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Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars

Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars

Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars
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Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars Paperback - 2019

by Matt Schumacher

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  • Used
  • Paperback
Used - Very Good+

Description

Phantom Drift Limited. Very Good+. 2019. Paperback. 0996442634 .
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A$10.76
A$7.59 Delivery within USA
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Ships from david's books (Michigan, United States)

Details

  • Title Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars
  • Author Matt Schumacher
  • Binding Paperback
  • Condition Used - Very Good+
  • Pages 176
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Phantom Drift Limited
  • Publication date 2019
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Illustrated
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 1000139088
  • ISBN 9780996442633 / 0996442634
  • Weight 0.69 lbs (0.31 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.25 x 7.5 x 0.38 in (23.50 x 19.05 x 0.97 cm)
  • Category Fiction - Fantasy
  • Bookseller catalogues Anthologies

About david's books Michigan, United States

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Reader reviews for Phantom Drift Issue 8 Hidden Planets, Monster Stars

From the publisher

Our eighth issue, Hidden Planets, Monster Stars, is "a veritable meteoroid of energy. This issue bears the stark birthmark of an earth umbilicaled to the Anthropocene, as well as to outer space and all that chaos. It's not at all surprising that falling cosmonauts close this issue, courtesy of Sonya Plenefisch, and that Jenny Grassl's "Making Grape Conserves" has "September" "cooking in the demon pot of suns." It's apt that, in Satoshi Iwai's "Pink-Active," the speaker's brother "has transformed into a three-legged flamingo living near the melted power plant," and quite fitting indeed that Harrison Demchick's ethereal mermaid hails from a tempting subterranean world known as "Magicland," where it is "never too hot." It's felicitous that, during Rick Krizman's tale, "little gods," "tiny lifeless faces with surprised looks" looked on "as the wind blew the grassfire back into the fields, and everything shushed." -- Matt Schumacher, from his Introduction

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