Hot August Friskys
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Zine | |
---|---|
Title: | Hot August Friskys |
Publisher: | Almost Foolproof Press |
Editor(s): | Ann Teitelbaum and Dar F |
Date(s): | 1992 (deadline for material was July 28) |
Series?: | |
Medium: | print zine |
Size: | |
Genre: | |
Fandom: | multimedia |
Language: | English |
External Links: | |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Hot August Friskys is a slash 140-page multimedia anthology.
Series
For other Frisky zines, see Frisky Business.
Contents
- Ménage a Trois de Sardonnac by Todd Parish (Alien Nation)
- Games by Jeannie Marie (Battlestar Galactica)
- Decisions by Cousins (Baywatch)
- Made For Moonlight by Jeannie Marie (Bonanza)
- New Territory by Todd Parrish (Indiana Jones)
- Loose Ends by Hephaiston (Man From UNCLE)
- Sure Fire Cure by Khylara (Memphis Belle)
- Soft Landing by Jerry K. Greenberg (Murphy Brown)
- You Can Call Me Al by Jenny Sandor (Quantum Leap)
- Bahama Beach Burn by Misty Mayfair (Quantum Leap)
- To Counsel the Doctor by Taylor Brackman (Star Trek the Next Generation)
- The Living Touch by Vixen Foxx (Star Trek the Next Generation)
- Another Word For Trust by Starr Copeland (Young Guns)
Reactions and Reviews
"Hot August Friskies" [sic], is a multi-media slash zine, covering everything from Alien Nation to Young Guns,
The two QL stories only make up 11 pages of the zine, but one of them is very good and the other is exceptional.
"Bahama Beach Bum" is just a sweet little sex story. Sam and Al, lovers, take a break from the QL Project. It's well-written, slight, and cute.
"You Can Call Me Al," by Jenny Sandor, is incredibly neat — I'm nominating it for a Stiffie Award. It's a during the series story, done completely from Al's point-of-view, which explains how Sam's meddling in history changes reality every time Sam jumps, to the point where Al's marital status, address, and sexual orientation is up for grabs. In this particular reality, for example, 'Donna' is Al's dog — let the psychologists chew on that one for a while — and he and Sam, he discovers, are lovers. The whole story would make a marvelous prelude to along, long novel — I hope Jenny Sandor writes more![1]