Three-lobed Burning Eye
- For the manifestation of Nyarlathotep in Lovecraft's fiction, see The Haunter of the Dark.
Three-lobed Burning Eye is an online magazine of speculative fiction edited by Andrew S. Fuller. First published in 1999, it features stories from the genres of horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction, as well as magical realism or slipstream.[1] All issues are collected in an annual print anthology. It is sometimes referred to as 3LBE magazine, with the subhead, "Stories that monsters like to read."
Authors
Early issues featured stories by Gemma Files, D. F. Lewis, Laird Barron, Tim Waggoner, and Kealan Patrick Burke. More recent issues have included fiction by Adam Browne, Lida Broadhurst, Nadia Bulkin, Cody Goodfellow, J M McDermott, Darren Speegle, Edward Morris, and Shweta Narayan.
Artists
The first fifteen issues and four annuals included an art gallery, and featured award-winning artists like Joachim Luetke, David Ho, and Alessandro Bavari. Cover artist Rew X is Fuller's visual artist pseudonym.
History
Years before the online incarnation, Three-lobed Burning Eye was an independent literary magazine magazine founded by Fuller and his friend Matthew Duncan while attending Bowling Green State University as Creative Writing students. Its original run lasted four printed issues from 1991-1993.
In 1998, Fuller revived the magazine in name, with a direction more appropriate to the title, publishing decidedly more speculative fiction. Poetry, reviews, interviews, and even the editorial letter were considered distractions from a simple set of stories. At the time, the online format and an email submission system were not widely accepted practices for magazines.
Publishing frequency has changed over the last decade, from the original quarterly schedule, to triannual, to "2-3 times per year," with a few unintentional hiatuses, which have made the print anthologies less than annual. In 2010, the magazine released two issues in May and October. All issues remain archived online. Though the website design has changed using CSS development, the magazine retains its original intention of one story per page, without advertising. Print annual anthologies I-IV included four issues each of the online magazine, while volume V included five. These were available in limited black-and-white or color editions, available only during one pre-order period.
The magazine's name is a vague reference to H. P. Lovecraft's story "The Haunter of the Dark," in which the character Robert Blake concludes the story's narrative with his terrified record of what he can only glimpse of the approaching beast. "I see it-- coming here-- hell-wind-- titan-blur-- black wings-- Yog-Sothoth save me-- the three-lobed burning eye..." Despite the title's origin, the magazine has largely avoided publishing Cthulhu Mythos stories.
Awards & Recognition
In 2011, "A Feather's Weight" by Jessica Reisman (issue 19) and "The Edge of the World" by DeAnna Knippling (issue 20) were included on the honorable mentions list in Best Horror of the Year Volume 3 by Ellen Datlow.
See also
References
- ↑ Locus Online reviews entry June 2010 by Lois Tilton