Gargarney - (http://www.ldd.net/scribers/tpowel/): "You can tell by the wind-up chicken that this is a different kind of literary site." Not much selection here yet (only two stories), but this new website dedicated to high-quality short humor is off to a great start. Recommended. (08 Nov 97)
The Gathered - (http://home.earthlink.net/~foxmj/): An episodic horror/fantasy tale, written in movie-script format, about a group of college students transported into a nightmare. Death, sex, and dark humor--if your video collection has titles like "Nightmare on Elm Street", "Army of Darkness", and "Dusk 'til Dawn", you'll LOVE this site! (13 Oct 97)
Grape-poetry (grepoetry) - (http://www.seacoast.com/~greperry): This poetry 'zine is publishing weekly installments of a WWW novel called "Journey to the Ancient Cities of the Old World, Bearing the Seven Thousand Wonders" which may be of interest to netizens. Set in Blacksburg, VA, it's a fictionalized account of the conflict between a professor and his students based on the real-life Blacksburg Electronic Village project in which over half of this small college town was wired to the Internet. Overblown prose and poor HTML linking and layout make the novel difficult to read. (11 Apr 97)
Grid - (http://www.vicon.net/~rwlucier/): Bob Lucier posts a small collection of short stories--many of them fragments of an unpublished novel. An offbeat collection of unusual character studies and well-turned phrases. Warning: some adult themes. (07 Dec 97)
Gruene Street - (http://ebbs.english.vt.edu/olp/gs/gruene.html): Their subtitle, "An Internet Journal of Prose & Poetry," sums them up nicely. Their design is very plain, letting the texts speak for themselves unadorned. . . webmasters take note: sometimes less is more. (27 Feb 97)
Gutter Voice - (http://www.io.org/~gutter/voice.html): This little 'zine bills itself as "a periodic slice of the best of dangerous literary fiction on the Web." Each issue features one or two shorts by a single author. I don't know how dangerous this stuff really is, but it's certainly dark and disturbing. (14 Mar 97)