Wednesday, April 2, 2025

The 40 But 10: Jean Ende




I've pulled together 40ish questions - some bookish, some silly - and have asked authors to limit themselves to answering only 10 of them. That way, it keeps the interviews fresh and connectable for all of us!


Today we are joined by Jean Ende. She is a native NYer who is trying to exorcise her background by writing fiction influenced by her Jewish family in the Bronx, NY. A former reporter for daily newspapers in Westchester, NY and Jersey City, NJ, she was a press secretary in the NY City government and for several political candidates. When she left politics, Jean spent several years doing communications work for public service organizations which led to her decision to go over to the dark side. An English major with a degree from CCNY, Jean got an MBA from the Columbia University School of Business. She became a VP at a major commercial bank, wrote for business magazines and taught marketing in college management departments. Jean has had two dozen short stories published in print and online magazines and anthologies in the US and England and her work has been recognized by major literary competitions. This is her first novel. Jean and her dog now live in Brooklyn which is a foreign country to anyone from the Bronx. 






What made you start writing?

I’ve always been a writer, can’t remember not writing, that was the way I gained acceptance. The first thing I remember writing was the play my class performed in the fourth grade. I didn’t think I’d be chosen for a part. But I was pretty sure I could write a play that fit the theme. I wrote it, the teacher thought it was great and I cast myself in the lead role. Similarly, my first summer in sleep-away camp I was a pudgy kid who was useless at athletics and picked last for the team. But during color war my team needed some songs to pep up our presentation, I was already writing poetry, found another kid who was feeling left out but could make up tunes. All of a sudden we both had friends and someone to sit next to at mealtime.

 

What’s the most useless skill you possess?

I remember song lyrics. Especially really terrible bubble-gum music from the ‘50s and 60s and theme songs from TV commercials and shows. Total waste of brain cells since I can’t carry a tune and have learned not to try singing out loud when there’s anyone around. I have learned to sing under the car radio or tapes when I’m not alone.

 

What’s the best money you’ve ever spent as a writer?

Going to writers workshops in other states and countries. Nothing beats the opportunity to travel with like-minded people who ask what sort of writing you do instead of what you do for a living. I’ve attended programs in Greece, Italy, Wales, New England, California and Florida in addition to programs near my home in New York. As a result I’ve now got friends of various ages and backgrounds who stay in touch, share literary achievements and provide encouragement.

 

What is your favorite way to waste time?

I watch TV, especially repeats of old series. I watch almost all popular shows, medical, police, family drama but generally avoid quiz shows and never watch sports. When I teach marketing I have to watch the Superbowl because we discuss the ads. But now that the ads are shown online I can avoid the game. I subscribe to almost all available cable networks.

 

 

 

 

What are some of your favorite books and/or authors

Anything written by Grace Paley. I’m in awe of the way she was able to write books that formed such an immediate connection with the reader and at the same time maintained a life as a leading social activist. Almost anything written by John McPhee. His books are so well written that I’ll stay up all night devouring books about things I have absolutely no interest in. I’m the last person in the world who’d ever build a birch bark canoe (see question 23) but I couldn’t stop reading his essay on how to do that. Only exception is his work on geology, just couldn’t get through that.

 

What genres won’t you read?

I stay away from, how to, books. I’m a natural klutz and better off paying someone to put together things for me than to try to figure it out for myself and wind up with wobbly furniture and dishes that don’t look or taste like the cookbook illustrations and descriptions. I’m particularly adverse to gardening books. I have a black thumb and can kill artificial plants. Let farmers, chefs and real craftspeople do what they can do and I won’t resent paying them.

 

Do you read the reviews of your books or stay far far away from them and why?

I read the reviews as soon as I can get my hands on them. Then I read them again and again. Then I ask friends if they agree. Doesn’t matter if they’re good or bad, I need reassurance that my writing is actually being published and people are reacting to it. Definitely use negative reviews to try to improve future writing by understanding what I did wrong or could do better. Have to admit that I firmly believe that positive reviews are written by people who are smarter than those who write the negative things.

