

The cover evidently ‘showcases the sensual explorations of women trapped in their alien environments’. (Personally, I’d much rather do without ‘Dragons!’) The layout certainly looks similar to the likes of other sfnal mags like Starlog/SFX, although I’m not sure how many people browsing the shelves will spot that the top strapline ‘Aliens! Murder! Celebrities! Dragons! Sex! Food!’ is tongue in cheek. The masthead and cover layout have been changed following professional advice, with a view to Interzone sitting more comfortably on the bookshelves. With the previous regime a smoky bar in Brighton seemed to be the only way of keeping abreast of plans (although the plans were evidently to keep on doing what had been done for the last 180 issues).Ĭosmetically, this issue is as big a step forward as there has been in the magazine’s near 20 years.

John McIndoe Ltd, Dunedin, 1973.TTA Press took over Interzone last year, and it has made a refreshing change to be party to the thoughts behind what publisher/editor Andy Cox and his team have in mind with regard to the direction of the venerable title, through the TTA Press Discussion Boards. European travel notes, art criticism and stories of "Cultural Contact". The Trust awards an amount of money each year to an aspiring artist or writer. The Caselberg Trust, a charitable trust supporting artists, is named in honour of John and Anna Caselberg.

Caselberg was awarded the Robert Burns Fellowship from the University of Otago in 1961. Along with his wife, artist Anna Caselberg, he was at the centre of a thriving art and literary milieu which included his good friend and collaborator Colin McCahon, father-in-law Toss Woollaston, and writer Charles Brasch. His work ranged through poetry and playwriting to short stories and essays. Fitzclarence Anstey John Caselberg (19 August 1927 – 16 April 2004) was a New Zealand writer.Ĭaselberg was born at Wakefield, south of Nelson, in 1927 and educated at Nelson College from 1936 to 1944.
