First Order of Business: May, June & July Short Fiction

Thanks to the Carl Brandon Society for having me as a guest blogger this month! I’m very excited about contributing and will hopefully institute a few regular features. The first one I’ve already talked about a bit on my other blog, The Angry Black Woman — each month we’re going to list the short fiction that’s been published by POC in magazines and anthologies. Part of the CBS mission is to bring attention to our fiction and I’m happy to facilitate that. Plus, I like having a handy reading list each month of stories I’m likely to be interested in.

Since it’s already July I’m going to spend the month playing catch up. So for today here are all the short stories published by POC in magazines in May, June and July that I know about. Want to be included in this or future lists? Check out the verbiage below the stories.

May 2009

June 2009

July 2009

Should your story be on this list? If it was published anytime in 2009, then: yes. Please let me know! I’m also going to add stories to the Carl Brandon wiki and I don’t want to miss any. If you’re a POC author and had a spec fic story published in a magazine or anthology, be it online or print, in 2009, please fill out this form.

Editors are welcome to alert me of stories I missed as well. I hope that editors and authors will give me a heads up every month!

Welcome K. Tempest Bradford, Guest Blogger

The Carl Brandon Society is pleased to announce that writer and artist K. Tempest Bradford will be guest blogging for us for the month of July. She is the founder of the Angry Black Woman blog (where CBS steering committee member Nisi Shawl has been guest blogging). She is also a writer of fiction, a jewelry artist, and a dramatist, amongst many other things. You can find her extended bio at http://tempest.fluidartist.com/about/

Justice League of America fans who prefer tokenism

Dwayne McDuffie (co-founder and creator of Milestone media and the comics writer who co-created Static Shock and other black comic book heroes) points out some of the reader responses to his final issue of Justice League of America, featuring the JLA teaming with Icon and Hardware in battle with Starbreaker:

I don’t think anyone will support an original black “mainstream” character. I know I won’t.

Maybe they should establish a separate league for all the negro superheroes. I’m not saying kick them ALL off. One would be okay. (Doesn’t Hollywood have some kind of law that says every movie has to have at least one black in it?) I just think they’re going overboard with all this diversity stuff. I mean, how many comics do minorities read anyway?