
<p> Robots often walk the pages of Pulphouse Fiction Magazine.</p><p> Pulphouse prides itself on crossing genre lines, blurring genre lines, and just flat mixing up genres until the genre classification means nothing. </p><p> Terms like different, off-center, twisted, and sometimes just head-scratching form the hallmarks of a Pulphousestory. </p><p> So, like everything else in Pulphouse, the robots in these ten stories might or might not fit the standard classification of robots. But they definitely scream Pulphouse!</p><p> Includes:</p><p> “The Clockwork Man’s Canteen” by J. Steven York</p><p> “nanoturds” by Ray Vukcevich</p><p> “A Little Song, A Little Dance, A Little Apocalypse Down Your Pants” by Robert Jeschonek</p><p> “Battery-Operated Boyfriend” by Barbara G. Tarn</p><p> “One-Night Stands for Love and Glory” by David H. Hendrickson</p><p> “Daisy’s Heart” by Robert J. McCarter</p><p> “Taking Care of Business” by Mary Jo Rabe</p><p> “Unfamiliar, Foreign, Outré” by Jerry Oltion</p><p> “Exchange Policy” by Scott William Carter</p><p> “Tinker Henry and the Clockwork Whore” by Jim Gotaas</p>
Page Count:
186
Publication Date:
1951-10-15
ISBN-10:
1561460931
ISBN-13:
9781561460939
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