations; the rest of the time, he can't turn it on and off at will. He can use a movie ticket stub to buy a coffee or a one-dollar bill to pay for a cell phone. He can stop muggings in plain sight, unseen, but only with worse violence. But this only adds to his confusion about his place in the world. Still reeling from the horrors of the September 11 terrorist attacks and ambivalent about his future, Seth is at a crossroads: Can he be one of the good guys by doing bad things,...
Seth Harrington can be invisible or undetectable, but he is not a superhero. The ability only works in morally grey situations; the rest of the time, ...
Stephen Theaker Antonella Coriander Marshall Moore
Six stories appear in issue 51 of Theaker's Quarterly Fiction: "Too Much Light Makes the Day Go Blind" by Marshall Moore, "One Slough and Crust of Sin" by Walt Brunston, "Water Imperial" by Charles Wilkinson, "The Assassin's Lair" by Howard Phillips, "Whale on a Tilt" by Andrea M. Pawley and "Cybertronica" by Antonella Coriander. There are also fifteen reviews, by Stephen Theaker, Douglas J. Ogurek and Jacob Edwards, looking at the work of Lavie Tidhar, Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell, Henry Kuttner, David Ramirez, Joe Abercrombie, and Paul Magrs, as well as Space Battleship Yamato, Jupiter...
Six stories appear in issue 51 of Theaker's Quarterly Fiction: "Too Much Light Makes the Day Go Blind" by Marshall Moore, "One Slough and Crust of Sin...