 

If you were on death row what would your last meal be?

My first reaction is to say, bring on the high calorie, high carb junk food. After a lifetime of feeling fat, trying to diet and suffering from a guilty conscience because I was a Weight Watchers cheater, I might welcome a chance to stop worrying about how I’m going to look. Jewish funerals involve closed caskets, who would know that I’ve been gorging on buckets of KFC, french fries and the ice cream sundae called the kitchen sink that my friends and I shared in high school after Saturday night movies. But on second thought, it’s hard to imagine what I’d be doing in one of the few states that still permit capital punishment. Can’t believe someone wouldn’t have enough influence to get me a last minute reprieve from the governor so I probably shouldn’t overdo it. A Big Mac, small order of fries and one scoop of ice cream with chocolate sauce and no sprinkles or whipped cream should do it in case I have to appear on the news the next day.

 

What scares you the most?

Senility. I watched my grandmother and then my mother outlive their minds. They were bright, proud, independent women who took too long to die and would have been appalled to see the blithering wrecks they became. I always make sure that I’ve left DNR instructions before any serious medical procedures.

 

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So, what’s a nice girl from a good family doing in a place like the Bronx House of Detention?

 

Like all immigrants who flee persecution, when the Rosens escaped the Nazis they thought life in America would be perfect. And for a while it seemed like it was. The men started businesses and provided comfortable homes with a mink stole in every hall closet, the women served abundant helpings of high carb food and offered Nobel-worthy diplomacy and grandma preserved traditions while finishing a bottle of whiskey every week.

 

But then cracks began to appear and the whole structure became shaky. American born, teenager, Rebecca, pushed boundaries so far the family story suddenly included the police and juvenile justice system; her father, a formerly revered Talmudic scholar mourned his loss of status in this money-grubbing society, and a woman with stricter religious beliefs married into the family causing near catastrophic rifts.

 

Although the shadow of the Holocaust is always present, this is frequently a humorous book. People who eat frozen, pre-packaged bagels are condemned, Cossacks with fiery swords who once burned peasant villages are now Bar Mitzvah waiters carrying flaming cherries jubilee, the blonde chippie who’s dating the synagogue president has a poodle-shaped purse that barks in French and no one understands how WASPs can wear leather loafers without socks.

 

This book has enough twists and turns and turmoil to make anyone, from any group, immigrant or Mayflower descendant, cry, Oy Vey!

 

 


Sunday, March 30, 2025

What I Read in March

 I know there is still one more day left in March but I am pretty confident I won't be finishing any new books between now and then so here's what I've read for the month! I'm pretty happy with the results from a quantity perspective because I'm still knee deep in publicity for a couple of books I'm working with and that usually whittles away at the free time I have...  and those that I did read were mostly advanced review copies. 

So let's see what I spent my time with this month....



The Antidote by Karen Russell

Give me more epic wild west fiction with a dash of magical realism please! This is becoming my new favorite genre, you guys.

The Antidote takes place during the 1935 dust storm known as Black Sunday and in it, we meet a prairie witch named Antonina who makes a living absorbing people's memories. A local outcast, our witch is suddenly fearful of her life. The dust storm seems to have emptied her of the memories she's taken and the residents of Uz, Nebraska will be murderously upset when they come to make a withdrawal and find she's lost the things they are desperate to collect. But Dell, a thick skinned orphan girl who has an ear for the local town gossip, has decided to become Antonina's apprentice and devises a way for her create new memories for those who come knocking.

Meanwhile, there's a dirty sheriff doing dirty sheriff things; a visiting photographer whose pawn shop camera can only take photos of what once was or may come to be; and Dell's uncle, the one farmer whose land strangely seems to be thriving after the dust storm while everyone else's is suffering for it. Not to mention the odd scarecrow that's staked out in his field that seems to be untouched by the weird weather and a pregnant tabby cat with revenge on its mind.

