Winter 2017 Issue
Our Winter 2017 issue of Psychopomp Magazine is available now. Featuring fiction by Julia Coursey, Lindsay Fowler, James R. Gapinski, and Nikki Stein. You can read the full issue on your computer or… Continue reading
Our Winter 2017 issue of Psychopomp Magazine is available now. Featuring fiction by Julia Coursey, Lindsay Fowler, James R. Gapinski, and Nikki Stein. You can read the full issue on your computer or… Continue reading
Writer Jason Marc Harris answered questions from Psychopomp‘s own editorial intern, Xai Thao, about writing, teaching, and his story “The Handle,” A Psychopomp Magazine Short Fiction Award finalist in 2016. You can read… Continue reading
The Fall 2016 issue of Psychopomp Magazine is now live.
Featuring work by McKenzie Hightower, Morgan Fox, Hugh Behm-Steinberg, and Vera Kurian.
We’re pleased to announce Psychopomp Magazine’s nominations for the 2016 Best of the Net Anthology. Jaclyn Watterson’s “Charlie’s Kidney” That winter, so many animals and people froze to death the state began distributing their carcasses… Continue reading
The Summer 2016 issue of Psychopomp Magazine is now live. Inside you’ll find prose by Danielle Lea Buchanan, Molly Gutman, Jason Marc Harris, Steven Wolf, and the first place winner of our 2016… Continue reading
From now until May 15, 2016 we’ll be reading flash fiction for the Summer 2016 issue of Psychopomp Magazine. It’s completely free to submit, and you can send us up to three short… Continue reading
Our Spring 2016 issue of Psychopomp Magazine is now live. Inside you’ll find prose by David Wirthlin, Julia Park Tracey, Kelly Kiehl, Ron Burch, and Jessica Rutland, in addition to visual art by… Continue reading
We’re pleased to announce the results of our 2016 Psychopomp Magazine Short Fiction Contest. All authors will be listed alphabetically by name within their categories. It was a pleasure to receive so many… Continue reading
There once was an orchid named Ed. He fell in total love with a wasp named Earl, who loved Ed back, totally. Together they became something else, not Earl and not Ed… Continue reading
After Justin’s father left and his mother began drinking, Justin would walk through the rooms and touch things his father had touched, what she hadn’t thrown out or broken, would feel these solid objects… Continue reading