For This Issue:
"...features different themes that focus on betrayal, aging, and communication, [and] leaves the reader feeling as though they have entered a new realm."
- The Hudson Current, Diana Schwaeble (read full interview here)
"Sybil's Garage No. 4 is an alienating thinga saturation tank of isolation and the sublime. Like its first three predecessors, Issue 4 aligns the quietly bizarre and the slightly uncanny with nineteenth-century design. That’s not to say that Sybil’s Garage is easily classifiable, either in form or content. Victorian woodcuts share pagespace with postmodern silhouettes and modernist sketches. Fragments of polyglottal marginalia pepper Sybil’s pagesappearing everywhere like cryptic typesetter’s notes. From the first glimpse of the Bladerunneresque cover to the final, stunning woodcut, this issue is its own work of slipstream art."
- Behind the Wainscot, Darin Bradley (read full review here)
"If you like 'alternate' science fiction, then this is for you."
- SFRevu, Sam Tomaino (read full review here)
"A solid four stars."
- Isadrone (LJ reviewer) (read full review here)
For Issue No. 3:
"...imaginative and intriguing, even if not all of it is SF."
- The Internet Review of Science Fiction, Lois Tilton (read full review here [login required])
"...this volume of work is sure to grab the reader's attention."
- The Hudson Current, Diana Schwaeble (read full interview here)
"Sybil's Garage is a unique little small press magazine..."
- SFRevu, Sam Tomaino (read full review here)
"The magazine is sprinkled throughout (to excellent effect) with early 20th century b&w illustrations and photographs. Beneath the title of each tale or poem is a nice touch the name of a recommended piece of music to listen to while you are reading."
- Whispers of Wickedness, Barry J House (read full review here)
Cat Rambo's "Lonesome Trail" is "a succinct, magical transmutation of poetry-writing into a night journey through a luminous desert valley." Yoon Ha Lee's "So That Her High-Born Kinsmen Came" is "a haunting glance into the mind of a nursing mother." Eric Gregory’s "The Redaction of Flight 5766" is "fascinating [and] ambiguous." Brian Conn's "Six Questions About the Sun" is "a gloriously inventive alternate cosmology."
- Emerald City, Nic Clarke (read full review here)