It also addresses topics such as the unjust treatment of Native Americans, white privilege, and how, even back then, mother earth takes her revenge when we abuse her lands.

This book! It's a chunkster, and it takes a while for all of the storylines to fully pull together so you have to be patient with some of the back story stuff but oh my gosh it's so worth it and that ending. Ugh! My heart!

It's magical, and powerful, and really uniquely done!




The Lamb by Lucy Rose

The Lamb is the newest internet darling and I'm 100% behind it. It's an extremely impressive debut and very deserving of all of the love #bookstagram has been showering it with. Lucy Rose wastes no time jumping right into it - with an opening line like "On my fourth birthday, I plucked six severed fingers from the shower drain" you know you are going to be in for one heck of a tasty, bloody ride.

One thing is for sure. The Lamb has taught me that I don't have the right goodreads bookshelves created for the kinds of books I've been reading lately. I'm going to create some now post-haste because this needs to be shelved under messed-up-mothers, and people-as-monsters, and mmm-tasty, and get-on-my-plate, and tastes-like-human.

I adored the short chapters, which helped give the impression that the story was moving along faster than it actually was because c'mon let's be honest, it was a really slow burn knowing what we know up front and waiting for it to finally all come to a head. And dang, did it serve up a messed up ending or what?

Seriously, I love the moment that cannibalism is having in literary fiction and horror right now!




Rose of Jericho by Alex Grecian

his is the sequel to Red Rabbit and it's every bit as fun and fantastic.

In Rose of Jericho, we are reunited with a few of our favorite characters: Rose, Sadie, and Rabbit, who take up residence in a haunted mansion when they travel to the town of Ascension to visit Rose's ill cousin; and Moses, who is a man on a mission after his wife is taken from him. In a moment of anger and grief, Moses does something he cannot undo and suddenly, the dead won't stay dead.

And no, not in a zombie sort of way. Just in a 'you get your brains bashed in and you lie there a minute and then you stand up and go about living your life as if it was just a little owie' sort of way.

But now Moses is dead set on righting his wrong and he knows he's going to need Sadie's help to do it. So he heads out to find his friends, and they are going to soon discover the roles they will need to play in order to restore order to the world.

The Red Rabbit witchiness we've grown to love is still in full effect, with some cool cosmic intervention stuff thrown into the mix, and even more gore and violence!

Can we make historical cosmic fantasy a thing now?!?!




The Haunting of Room 904 by Erika T Wurth

I love the way Erika's writing shifts and changes with each new book, especially these last two from her, weaving in new levels of creepy supernatural horror while also pushing the Native American voice and experience forward.

Her female characters are flawed badass toughies that I can't help but wish I knew in rl. Well, ok maybe not in the case of this particular book. You can keep Olivia and her paranormal investigative self far far away from me because ain't no way I want to get caught in the crosshairs of the vengeful spirits she's tangled up with in The Haunting of Room 904. Spirits trapped in wooden boxes and hotel mirrors, dark evil entities literally breathing down your neck, and an occult group called the Sacred 36 who attempted a ceremony that backfired... yeah, no thanks, I'll be waaaay over here in my book room flipping pages, living safely on the periphery!

It's also another great example of grief fiction. The death of Olivia's sister, and the guilt she feels over not taking her call for help seriously 5 years ago, weighs heavily on her, and this new case she's picked up might just be the one chance she has to right the wrong she's been living with.

Cover those mirrors y'all!




White Line Fever by KC Jones

I need to be up front with you guys. I accepted this review copy with some hesitation. I wasn't crazy for the cover and the description sounded a little lackluster. But... it's Tor Nightfire and I usually really dig their stuff so I figured I'd give it a shot. And omg... I'm so glad I did!

