
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet #20
June 2007; the 20 of Robots tarot card issue
60 Pages, Half Legal $5
Fast becoming one of my favorite rags. Bite sized morsels of speculative fiction. Zine on the outside, literary journal inside. There are parts I don’t love and skip over, but the parts I love make the whole thing worthwhile. Sometimes creepy, sometimes dreamy. Favorite bits by Karen Joy Fowler and Steve Bratman. Well worth the price. Submissions send SASE for guidelines.
Small Beer Press
176 Prospect Ave
Northhampthon MA 01060
info@lcrw.net - lcrw.net
a second opinion:
  Lady Churchill's Rosebud  Wristlet
Lady Churchill's Rosebud  Wristlet is a well established small press magazine edited by Kelly Link  and Gavin Grant, both of whom have also joined Ellen Datlow to produce the 
Year's Best Fantasy and Horror anthology  series. 
Lady Churchill's publishes a  brand of lyrical, sweetly strange fiction that ranges from solid to very  special.
The most remarkable stories in Issue 20 are 
Anil Menon's "Invisible Hand", a bantering,  hilarious and poetic piece about an argument between three Hindu gods, and 
Edward McEneely's "Consider the Snorklepine",  about a fantastical little beast whose sense of human virtue has influenced its  human friends through the centuries. McEneely's style is subtle, sweet and  perfectly understated.
Other inclusions are well put together even if  they lack the delightful touch of "Invisible Hand" and "Snorklepine". "Under the  Skin", by 
Steven Bratman, describes a  small town plastic surgeon and his experience of his seriously ill daughter's  encounter with the local eccentric. The piece is fit to burst with the weight of  so many significant and complex characters but the juggling act is, in the end,  smoothly handled.
Karen Joy  Fowler's "The Last Worders" warrants particular attention. This is a long  story that requires a good deal of stamina from the reader, but the writing is  marvellous with some heartbreaking turns of phrase. Two sisters travel overseas  to confront someone from their past and encounter a strange, almost mystical  cafe in the town of their destination. The great strength of this story lies in  its treatment of the fabulous; throughout the process of discovery and  investigation, the reader remains more curious than the characters are of the  mysteries around them. This allows the strangeness of the setting to impact the  reader directly, rather than forcing them to notice by having the characters act  out their (artificial, affected) wonderment.
Some stories frankly fail to  deliver. "Workshop", by 
Laura Evans, is a  ponderous walk through false intrigue leading to disconnected scene of  desolation and despair. It has all the frustration of listening to an anecdote  told by a dear friend with a knack for circumlocution, though this approach does  come into its own in the details of that final scene. It is harder to appreciate  
Amelia Beamer's "Krishnaware", a  retelling of the familiar premise of a protagonist sacrificing real life for  immersive virtual reality. There is no new layer or extension of this oft-tried  framework, and the narrative is too heavy with unnecessary explanation for the  reader to settle in and enjoy the characters.
"The Third Kind of  Darkness", by 
M. Brock Moorer, opens with  a dull poetical exposition along the theme of the title, but goes on to unfold  an intriguing world of adult politics and manoeuvring seen through the eyes of a  child. The backbone of the narrative is a mass of smoke and mirrors and there is  not quite enough flesh to grasp or magical illusions to distract and entertain.  The protagonist is a fascinating portrait of sex versus gender but,  disappointingly, more time is spent on building the two peripheral child  characters than on developing the character at the centre of it all.
In  amongst the poetry and other various snippets, 
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet is a great  repository of fantastical writing. The style of the pieces is generally warmer  and richer than other magazines, with greater focus on language craft and  originality of imagination. A rewarding read, expansive in its  creativity.
Lady Churchill's Rosebud  WristletEditors: Gavin Grant  and Kelly Link
Publisher: Small Beer  Press
ISSN: 1544-7782
The magazine  is available from the publisher's 
website for $US5.