FAQ

What is Carousel Chain?

Carousel Chain is an ongoing series of short stories set in the world of the Carousel, where archipelagos of fantastic islands drift over a magical land. This setting serves as a backdrop for self-contained, sequential stories about a collection of wildly different characters. A new story is published every other week, along with accompanying artwork.

Why should I be interested?

If you like short stories, or enjoy web-comics with an ongoing storyline, you might enjoy Carousel Chain. If you like serial storylines such as Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time, or J. Michael Strazinky's television show Babylon 5, or any of numerous anime shows, you'll probably like Carousel Chain.

How can I keep up with a site that only updates every other week?

Good question! I know I have trouble keeping up with sites that update every day. That's why I've created a handy-dandy announcement list. On it, I'll announce when a new story is posted, or anything else about the site changes that I think you might be interested in. Instructions for signing up can be found on the 'Email' page.

Will you post stories I write?

Not at this time. Carousel Chain is neither a magazine nor a shared world. However, any changes to this policy will be announced on the mailing lists.

Who is [blah]?

Check the Concordance.

Who draws the art?

Kevin Maginn

Who writes the stories?

Chrysoula Tzavelas

Who designed the website?

Chrysoula Tzavelas and Kevin Maginn

How did they do that?

Nested frames and cascading style sheets.

Who hosts the website?

100megswebhosting.com

How can I stay abreast of changes to the site, such as new stories?

Sign up for announce@carouselchain.com.

How do I find other people who also read Carousel Chain?

Check out the Forum link above.

This site looks terrible on [browsername/operating system/screen resolution/color depth]! Fix it!

This site was designed to be viewed with a recent version of Internet Explorer (4.0 or later), on a modern operating system, with a color depth of at least 16 bits, and a screen resolution of at least 800x600 (and preferably 1024x768). If that's not you, sorry.