Ben Loory
July 11, 1971 – present
Birth place: Dover, New Jersey, USA
Browse magazine works (first published 2009)
Ben Loory is a writer of short stories, most of which are fables or absurd fantasies, and creative non-fiction, as well as a screenwriter and a musician. He is a member of the SFWA and the HWA. He is a graduate of Harvard University and earned an MFA in Screenwriting from the American Film Studies Institute. <br /><br />The following online stories have not yet appeared in print: * "The Reapers." <i>Moon-Drenched Fables</i> (September 15, 2009). * "The Rats in the Town Dump." <i>Dogzplot</i> (September 2009). <a href="http://dogzplot.blogspot.com/2009/09/rats-in-town-dump-ben-loory.html">link</a> * "Aesop's Journey Through the Twilight Zone." <i>Static Movement</i> (September 21, 2009). * "Man Woman Egg Bird." <i>Cantaraville</i> 12 (October 2009). * "The Parable of the Pebbles." <i>Weirdyear</i> (October 18, 2009). <a href="http://weirdyear.blogspot.ca/2009_10_18_archive.html">link</a> * "The Cigarette." <i>PANK</i> 4.12 (December 2009); <i>Novembre Magazine</i> (July 30, 2014). <a href="http://novembremagazine.com/the-cigarette-by-ben-loory-coolover-by-maximilian-zentz-zlomovitz">link</a> * "The Pilot." <i>Lit Up</i> (December 18, 2009). <a href="https://litupmagazine.wordpress.com/category/contents/fiction/page/5/">link</a> * "The Book of Jokes & Stories." <i>MiCrow</i> (Winter 2010). * "The Boxer." <i>Red Fez</i> (February 2010). <a href="https://www.redfez.net/fiction/the-boxer-a-fable-114">link</a> * "The Woman, the Vase, and the Flowers." <i>Enchanted Conversation</i> (April 10, 2010). <a href="http://www.enchantedconversation.org/2009/04/woman-vase-and-flowers-by-ben-loory.html">link</a> * "The Satellite." <i>Xenith</i> (April 24, 2010). * "The Assassin." <i>Danse Macabre</i> (April 25, 2010). * "Steel." <i>Residential Aliens</i> (May 1, 2010). * "The Drunk." <i>Cabinet des Fées</i> 10 (May 18, 2010). <a href="http://www.cabinetdesfees.com/2010/the-drunk/">link</a> * "Thorns." <i>BLIP Magazine</i> (Spring 2011). * "Rain." <i>The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts</i> (June 8, 2015).