Walter Miller's Home Page - (http://pages.prodigy.com/Hell/walter/): Ordinarily, I don't list sites that appear to be personal journals, but Walter's site is bizarre enough to warrant an exception. At first, Walter appears to be a miserable wretch crying for sympathy. Reading on--nearly peeing with laughter--you may begin to wonder if this "diary" isn't actually an elaborate, Andy Kauffman-esque hoax. Is Walter a basket-case imbicile or a sly comic genius? Maybe he's both. (25 Feb 97)
Web del Sol - (http://www.webdelsol.com/fiction.htm): Web del Sol has re-appeared with a new URL and a vastly improved new design. Gone are the obnoxious frills that made this literary webzine an eternity to load and a bitch to navigate--the current incarnation is simply beautiful. Web del Sol features some fine prose culled from a variety of publications. (18 Sept 97)
What is Reality? - (http://www.oocities.org/SoHo/8540/): Jerry Davis offers a small collection of SF stories and social parody. The parodies are only moderately amusing, but the SF stuff is REALLY good...a recommended read. (12 July 97)
Whirlgirl - (http://www.whirlgirl.com): Whirlgirl is a new weekly graphic serial novel about a superheroine with an overactive adrenal gland and a stylish dash of cyberpunk. Nefarious villians, cheezy dialog, splashy graphics, cliffhanger endings, and a hot babe in spandex--what more could you want in a comic book? Give her a whirl. (24 Aug 97)
Wingspan - (http://www.gleeful.com/Wingspan/): Related short stories about the angels of heaven and hell, locked in eternal struggle. "Do you hear the flutter of wings? Read on... " (07 Dec 97)
Writer's Round Table - (http://www.vlmnet.com/writers/): This site is more of a writer's collective than a webzine. The Round Table currently includes prose and poetry from over two dozen writers, and has a discussion area to provide advice and feedback. The site is maintained by Jason Mac Entee, who offers some amusing shorts in his section--see especially "George and Sandy" and "God and the Oracle". (20 Mar 97)