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Opium magazine logo.

Opium is a journal featuring fiction, comics, poetry and humor. Founded by Todd Zuniga, the magazine first appeared online in 2001 and in print in 2005. It was based in San Francisco[1] and later, it is headquartered in New York City.[2] It features many notable writers and artists including Etgar Keret, Aimee Bender, Tao Lin, David Gaffney, Davis Schneiderman, Alison Weaver, Jamie Iredell, D.B. Weiss, Diane Williams, Jessy Randall, Tana Wojczuk, Pia Z. Ehrhardt, Ben Greenman, Jack Handey, Dawn Raffel, Stuart Dybek, Josip Novakovich, Dan Golden, Terese Svoboda, Benjamin Percy, Shya Scanlon, Greg Sanders, Christopher Kennedy and Art Spiegelman. Exclusive on-line material has included work by Martha Clarkson, Stacy Muszynski, Brigit Kelly Young and Iris Gribble-Neal.

Opium hosts the Literary Death Match, a competitive, humor-centric reading series that features four writers in a read-off, all critiqued by three judges. Opium Europe features all-new content written solely by Europeans, in both French and English, both online and off. Opium Studio, scheduled to open in Spring 2009, is a virtual art gallery that showcases everything from wit-inspired cartoons to paintings to collage to sculpture. Opium Live is an interview series that features interviews with authors and artists.

In June 2009, Opium launched Opium 8, "The Infinity Issue," featuring conceptual artist Jonathan Keats and "The Longest Story Ever Told."[3] To create this nine-word story, Keats used a double layer of black ink and masked the words with an incrementally screened overlay. It can be read at a pace of one word per century, or as ultraviolet light fades the overlay.[4] According to the artist, the reading of this story is predicted to take one thousand years.[5] Keats' work is covered worldwide including in America, Brazil, Russia,[6] the UK,[7] Turkey, Japan, and France.[8]

In Fall of 2009, Opium released their ninth issue, dubbed "The Mania Issue". It features stories and poetry by writers including Jonathan Baumbach, Dawn Raffel, Dean Young, Kathleen Rooney, and Elisa Gabbert, as well as a "Fan Fiction Explosion" curated by previous Opium contributor Shya Scanlon.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ 2009 Novel & Short Story Writer's Market. Penguin Publishing Group. 1 July 2008. p. 501. ISBN 978-1-58297-664-8.
  2. ^ The O. Henry Prize Stories 2013: Including stories by Donald Antrim, Andrea Barrett, Ann Beattie, Deborah Eisenberg, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Kelly Link, Alice Munro, and Lily Tuck. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. 10 September 2013. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-345-80326-9.
  3. ^ The long nine words The New Yorker, June 24, 2009
  4. ^ NBC Washington, June 23, 2009
  5. ^ Mediabistro, June 23, 2009
  6. ^ Lenta June 18, 2009
  7. ^ "The Couch Surfer: A 1,000-year story is about as practical as a shark in formaldehyde", The Independent, June 22, 2009
  8. ^ 20 Minutes Archived 2009-06-26 at the Wayback Machine, June 23, 2009

External links[edit]

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