YOU ARE READING THE PLANET ARCHIVE SITE (1994-2004)!
Visit the current PlanetMag.com blogzine for stories, etc., published since mid-2004...
Wild Science Fiction and Fantasy
on the Web -- Free!
Since January 1994, online and in color worldwide
Planet
Magazine is the free,
award-winning and groundbreaking electronic quarterly of short science fiction
and fantasy
by emerging writers and illustrators. Our goal is to encourage authors and artists
and to just have fun.
There could be other, hidden aims, of course, motivations that are obscure and
uncomfortable,
instincts linked perhaps to primal, nonreasoning urges regarding power and procreation
--
the very same forces, no doubt, that brought down the Atlanteans
and their alabaster-towered oceanic empire.
And the Dark Gods laffed....
ISSUES FROM 1994-2004: (Planet
is published quarterly on or about
January 1, June 1, September 1, and December 1.)
(Notice:
Planet Magazine is registered with the U.S. Copyright Office
and may not be excerpted, retransmitted, or sold without the publisher's permission.)
This Web site
was designed by Andrew G. McCann and last updated on September 12, 2004.
Planet Magazine, its entire contents, and this home page are copyright (c)1993-2001 by Andrew G. McCann, expect where noted. You may not legally retransmit, excerpt, or otherwise copy Planet Magazine without the express, written permission of the publisher. In addition, you may not charge any money or any kind of fees for Planet Magazine under any circumstances without the express, written permission of the publisher. Planet Magazine has been online and registered with the U.S. Copyright Office of the Library of Congress since January 1994. Published by Cranberry Street Press, Garden City, N.Y., Planet Magazine is available internationally via this website (and formerly the defunct Etext.org site).
total page hits since November 1999.
Planet has been online since January 1994.
Planet Magazine ISSN: 1526-1840
Planet Magazine is the verbal equivalent
of an enormous Death-Ray howitzer
perched crazily atop a Swiss alp
and locked on to certain, classified brain-wave patterns.