-- ** ******* * * * * * * * ** * ******* ***** **** * ***** ** ** ******* * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *** **** * *** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * **** * * * **** * * * ================================================ InterText Vol. 4, No. 5 / September-October 1994 ================================================ Contents FirstText: The Road More Traveled.................Jason Snell SecondText: Here Comes the Flood.................Geoff Duncan Short Fiction Sometimes a Man_.................................Steve Conger_ The Gardener_.......................................Jim Cowan_ The Monkey Trap_.................................Kyle Cassidy_ Serial Access_...............................E. Jay O'Connell_ The Thieves_.......................................Levi Asher_ Underground, Overground_.........................Simon Nugent_ Fallen Star, Live-In God_....................Rachel R. Walker_ .................................................................... Editor Assistant Editor Jason Snell Geoff Duncan jsnell@etext.org gaduncan@halcyon.com .................................................................... Assistant Editor Send subscription requests, story Susan Grossman submissions, and correspondence c/o intertext@etext.org to intertext@etext.org .................................................................... InterText Vol. 4, No. 5. InterText (ISSN 1071-7676) is published electronically on a bi-monthly basis. Reproduction of this magazine is permitted as long as the magazine is not sold (either by itself or as part of a collection) and the entire text of the issue remains intact. Copyright 1994, Jason Snell. Individual stories Copyright 1994 their original authors. .................................................................... FirstText: The Road More Traveled by Jason Snell ==================================================== Welcome to Tortured Metaphors 101. Today, class, we'll be discussing the tortured metaphor of The Road. But first, let me give you an example: The Road to InterText has been an interesting one. Though it's now getting toward the end of 1994 and I'm editing a electronically distributed fiction magazine that's read by thousand of people on six continents, I was on The Road long before InterText first appeared in early 1991. Now, my first experience with Internet publishing was Quanta, when it first appeared in 1989. This story goes back further. In 1985 I was a high school student armed only with an Apple IIe computer, a 300 baud modem, and a lot of spare time. So what did I do? I ended up as the operator of the only computer bulletin board system in Tuolumne County, California. At the time, most of the Apple II bulletin boards I knew were involved in only two sorts of business: software piracy and adolescent chats about what your favorite pirated game was. And so, for a while, that was what my bulletin board, Starbase 209, focused on. Pirated software and inane conversation, all on an Apple II with about 128K of RAM and 800K of disk space. It was a cozy place, to say the least. I lost interest in piracy pretty quickly. Instead, I was drawn to another section of my system--a "library" of plain text files, usually filled with information about piracy or how to build letter bombs. Classy stuff. What did I do with that area? I turned it into an on-line fiction area, featuring stories that my friends and I had written. Looking back on that time (and on those files--I still have most of them), I wince at just how horrible my writing was. The quality of the fiction I wrote in the mid-'80s isn't really the issue, however. The key is that I had been drawn to creating works of fiction, editing them, formatting them for the limitations of the on-line format, and putting them out for people to read. They became the most popular section of the system, especially when a friend of mine and I began writing a monthly adventure serial--always featuring a cliffhanger ending, of course. Though the audience was sorely limited and the quality of the material was questionable at best, those stories were the dirt road that became the paved thoroughfare that is InterText. I shut down Starbase 209, went off to college, and began exploring the Internet. On one Usenet newsgroup (probably rec.arts.startrek, I read an announcement from a student at Carnegie Mellon University saying that an on-line science fiction magazine was starting up. I sent in one of those stories that appeared on the bulletin board ("Into Gray"), and it appeared in the first issue of Daniel K. Appelquist's Quanta. In Quanta I read about another on-line magazine, Jim McCabe's Athene, and subscribed to it. And when Jim McCabe announced he no longer had the time to produce Athene, I decided that I'd create something to replace Athene. On The Road again. My rationale for starting InterText was that since Quanta was a science fiction magazine, if Athene went away there'd be no place on the Net for writers of non-genre fiction to go. And at the time, it may have been true. Of course, since then the size of the Internet has grown radically and any number of on-line publications have sprung up. More appear each day, and while some fade away quickly, others seem to be in it for the long haul. I'll bet some of the editors of those publications got their start someplace like where I got mine--some bulletin board in an out-of-the-way place. But now it's nearly ten years later, and we don't have to toil in isolation anymore. We're all out here on the Net together. It couldn't have happened at a better time. Heck, if it happened ten years ago, people worldwide would've seen the awful stories I wrote at the age of 14. Instead, it's just people in my home town. I can live with that. I can see from my watch that we're all out of time for today. But we're not done with The Road yet, class. Your homework: work 50 different permutations of the phrase "Information Superhighway" into a two-page essay. My suggestion? Write a news story about the Internet. It'll be _easy._ SecondText: Here Comes the Flood by Geoff Duncan ==================================================== I don't know if you've noticed, but the Internet is growing. Sure, there's been plenty of off-line hype in the papers and on the talk shows. Newsweek--that bastion of politics and info-graphics--has a new page called "Cyberscope" in which they profile on-line issues. CNN has developed a tendency to pounce on stories about the Net and its culture, particularly when it might involve something scandalous. And there's Wired, the self-anointed travelogue for digital hipsters, preaching its own revolution, flashing fluorescent colors, and declaring NCSA Mosaic the greatest thing since the Last Supper. The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal alternately declare the Internet a ripe, fast growing market, then say its size is overestimated. Whatever. It's clear The Establishment is starting to plug in and get on-line. Of course, the hype hasn't been limited to traditional media. Commercial on-line services are engaged in a shoving match to see who's More-Internet-Than-Thou. Delphi was the first to offer significant Internet access as part of its package, but it wasn't until America Online released torrents of "uncouth" newbies into Usenet newsgroups that we started to see a culture clash between long-time Internet geeks and people who thought