It's a bit of a slow burn to start, with Livia discovering her husband has cheated her, which is the catalyst that propels her and her childhood girlfriends towards the Devil's Driveway, a 15 mile long seasonal shortcut between highways that's known for its extremely high death toll. In an attempt to escape an aggressive tow truck driver, the girls turn down the sketchy backroad and begin to experience periods of lost time and odd dizzy spells. It's not long before they start noticing the signs of previous car crashes and then begin seeing things that aren't there, creepy ass hallucinations that start out as bugs and bats, but then quickly escalate to darker and scarier things.

KC Jones periodically disrupts the tension with some flashbacks into Livia's past, her relationship with her father, and the bonds between her and her friends, which helps shine a light on what Livia and her gal pals are suffering through as the powerful visions pull them deeper and deeper into paranoia and panic. I found myself wanting to push through the flashbacks quickly so I could get back to the main story. For those of you who grew up on cable tv, those scenes started to feel like annoying commercial breaks, popping up at the most inopportune times, right as the shit started getting really good.

All they wanted was a relaxing weekend getaway and instead, what they got was a full fledged terror filled ride down a road that wasn't going to let them go now that it had them in its sights.

Horror filled road trip anyone?




Blood on Her Tongue by Johanna Van Veen

I just finished Blood on Her Tongue yesterday and get ready, you guys. You think you know what you're getting yourselves into but it's not what you're expecting. I mean, ok, it is... in one sense. It's dark. It's atmospheric. It's bloody. But the dog knows. Ooooh man, does the dog know!

Set in the Netherlands in the late 1800's, the book opens with Sarah accompanying her husband to view a body that's been discovered in the bog on their property. She immediately becomes infatuated with it and writes to her twin sister Lucy about the strange thoughts and dreams she's been having ever since coming in contact with it. Not long after, Sarah becomes gravely ill, speaking gibberish and running a high fever. Her husband and their childhood friend Arthur fear she's going mad. Lucy rushes to her side in an attempt to save her from the asylum, but ends up coming face to face with a horror nothing could have prepared her for.

The set up and storyline will have you thinking vampires (sorry for the slight spoiler) but oh dearies, it is something much much darker and sinister... and ancient... and it is soooo fucking hungry!

Some of you may know that I typically do not do well with gothic horror, and if I'm being honest this one tried my patience a few times, especially with the whole 'men know better than women', and the marital affair (why do so many of the books I've read lately involve cheating, it's so cringe) and oh yes, I should have predicted, all the fainting or near fainting spells and female hysteria stuff that the ladies were afflicted with back then. But all those pet peeves aside, the story really kept my interest piqued.

Dripping with dread, the book delves into codependency, mental health, and the allure of the unknown all while challenging familial bonds. How far is too far when a loved one's survival is at stake?




I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger

Oh gosh you guys, this book. I forget who I first saw reading it but I took one look at the description and knew I wanted to read it, too.

It's a slow burning dystopian novel that's less focused on how fucked up the world has become and turns instead towards the aching emptiness we would do anything to fill when we lose the one we love the most. Yes, sure, the richest of the rich bitches have taken over, an elite sixteen referred to as the astronauts, and yes, there are giant medical freighters out on Lake Superior conducting test trials on volunteers and cranking out a suicide drug called Willow, and yes, food and books can be hard to come by at times, but our narrator Rainy, a gentle giant of a man, is doing his best to live life as close to normal as possible and that's mainly because he has the love of his life Lark at his side. Until one day, he doesn't.

After allowing a sketchy but kind stranger to rent out a room in their attic, Rainy suddenly finds himself haunted by grief and shock and caught up in a situation he can only control by escaping, and escape he does, towards the safest and warmest memory of his wife he has, heading out towards a remote set of islands called the Slates.

Driven by the desperate hope of his wife's ghost meeting him out there, Rainy comes face to face with nasty storms at sea, horrid toll bridge workers, a group of air rifle packing punks, and befriends a young girl attempting to escape a bad home situation, all while trying to keep the people who took his wife from him from catching up to him first.

I didn't expect to like this book as much as I did. It's very reminiscent of Per Peterson's books, who is an author I absolutely adore. Rainy is one of the most likeable, most laid back characters I've read in a while. He has so much heart and an incredible knack of making the best of the worst situations. I just wanted to reach into the pages and give him a big ole bear hug most of the book, and I'm not a hugger so that should tell you something.




Bones and All by Camille DeAngelis

Ok, I'm on a bit of a literary cannibalism kick these last few months, so I gave this one a shot and all it did was confirm that I really don't like YA. Nothing against those of you who do. It's just not for me.

I have to admit those first few pages were very attention-getting, flipping through it at the store when I was making the decision on whether or not I wanted to buy it. But DeAngelis just couldn't sustain that wow-factor all the way through. The characters, their motivations, and their nom-nom, lick the plate clean, eat all the people and their bones behaviors all lived too far above the surface when I would have loved for everything to go just a little bit deeper.

It's like the Disney version of cannibalism. meh.

If you're feeling tempted like I was, you're really not missing much. It's ok. Put the book down. Spend your money on something else.

And can we please for the love of god stop with the movie cover posters?! I should knock a star off just for that!




Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer (audiobook, reread)

In anticipation of picking up the 4th book in the series, I decided to do a re-listen (or is it now a thrice-listen of the audiobook.

Still just as a good as the first time. Mostly because my memory is shit and I forget a lot of the details and it's just so darn amazing.




The Cut by CJ Dotson

Oh Sadie, how you really worked my last nerve, you stinker.

In The Cut, a pregnant woman escapes an abusive relationship with her three year old daughter in tow, and ends up taking a housekeeping job in an old hotel, with free room and board.

Within Sadie's first day at the hotel, there are strange wet noises in the hallway, random damp spots on the walls and hallway rugs, and she's witness to an incident from her window, where a guest appears to be drowning in the pool, though when she rushes out there to help, no one is around, the pool is calm and serene, the only evidence of anything untoward is the quickly drying wet drag mark on the concrete.

The hotel manager seems wholly unconcerned when Sadie reports it. She tries to put the weird experience behind her until the next day when she learns a guest has failed to check out and take their stuff, and notices dried blood in a tub during one of her routine cleaning jobs. And let's not mention the slimy little tentacled things that appear on the floor of her own tub while she's taking a shower... although, when she grabs the manager again, all of the evidence is gone when he takes a look.

Is she losing her shit or is something horrible hiding just beneath the surface of the L'Arpin Hotel? And is manager and the rest of the staff behind it? And what of old lady Gertie, who offered to babysit her daughter on her work days, who always happens to show up right after the weird stuff takes place?

Dotson immediately sucks us in with all the strange shenanigans. I had so many questions, you guys. But then it just got meh and kept on meh-ing. There was so much to look forward to, yet so many annoyances kept popping up. The repetitive rehashing of the abuse she took, the constant fits and tantrums and coddling of her daughter, the whole not feeling safe but then running off to check things out and leaving her little girl alone, asleep in the hotel room, and even then when she was out there spying around, talking herself out of everything she saw, it got old quick.

So when the real shit starting hitting the fan, I was more perturbed and less hanging on every word, because I had kind of figured out what was going on before we got there and just wanted to get it over with.

A solid three star. Less if I focus on the all the ways Sadie annoyed me and the overall execution of the book, but for the creepy, cosmic weird plot it certainly deserves more.

Saturday, March 1, 2025

What I Read In February

 Well, if January was the month that didn't know when to up and leave, February was the one that high tailed it right the heck out of there, didn't it?!

Another less than stellar reading month from a total quantity perspective but another solid month in terms of quality. 

Check out which books blew me away this past month....




The Repeat Room by Jesse Ball

Jesse Ball is a must-read author for me. His writing is so sparce and strange and beautiful and unsettling and everything I've ever read from him just haunts me endlessly. He has a unique way of viewing humanity and creates worlds that I would be terrified to live in.

Take The Repeat Room for example. In this horrific future, a man is called in for jury duty. He is in a room packed elbow to elbow with hundreds of other potential jurors. They will spend the next two days going through rigorous testing and examinations. They will be whittled down to one person, and that one person will be given the opportunity to sit beside the repeat room and experience the accused's life in order to make a determination on whether they get to rejoin society or be put to death.

The first half of the book follows Abel as he moves through the selection process. The second half of the book is through the eyes of the accused. And neither part is going to give you the answers you are seeking so you can forget all about that but holy crap what a journey this book is.

If you haven't read Jesse before, this might be the perfect book for you start with. If you enjoy books that never quite let you in, leaving you feeling slightly lost and uncomfortable, you are going to love this.




Listen to Your Sister by Neena Viel

Yeah. No. This wasn't for me. I thought about DNFing a few times before the weirdness fully kicked in and then once it did, I figured I was too far in at that point so I just sucked it up and muscled through.

Was it me or did the writing seem... off? Things flowed really strangely and it felt kind of disjointed at times. It definitely had the rougher edges of a debut novel.

For those of you who haven't read it yet and are expecting a creepy cabin in the woods horror novel, this is not quite that. Part childhood trauma, part sibling survival story, and a huge heaping serving of oldest sister trying to hold everyone's shit together, including her own, this is more psychological horror than anything else. And it's weird. I mentioned it being weird, right?




Ring Shout by P Djeli Clark

I am really late to the game with this one but in my defense, the jacket copy does not do it justice and whenever I saw people reviewing it, I just assumed it was historical fiction, which really isn't my cuppa, so it totally flew under my radar. Until... I saw it sitting on the shelf in a used bookstore a few weeks back, in their sci-fi and fantasy section. Obviously that gave me pause, so I really looked it at this time and decided to bring it home with me.

I was feeling a bit under the weather today and this one called to me from the tbr and here we are, a handful of hours (and a man, I really don't feel good, nap in the middle) later...

I liked it! Three badass black women taking out their anger on a bunch of demonic monsters in human meat suits known as Ku Kluxes, not to be confused with the Klan, which are regular white assholes who haven't been infected or 'turned' yet.

The book is full of haints, an evil butcher, and a nasty boss monster that's determined to bring on the end of the world. And our leading lady Maryse discovers she's the one everyone's looking at to save the day.

It was soooo deliciously not what I expected! An incredibly unique spin on a very dark period of our history.




Beta Vulgaris by Margie Sarsfield

Just another weird sad girl novel, only this one takes place during a sugar beet harvest as we watch our main gal lose her shit when her eating disorder gets the better of her, and her bank card gets overdrafted and her boyfriend gives her the slip, and other harvesters start disappearing into the darkness....

The beets told her all along to return to the dirt. Elle oh Elle.

I actually didn't hate it. I mean, it was a slow burn for a long while there and we spent a lot of time in Elise's head and I'd be lying if I said my younger self didn't have some of the very same neurotic, paranoid thoughts she did about whether people actually liked her or were putting up with her, loved her or were planning on leaving her, tiptoeing around the hard conversations to avoid giving anyone any reason at all to leave her. So get ready for 200 plus pages of THAT while also learning all about harvesting sugar beets, haha, but then strap in because once she really starts giving in to the self talk and the breakdown hits its crescendo... I can't even. Unhinged City Here I Come.

And hello to that cover, amirite?!




The Garden by Nick Newman

Oh man! This book! I think by now you know that I'm a sucker for post apocalyptic, dystopian novels and the isolation angle is always a fun one!

Two elderly sisters rely on each other for their daily survival. Evelyn steadfastly follows Mama's almanac, a book which guides the girls through each season and how to tend to their garden to ensure they have enough food to live off of. Lily, the younger, is more whimsical, preferring to practice her dance routines or paint out in the gazebo, and cooks what Evelyn forages.

The house they live in is the very same one they grew up in, and was initially put to use as a group commune when things in the outside world first started going bad. Though, as things worsened, everyone packed up and headed out, leaving the sisters alone with Mama and Papa. Papa also eventually disappeared and that left the three. Mama, now crazed and in an effort to protect the girls, sealed the kitchen off from the rest of the house, claiming the rooms were all poisoned and filled with dangerous "man" things, and forbid them from exploring beyond the garden because there was nothing left outside their little haven but a barren wasteland.

After Mama's passing, the girls did the only thing they knew to do, which was maintain her strict rules to ensure their own safety. That is, until they discover a young boy who has broken through their garden wall claiming he is running from "others" and, you guessed it, this encounter shatters their entire world, flipping everything they were taught to believe right onto its head.

The Garden is wonderfully reminiscent of other post apocalyptic and isolation novels I've read (books like The Road, California, Whether Violent or Natural, The Water Cure, What Mother Won't Tell Me, These Silent Woods, all come to mind) where the characters appear to unravel almost as beautifully as their outside worlds do and where creative parenting plays a large role in just how fucked up the kids have become.

It's a deliciously slow burn with a couple of sick little twists thrown in towards the latter part of the book and it's an understatement to say that I thoroughly enjoyed it!




Red Rabbit by Alex Grecian

This is another #bookstagrammademedoit banger!

Red Rabbit is an epic western with ghosts, ghouls, demons, shapeshifters, witches and witch hunters, and found family, and was just a super fun read.

It follows an eclectic group of strangers that end up falling in with each other on a journey to Burden County, Kansas to see if they can put a stop to Sadie Grace, a witch who's allegedly tormenting the townfolk there. The characters were quirky and well developed, the storylines all flowed together smoothly, and the best part was how Grecian kept you guessing the whole way through.

Evenly paced, deliciously atmospheric, simultaneously tender and violent, this chunkster of a novel should not be missed!

It gets all the stars, goddamnit!


Monday, February 10, 2025

The 40 But 10: Mark Rayner

 



I've pulled together 40ish questions - some bookish, some silly - and have asked authors to limit themselves to answering only 10 of them. That way, it keeps the interviews fresh and connectable for all of us!


Today we are joined by human-shaped, monkey-loving, robot-fighting, pirate- hearted, storytelling junkie, Mark Rayner is an award- winning author of satire and speculative fiction. He writes in the genres of science fiction, humorous SF and dark comedy. He also dips his toe in the occasional bit of dramatic prose and experimental/literary fiction. When not working on the next novel, he pens short stories, squibs and other drivel. (Some pure, and some quite tainted with meaning.) He's the co-host of Re-Creative, a podcast about how creative people were inspired by other works of art. Mark does all these things while being Canadian and owning cats.

Sign up for his newsletter and get a free book : )




What’s the single best line you’ve ever read?

“The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't.”

~Douglas Adams, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

 

What is your favorite book from childhood?

One of my first memories is of reading my favorite book, Look Out for Pirates! aloud, to my brother, Mike. He was barely a toddler. Whenever I leaned over the crib to show him the picture that went with the prose I was so enthusiastically reciting, he’d grab the book at try to throw it away. (Very pirate-like behavior, so I approved.)

A few years later, when all my classmates were explaining they wanted to be astronauts, or nurses, or firefighters, I explained it was the pirates life for me. I was devasted when I learned that being a pirate was not a viable career goal. (I mean, unless you want to manage a hedge fund.)

 

If you could have a superpower, what would it be?

Telekinesis, 100%!

It gets you flying, assuming you can lift yourself. You don’t have superstrength, but you don’t need to get close to anything. You can protect yourself with force fields. Hell, you could theoretically manipulate atoms and create things with the power of your mind.

Plus, you never have to get off the couch when you can’t find the remote!

Am I jazzed about this superpower? Hell yeah. I’m in the process of writing two trilogies in which this is the killer app.

 

Summarize your book using only gifs or emojis.

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What’s the one book someone else wrote that you wish you had written?

Serious answer for this one: Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities. It’s about Marco Polo telling Kublai Khan about all the marvelous cities in the Khan’s empire, but so much more. It’s a prose poem, a paean to the limitless nature of human creativity. Don’t look to it for plot or character development, but in terms of style and imagination it’s not to be missed. And it inspired one of the short stories in my new collection, The Gates of Polished Horn, “This Ambiguous Miracle.”

 

What are some of your favorite books and/or authors?

Some of my favourite authors include Ursula K. Le Guin, Philip K. Dick, William Shakespeare, Samuel Beckett, Chuck Palahniuk, Tom Robbins, George Orwell, Robertson Davies, Julian Barnes, George Saunders, Milan Kundera, William Gibson, Douglas Adams, Christopher Moore, Harold Pinter, Tom Stoppard & Italo Calvino.

 

If you could spend the day with another author, who would you choose and why?

Assuming we can go back in time? Kurt Vonnegut. He’s my literary hero, and I consider one of America’s all-time great satirists. Vonnegut has a beautiful way of casting the folly of human nature into disrepute at the same time as having great sympathy, and even love, for his characters. Plus, he was funny as hell and apparently a great conversationalist when he was in the mood.

 

Which literary invention do you wish was real and why?

I guess I stole my own thunder on this one – a time machine, clearly. Though you have to be careful when you’re time travelling, as people will learn from the first story in my new collection, “Socratic Insanity.” The framework for this story is that time travellers who go back to, oh, let’s say kill Hitler before he does all his damage, believe they have succeeded. But when they come back, they have not – you can’t change what has already happened, or if you do, you create an alternate reality. But you can’t travel to an alternate reality. Their subjective reality – I killed Hitler – just doesn’t match the objective reality. So my time travellers go insane. But not if they’re careful and don’t try to change anything. Having drinks with Kurt Vonnegut doesn’t count.

 

What do you do when you’re not writing?

I teach at Western University, at the Faculty of Information and Media Studies (FIMS). I’m very lucky to have a job that feeds my writing, while much of my marketing activities as a writer help me in the classroom. My teaching focuses on web design, information architecture, visual communication and social media. I teach in the undergrad program, called Media and Communication, plus in our two professional graduate programs, the Library and Information Science program, and in the Master of Media in Journalism and Communication program.

When I’m not teaching, I like to enjoy workouts, reading, video games, movies and playing guitar. And my two cats, Max and Milo, keep me busy too!

 

Why do you write?

For the money, of course. Bwahahah!

Sorry. It’s just that this is a deep and difficult question. Why am I trying to answer it? I guess I like a challenge. I mean, writing is one of the all-time great artistic challenges. The rejection isn’t as intense as it is with acting, but it’s up there. Yet having the ability to bring people, ideas, worlds … whole universes into existence is just such a cool thing.

Writing is an act of empathy. The best stories are ones that move us and that requires the author has compassion for their characters. Even the baddies.

And I’ve always been a storyteller, since I first started reading Look Out for Pirates! to my brother. It’s a compulsion. An intellectually and emotionally rewarding compulsion. It can be painful too, but I’ve never really seriously considered NOT writing. It’s too much at the core of who I am.


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What happens when you’re face-to-face with a truth that shakes you? 

Do you accept it, or pretend it was never there?

Award-winning author Mark A. Rayner smudges the lines between realist and fabulist, literary and speculative in this collection of stories that examines this question—what Homer called passing through The Gates of Polished Horn.

We discover the cruelty of creating synthetic consciousness. A woman is worried that her husband is having an affair but discovers it's much, much worse. A time traveler uncovers a reality-bending fact while observing the death of Socrates. Waldo, of Where's Waldo fame, has an existential crisis. A traveling salesperson is killed on the highway, and this is just the start of his journey through the gates.

Infused with comic insight and tragic vision, this collection invites readers into new realities that touch on our shared humanity.

“Mark A. Rayner’s formidable storytelling is on full display in this thoughtful and diverse collection. He’s a fine and creative writer whose characters and storylines are quirky, inventive, and often very funny.  Bravo!”
~Terry Fallis, author of The Best Laid Plans & two-time winner of the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour

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