This magazine is supported entirely by donations. If you'd like to help support the writers in this issue and keep Helix in existence, then please use the button below:

Or you can send a check to:

Lawrence Evans, Managing Editor
Helix
P.O. Box 3912,
Gaithersburg, MD
20885-3912

Donors will receive an email announcement of the contents of the next issue, and an early private preview of that issue.

Helix is embarrassed to confess that J., the last novel by our steamed Senior Editor, is now once more available in a new edition from Norilana Books in both hardcover and paperback versions. With the holiday season approaching, buy several copies as gifts for your enemies.

10/16/2007


Helix is proud to announce that "Port Custodial Blues" by Vera Nazarian and "Tonino and the Incubus" by Peg Robinson received Honorable Mentions for the 2007 Washington Science Fiction Association Small Press Short Fiction Award. Helix Managing Editor Lawrence Watt-Evans accepted the Honorable Mention certificates on their behalf at Capclave, WSFA's annual convention.

Congratulations, Vera and Peg!

10/14/2007


Helix Webmistress and Belly Dance Consultant Melanie Fletcher is pleased to announce that her novella Sabre Dance, which will form half of Yard Dog Press's Double Dog #4 (with Laura J. Underwood's The Lunari Mask), is now available for ordering.

When a spoiled duchess is kidnapped by a marriage-minded caliph's heir, Sgt. Adrianne Roche of the Queen's Own Sabres is sent to the rescue. Masquerading as a belly dancer and unwillingly teamed with a magic-using monsignor, Adrianne must stop this royal wedding — or else.

08/10/2007


Helix is proud to announce that the following stories received Honorable Mentions in the 2006 Year's Best Science Fiction collection:

Issue #1:
"A Feast of Cousins" by Beth Bernobich
"The Sum of Things" by Robert M. Brown
"Mahmoud's Wives" by Janis Ian
"Going to See the Beast" by William Sanders

Issue #2:
"Put Up Your Hands" by Terry Bisson
"The Padre, the Rabbi, and the Devil His Own Self" by Melanie Fletcher
"Tonino and the Incubus" by Peg Robinson

Congratulations to our writers!

07/17/2007


Helix is pleased to announce that Lawrence Schimel won 3rd place in the Rhysling Award for his poem "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Hole" (published in Helix #3).

The Rhysling Award is given annually by the Science Fiction Poetry Association in two categories, long and short, and has been won in the past by Gene Wolfe, Ursula K. LeGuin, Michael Bishop and Joe Haldeman.

Congratulations, Lawrence!

07/08/2007


Helix has been awarded Honorable Mention for best new online magazine of 2006 in the Million Writers Award competition, sponsored by storySouth magazine.

Five Helix stories have made the "Notable Short Stories of 2006" list, which is the long list for the Million Writers Award: "City of Chimeras" by Richard Bowes (Helix #1), "A Feast of Cousins" by Beth Bernobich (Helix #1), "Mahmoud's Wives" by Janis Ian (Helix #1), "Put Up Your Hands" by Terry Bisson (Helix #2) and "Tonino and the Incubus" by Peg Robinson (Helix #2). Finalists will be named on May 23.

05/09/2007


HELIX is proud to announce that of the eight poems we published in 2006, fully half have been honored with a Rhysling nomination. Our nominees are Mike Allen for "Manifest Density," William Sanders for "The Last Madman" (both from HELIX 2), JoSelle Vanderhooft for "Pluto Contemplates His Next Career" and Lawrence Schimel for "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Hole" (both from HELIX 3).

The Rhysling Award is given annually by the Science Fiction Poetry Association in two categories, long and short, and has been won in the past by Gene Wolfe, Ursula K. LeGuin, Michael Bishop and Joe Haldeman.

HELIX congratulates our nominated poets and wishes them the very best of luck.

03/15/2007


In response to a number of inquiries: no, there are no plans for a downloadable version of Helix. Even if we wanted to do that, we couldn't, because we do not own the download rights to the stories. We buy online rights only.

08/05/2006


We have learned that according to the rules of the World Science Fiction Convention, in order to be considered a semiprozine, we must among other things announce ourselves to be a semiprozine.

Therefore be it known to all and sundry — and mondry too, for that matter — that Helix is a semiprozine; amen, so mote it be.

07/28/2006

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©2008 Helix. No content may be used without permission.       This issue published January 1, 2008