Articles

  • 2 months ago | lightspeedmagazine.com | Wendy Wagner |Eugenia Triantafyllou

    There once was a man and his wife who had seven children, all boys. They were all very human and very poor. The youngest boy was so tiny and malnourished that they called him Little Thumb; but though small, he was very clever. Then there came a very bad year, and the famine was so great that these poor people decided to abandon their children in the woods. But that’s not how your story starts. Your story starts with the monster. • • • •You know you are the daughter of ogres.

  • Jul 19, 2024 | pseudopod.org | Eugenia Triantafyllou |Steph Bianchini |Clockpunk Studios

    Eugenia Triantafyllou is a Greek author and artist. She writes ghost stories. She currently lives in Northern Sweden with a boy and a dog. Her short fiction has appeared in Apex, Strange Horizons, Black Static and other venues. You can find her on Twitter @FoxesandRoses or her website https://eugeniatriantafyllou.wordpress.com. Find more by Eugenia Triantafyllou Steph P. Bianchini lives in Scotland after (regretfully) relocating from East Asia.

  • Jul 1, 2024 | psychopomp.com | Eugenia Triantafyllou

    Publisher’s note: this is the second of four novelettes we will be publishing this year. You can read this for free on our site (via this very page you’re on) OR, if you’d prefer to grab a PDF or ePub version of this, simply enter your email below and you’ll automatically receive it. You’ll also be signed up for our weekly amazing Letters From the Psychopomp. THE WOMAN WHOSE BODY Joanna is renting has a nosebleed. Joanna is about to get evicted again and she’s cranky about it.

  • Jun 4, 2024 | uncannymagazine.com | Eugenia Triantafyllou |Clockpunk Studios

    From: [email protected]To: Cara Hasani [email protected]September 18, 2015, 5:36 amSubject: I am drifting, but thank you for the photosMy dear Cara,Thank you for sending me the photos, I never thought I’d feel this way again. But the pictures help. They really do. I can’t stop looking at them. Thank you for scanning and emailing them to me. These photos and our old videos are all I’ve got in this place. Before your messages stop coming through, I want to tell you this: It’s all my fault, Cara.

  • Mar 5, 2024 | reactormag.com | Eugenia Triantafyllou

    It was 2010 when I first started writing fiction in my native language, Greek. There weren’t a whole lot of opportunities for artists in Greece, although many talented people exceled in various artistic mediums, so I decided to try writing in English. This came with an array of challenges to overcome, such as improving my reading and writing skills in English. Those were obstacles I had anticipated.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →