Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Blog Tour: IKONA

 



In a world divided by a genetic catastrophe, a monk and a former thief are linked by a sacred object that holds the key to a global cure.



The presence of a holy icon that bridges the gap between different eras and fractured timelines defines the world of M.D. Dixon’s IKONA. The story follows a diverse group of people as they are drawn into the artifact’s mysterious field, leading to a convergence that is both fated and determined by choice. It is an exploration of how memory and healing can transcend the limitations of linear time.





Amazon | Goodreads


A holy icon in the form of a Russian Orthodox cross surfaces throughout history, possessing a healing power that remains unexplained. Four strangers are drawn into its resonance, their journeys taking them from the bustling centers of Sydney, Hong Kong, Atlanta, and Berlin to the silent ruins of a future Siberia. In Atlanta, Kate Davies watches as the icon affects a sick child, while in Sydney, Finley Minor is haunted by visions of the weight of the future. Jia Li MacPherson, a former thief, carries secrets that powerful entities seek to bury. A century ahead, Wallace Deng Moroz, a monk in a world nearly ended by a genetic engineering catastrophe, searches for a cure in a dangerously polarized society. 

Their paths are destined to cross, but the outcome depends on their choices. They must decide which future they are meant to live in and what must be surrendered to reach it.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


———

FINLEY & THE SEA 

MAY 2019 

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA 


Finley Minor was by his own accounts an empty man, a listless man, spiritually and emotionally sparse. Blink a thousand times and his course in life would not have shifted an inch. He was motionless like a chameleon in the presence of a threat. But this was not fact, only fear, and that of a man who knew that he’d not lived at full throttle and had succumbed to the fate of it —a slow and shallow life. He ruminated on it. He judged himself for it. He laughed at his own expense, without thinking he might ever change a thing. 


In the way one always has a beginning, a great excuse, this was Finley’s: at the age of seven, in his native England, he sat on the beach as his stick wove tessellations in the sand (almost of its own accord, it seemed in retrospect), and he looked to the horizon towards France with the open, impressionable curiosity of his young age. He wondered at the sea’s depth, its great distance, how one might (as many had) swim across the channel, what creatures might lurk there, what they might feel like against bare skin. He imagined something slimy and cold, fanged, and slithering. The waves seemed to roar at him, even though they descended in the rockpools with the gentleness of pooling cream.


He stood, determined to satisfy his curiosity. He took halting steps over the rocks and shells, straight ahead, then bearing left around a rock face that jutted into the sea. He sat on a big, flat rock and stared into the gray water. He heard his father calling out his name, but ignored him. The water rushed in again and again, and each time reached further and further, first sucking at his toes, then his heels, then his knees. His curiosity fled; he became afraid, and all sound was magnified, the dull ocean roar, the seagull squawking a few feet away, his heartbeat. He knew he had to go back to shore. He waved to his father, stood, and took a faltering step. There was a low murmur; the water fizzled once more in retreat from the rocky sand like the gasping breath of a dying man. He felt dizzy and fell to his knees. He crouched on all fours and steadied himself as the water swirled and grasped at him, and the sky looped and the clouds fell from the corner of his eyes. He felt his head winched back towards the horizon, and the sea reached for his throat. Blackness. 


When he came to, dragged back to shore by his father, he announced that his aunt would never return from her Côte D’Azur holiday. He wagged his finger towards the surf and pulled a face, “Over there, there is smooching.” 


The official prognosis was that he’d had an epileptic fit, though none of the tests proved it. He must have passed out, in that case, the doctor pronounced, low blood sugar, a low-level virus, dehydration. 


But Finley knew, only he knew. 


The ocean had rent a hole in his soul, and let in the future.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


M.D. Dixon is a novelist, somatic therapist, and explorer of the intersections between the psyche and the sacred, science and mysticism, trauma and transformation. Holding a Ph.D. in the social sciences with a focus on Russia and Ukraine, Dixon has spent nearly fifteen years in therapeutic practice in Sydney, Australia. Dixon’s debut novel, IKONA, weaves visionary fiction, myth, and metaphysics to illuminate the evolution of consciousness. Dixon also hosts The Shattering Place, a podcast on multidimensional healing and the awakening human story, launching in early 2026.

Visit M.D. Dixon online.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Additional tour coverage is taking place today at Long and Short Reviews and Chapter Break



The Page 69 Test: The Walls Are Closing in on Us

Disclaimer: The Page 69 Test is not mine. It has been around since 2007, asking authors to compare page 69 against the meat of the actual story it is a part of. I loved the whole idea of it and so I'm stealing it specifically to showcase small press titles - novels, novellas, short story collections, the works! So until the founder of The Page 69 Test calls a cease and desist, let's do this thing....






In this installment of Page 69, 

we put Trent Brown's The Wall Are Closing In On Us to the test.



Set up page 69 for us.

I realized when sending over this page that this could take forever, so here goes nothing. The MC, George, is out with his best friends Koi and Chito, along with Koi's girlfriend Susanna (affectionately called Satty here). George has already been through quite a lot leading up to this page -- no spoilers!! but... he's been through it -- and this is one of the few moments of respite he's been given so far. But despite the respite, temptation abounds for this boy. 

 

What is the book about?

Memory. New, old, and false identity. Circus performers. Mountain lions. A fight to the death. Choctaw mythology. Love and death. Disappearing during the most tumultuous time in modern history. The consequences of disappearing and coming back a new person. 

 At its core: The Walls is a fictional retelling of a mysterious ancestor of mine.

 

Do you think this page gives our readers an accurate sense of what the book is about? Does it align itself with the novel’s theme?

No? Yes? Maybe?

 I like to tell people that this book is about nothing at all. Or at least, what happens when you try to reduce yourself from who you are into nothing at all. But, to answer your second question, nothing aligns more with the novel's theme than the last sentence from this excerpt: "The only sounds were of squirrels and raccoons in the trees, frogs and toads in the muddy bank, and a restless fish gator that might come up for air between sleeps in the pitch black." If you like those things, you'll probably like this book. 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Page 69



The Walls Are Closing In On Us 



Chito shrugged at her and looked to his older brother as if to ask him what he thought of the situation. Koi looked at the two boys, then his girlfriend who was still smiling at him with a gaze of temptation and then back at the front door of their home. No light escaped the windows. Their parents were asleep, or at least awake and not trying to see anything.

“What did you have in mind?” Koi asked her.

“Let’s walk down to the hatcha. And drink these,” she said, picking up two big glass bottles out of a crate in the bike basket and holding them up in front of her face.

“What’s that?” George asked.

“Beer,” she said.

George had never seen a bottle of beer before, or a beer at all. It was strictly forbidden in Chito and Koi’s household and he never saw his mammy drink a drop of it. She only spoke of it once, lamenting to herself about how so many good men in their community had been ruined by it. He had taken that as enough evidence to stay away from it ever since.

“Satty, what are you doing with that stuff?”

“Trying to have fun, like I said.”

“The boys can’t have alcohol.”

“Why not?”

Koi didn’t answer, because he didn’t really have one. And by the time he had thought of a few weak reasons why his two brothers couldn’t have a drink, he realized that she had laid the bike down and started carrying the bottles back down the driveway.

“Hey, where are you going?” he tried to yell in a whisper.

“To wherever the fun might be.”

He shook his head and turned to look at the two younger boys whose eyes were wide as if to say please can we go and he shook his head again and shrugged his shoulders and they started down the path after her.

 They sat under a small wood bridge at the edge of a creek offshoot of the Pearl, or hatcha, River. The water hardly moved here, it was more of a swamp than anything else. The only sounds were of squirrels and raccoons in the trees, frogs and toads in the muddy bank, and a restless fish gator that might come up for air between sleeps in the pitch black.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Joshua Trent Brown is a writer from a small town in North Carolina that you've never heard of. He has a debut novel out called "The Walls Are Closing In On Us." You can buy it from Malarkey Books or pretty much anywhere else. He's working on another book too, if you like this first one. You can learn more about him at joshuatrentbrown.com.



The Walls Are Closing In On Us

Literary |  Historical fiction

Malarkey Books | March 3, 2026


The Walls Are Closing In On Us follows George, a dying Choctaw and white man, reckoning with the ghosts of his past as he bleeds out beside a cold North Carolina river, hundreds of miles from home. 

 Based ever so slightly on a true story, this Southern odyssey explores what it means to be anyone at all, and how even the simple act of reading someone’s name is enough to bring them back to life – no matter if they wish to remain forgotten.

 


Monday, February 16, 2026

The 40 But 10: Eugen Bacon

 


We're happy to help Meerkat Press support the release of their latest title Another Nemesis, poems by Ai Jiang, Angela Yuirko Smith, Eugen Bacon, and Maxwell I Gold, by participating in their blog tour. 



For our portion of the tour, Eugen has decided to participate in our 40 But 10 series - where 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!


Eugen Bacon is an African Australian author. She is a Solstice, British Fantasy, Ignyte, Locus and Foreword Indies Award winner. She’s also a twice World Fantasy and Shirley Jackson Award finalist, and a finalist in the Philip K. Dick Awards and the Nommo Awards for speculative fiction by Africans. Eugen is an Otherwise Fellow, and was also announced in the honor list for “doing exciting work in gender and speculative fiction.” Danged Black Thing made the Otherwise Award Honor List as a “sharp collection of Afro-Surrealist work.” Visit her at eugenbacon.com.





Describe your book poorly.

It’s not a novel or an anthology and it’s kind of biggish at 100 pages. There’s not one or two or three authors and the cover looks like a rainbow with some devils and angels on it. So the real artist is the publisher. In effect, you can get painted pastures and news from the sea, a bit of Lilith and Circe and a bastardized song. Somewhere inside is an unbuilt thing and a Saraswati. Nah, yeah, Loki and Anansi too. Tell you what, something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue, something taken, something forsaken. Bloody oath, she knows a bit more. Relax. What else were we to do? Look out for the wall of someday. 


Do you have any hidden talents?

I’m telepathic. My hand itches when I’m about to get money. For real, I feel things deeply. Like, years ago, miles away, I knew when my father was dying. Maybe I need to listen to that intuition more.


What’s the most useless skill you possess?

I’m telepathic. What’s the fucken point when you know someone’s about to break up with you or something’s about to go to shit, before anything’s even happened, and you can’t change squat?


What do you do when you’re not writing?

I love artsy movies, foreign language movies, swimming, power-walking to headphone music, reading collections of short stories or multi-authored anthologies… I’m quite a fussy reader, though. Certain books talk to me more than others, and I pay attention to those.


What is your favorite book from childhood?

I grew up reading African ‘how’ and ‘why’ stories: Why the crocodile lives in the water. How the zebra got her stripes. Why the hyena has two short legs… These were my favorite books, that always had a cultural or societal moral.


What genres won’t you read?

I don’t like erotica text for the sake of it. Sure, I love intimacy but bad sex is quite awful on page. I love something sensual that builds on an emotional connection rather than just a physical grind on a flesh whimsy.


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

Michael Ondaatje. Divisadero, where, at Lucien Segura’s wedding, Marie-Neige—the woman who is not his wife—pulls a note from her cotton sleeve and pushes it into his breast pocket. It would burn there unread for another hour as he danced and talked with in-laws who did not matter to him… everything that was important to him existed suddenly in the potency of Marie-Neige:

The note she had written said Good-bye. Then it said Hello …

 

What are you currently reading?

I’m judging works for the 2025 Otherwise Award so I can’t name the works but I feel tremendously exhilarated to be in a position where I can pay attention to genre- and gender-expansive works that engage with difference in poignant ways.


Which literary invention do you wish was real and why?

A bit cliched… time machine, change outcomes—but would I really? What if the cascade effect of each alteration yielded far worse results?

 

Do you think you’d live long in a zombie apocalypse?

Good Lord, no. I’m too curious, too easily spooked.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Releasing February 17, 2026

Dark Speculative Poetry


Meerkat Press | Bookshop.org | Amazon



This dark and thought-provoking poetry collection is co-authored by four multi-award winning authors and poets, Ai Jiang, Angela Yuriko Smith, Eugen Bacon and Maxwell I. Gold.


anOther Nemesis unravels sinister speculative poems themed The Colonizers, Primal Sources, Nameless Others and Crooked Ontologies. It reconnoitres words as weapons, reshaping to the unworldly, casting transfigurations of that which was never meant to be changed, and featuring poignant behind-the-poems by each poet.


The extraordinary assemblage interrogates the ways cultures, language, information, and the lack thereof are used as means of control; how voices will always rise against systems that rewrite identity, suppress truth, and silence dissent; the distinctions of purity and diffusion and the infinite number of fates upon which our existence is simultaneously contingent; how Ubiquitous indifference can sometimes be the cruelest villain of them all... and more!



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Excerpts



Calibration by Eugen Bacon


worlding the merpeople insists on fundamental descaling and tail amputation without anesthetics to ascertain if the language of crying harbors an ideology of resistance

because the truth of a creature manifests itself

when its discomfort threshold

is breached.



A Home You Don’t Remember by Ai Jiang


How to Miss

You’re eager to sip sweet nectar

from deep chasms and explore

the long winding valleys of the place

of your birth. But how do you miss

a place that seems like only a passing

portrait because it has been so long

since your physical body roamed

across its soils, stepped into its marrows,

     uprooted

from its grooves, troughs, and furrows? 

a place renamed, unnamed, renamed,

until it has forgotten what it had been

before the touch of human hands, 

untrodden by human footprints,

now holding memories not its own.



Sun Wukong by Angela Yuriko Smith


The Monkey King—Sun Wukong, mischief embodied, irrepressible rebel birthed from stone to defy gods. His voice taunted heaven and teased immortals, arrogance wrapped in humor, wisdom hidden behind mirth. He defied limits, another snatcher of forbidden fruit, he grifted peaches of immortality and rewrote destinies with defiance. His laughter shook the celestial palaces; his clever tongue twisted divine decree into chaos, leaving order trembling in his wake.


Today, the Monkey King swings through digital jungles, flipping conventions and mocking algorithms with anarchic glee. He leaps across viral trends, prank videos, and meme culture, rebellious against the gravity of expectation. Sun Wukong is the chaos in the comment section, the unpredictable tweet that shatters expectations, the influencer who refuses to follow the script. He challenges censorship, mocks digital vanity, and playfully dismantles the serious facade of modern life, reminding humanity that freedom lies in laughter and that chaos is is needed for creation.


Defy all order—

Creation is subversive.

Freedom is laughing.



The Wall of Someday by Maxwell I. Gold


To Hope there was more,

over death,

over stars

after the Earth was ash

and there was no more less than,

no more walls;

in Hope to see towers that might stretch beyond limitation

outside my window or a house trapped

on the edge of a someday

I’d never know or to see what lay beyond the thick walls of night,

To Hope each time a great storm gathered,

cackling with heavy thunder and light,

I’d never know the words,

ne’er to pass the wall’


And to hope one day I might cross the threshold,

where the Gates of Tomorrow swung wide

and no longer the dark cruelties of today,

beat ceaselessly against my brain;

though with each passing night,

the storm’s call grew ever deeper,

‘never to pass the wall

and hope there was more,

over death,

over stars

after the Earth was ash

and there was no more less than,

no more walls.



About the other authors: 


Ai Jiang is a Chinese-Canadian writer, Ignyte, Bram Stoker, and Nebula Award winner, and Hugo, Astounding, Locus, Aurora, and BFSA Award finalist from Changle, Fujian currently residing in Toronto, Ontario. She is the recipient of Odyssey Workshop’s 2022 Fresh Voices Scholarship and the author of A Palace Near the Wind, Linghun, and I AM AI. Find her at www.aijiang.ca.


Angela Yuriko Smith, former president of the HWA and publisher of Space and Time magazine, is the proud recipient of multiple awards, including two Bram Stokers. As a Publishing Coach, she helps writers search less and submit more with her weekly calendar of author opportunities at authortunities.substack.com.


Maxwell I. Gold is a Jewish-American cosmic horror poet and editor, with an extensive body of work comprising over 300 poems since 2017. His writings have earned a place alongside many literary luminaries in the speculative fiction genre.  His work has appeared in numerous literary journals, magazines, and anthologies. Maxwell’s work has been recognized with multiple nominations including the Eric Hoffer Award, Pushcart Prize, and Bram Stoker Awards. Find him and his work at www.thewellsoftheweird.com.


Tuesday, February 10, 2026

The 40 But 10: Robert Hoffman

 



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 Robert Hoffman, who recently retired from teaching after 34  years.  He was a blogger for six years for his local paper, the Albany Times Union. He also blogged for Albany.com, Fark.com, CrooksandLiars.com, and kneesandfists.com. In 2021, he published my his first novel, "Blind Spot.  He also wrote a television pilot with a friend which was just named an "Official Selection" at the  Las Vegas  International Film and Screenwriting Festival.  "Taken to the Grave" marks his second attempt at writing a work of fiction.




Why do you write?

I’ve enjoyed writing since I was in high school.  My dream was to be a sports writer, but then I began to enjoy writing about a host of issues.  In college I had my own column which I enjoyed immensely.  However I was unable to further my writing career when I graduated and ended up as a social studies teacher for my career which worked out fine.  About 12 or 13 years ago I started blogging and I was picked up by our local newspaper, the Times Union of Albany.  I did that for a few years, but began to get bored doing it, and so I decided to try writing a work of fiction.  I enjoy getting to express my ideas and opinions through characters that I create, and I enjoy the challenge of completing a story that moves people.

 

What’s the most useless skill you possess?

My wife says I have a head filled with “mindless muck.”  If I were to translate that I would say that I have a head for trivia.  As a social studies teacher, this skill can come in handy, I mean, if somebody asks you who the 14th president was, and you don’t know that it was Franklin Pierce, aren’t you going to feel silly.  I also have a head for sports trivia, and can quote a lot of movies and old television comedies.  If being able to do that is wrong, then I don’t want to be right.

 

 Describe your book in three words.

 Journey of Discovery

 

Would you and your main character(s) get along?

Well that’s pretty funny because the story was inspired by something that my wife experienced and for a while, because of it, we did have a few disagreements, however, I’m happy to say we get along just fine.


If you could cast your characters in a movie, which actors would play them and why?

Maria could be played by Julia Louis Dreyfuss, although I’m not sure she’s Italian enough looking, but she’s spunky and intelligent and passionate like Maria.  Mark could be played by Matt Walsh from “Veep.”  I would think that Annie could be played by Chloe Grace Moretz, and perhaps Michael could be played by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman.  Sofia and Lawrence would have to be played by multiple actors since their stories are kind of told through flashbacks.


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

 I tend to look for books that have some comic relief to them.  I like Richard Russo, as well as Gary Shteyngart, and Kurt Vonnegut.  I also enjoy Philip Roth because he seemed to always be ahead of his time when it came to understanding where America came from and where it’s going.

 

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

 “Confederacy of Dunces,” and it’s not even close.  The characters, the setting, the way the story all comes together at the end, it is brilliant and laugh out loud funny.  My favorite book of all time.

 

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

 I actually wrote a blog about this several years ago.  I took a look at what many of the most infamous amongst us who were on death row ordered for their last meal, and it was quite illuminating.  I narrowed mine down to three choices:

               A - A Burger King bacon-double cheeseburger with onion rings

               B - A meatball pizza from almost any Long Island or New York City pizzeria

               C - A pastrami sandwich from almost any Jewish deli in New York City or Long Island.  After that, all I can say is, “Warden, do your worst!”

 

If you could time travel, would you go back to the past or forward into the future?


 I would go forward in time.  There are no “good old days.”  The past was pretty awful, racism, no air-conditioning, no medicine, who wants it?  I would like to travel to the future so I can see how my grandchildren turn out.

 

What’s the one thing you wish you knew when you were younger?

 I don’t have regrets because they are the biggest waste of time that there is.  You can’t change the past, and even if you could go back and talk to your younger self, you, being you, would you even listen?  However, I would have given writing a real shot as a profession, so I would have told myself to be ore daring and less cautious, but I’m sure wouldn’t have listened because that’s who I am, thus, a waste of time.  It would be more lucrative to go back in time and tell my younger self to bet it all on the 2008 Super Bowl, and pick the Giants before the season started, I would have made a mint.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

E-book  |     Paperback   |   Goodreads 


Maria Abrams has always needed answers. A college professor with a gift for logic, she believes that if you dig long enough, the truth will rise to the surface. But when she turns her relentless curiosity toward her own family, she unearths more than she bargained for: a web of secrets her mother carried silently to the grave.

A precious gift from her favorite niece reveals a hidden relationship and its lasting consequences, Maria’s pursuit of clarity collides with the resistance of relatives who would rather leave the past buried. Her journey takes her from small-town New York to séances with reluctant mediums, forcing her to confront uncomfortable truths about loyalty, betrayal, and the fragile bonds that hold families together.

Taken to the Grave is a layered family mystery about identity, silence, and the cost of uncovering what was meant to remain hidden. At once intimate and suspenseful, it asks the ultimate question: when does the truth set us free, and when does it break us apart?