Editor | Lynne M. Thomas |
---|---|
Editor | Michael Damian Thomas |
Categories | science fiction and fantasy |
Frequency | Bimonthly |
Founder | Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas |
Founded | 2014 |
First issue | November 4, 2014[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Website | uncannymagazine |
Uncanny Magazine is an American science fiction and fantasy online magazine, edited and published by Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas, based in Urbana, Illinois.[2] Its mascot is a space unicorn.[3]
The editors-in-chief, who originally edited Apex Magazine from 2012–2013, chose the name of the magazine because they say it "has a wonderful pulp feel", and like how the name evokes the unexpected.[4] They created the magazine "in the spirit of pulp sci-fi mags popular in the 1960s and '70s."[2]
Uncanny has been published bimonthly, beginning in November 2014, after receiving initial funding through Kickstarter.[5] It continues to fund itself through crowdfunding as well as subscriptions, which numbered 4,000 in 2017.[6][2]
The magazine publishes original works by authors such as Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Bear, Paul Cornell, Catherynne M. Valente, Charlie Jane Anders, Seanan McGuire, Mary Robinette Kowal, Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Alex Bledsoe, Nalo Hopkinson, Jane Yolen, Naomi Novik, N. K. Jemisin, G. Willow Wilson, Carmen Maria Machado, Amal El-Mohtar, Ursula Vernon, Kameron Hurley and Ken Liu, and published early stories by Alyssa Wong and Brooke Bolander.[7][2] Each issue includes new short stories, one reprint, new poems, non-fiction essays, and a pair of interviews.[6] The magazine pays its authors and artists.[6] It also produces a podcast where some of the magazine's content is read aloud.[8] They have a staff of 10 editors and receive between 1,000 and 2,000 submissions every month.[2]
In 2018, they published a disability-themed issue called Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction with content exclusively from disabled creators.[9] This was a continuation of the Destroy series originally from Lightspeed magazine; in it, the authors and illustrators envisioned "a truly accessible future is one that features rather than erases the disabled mind and body".[9] The issue won an Aurora Award for Best Related Work in 2019.[10][11]