Bored with the same old fashioned author interviews you see all around the blogosphere? Well, this series is a fun, new, literary spin on the ole Would You Rather game. Get to know the authors we love to read in ways no other interviewer has. I've asked them to pick sides against the same 20ish odd bookish scenarios....
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
Lancelot Schaubert's Would You Rather
Bored with the same old fashioned author interviews you see all around the blogosphere? Well, this series is a fun, new, literary spin on the ole Would You Rather game. Get to know the authors we love to read in ways no other interviewer has. I've asked them to pick sides against the same 20ish odd bookish scenarios....
Monday, September 21, 2020
Blog Tour: The Cipher
What belongs in the
Funhole?
The Funhole Contest Winners Designs
It’s a hole in the floor of a crappy little nondescript storage
room in a crappy and nondescript building. It’s the Funhole, the calm, terrible,
inexplicable hole that ignites and drives the story of The Cipher, my latest—and also my first—novel.
A word of explanation: The
Cipher was originally published as the lead title for an experimental and
ass-kicking line of horror novels back in the day (1991!), and has just been
reissued by the mighty Meerkat Press for a (w)hole new generation of readers.
But the Funhole, which lies, literally, at the heart of the story, has been
there all along.
“It was of no one’s making, not a thing like that . . .Pure
black and the sense of pulsation, especially when you looked at it too closely
. . . Its edges were downhill, and smooth. They asked for touch.” In the course
of the story, every item put into the Funhole by hapless Nicholas and
unstoppable Nakota comes back altered in unpredictable ways; I’ll leave it to
you, if you’re curious, to find out what those items were, and what they turned
into. And what happened to Nicholas and Nakota, and to their interested,
greedy, helpless friends.
But what else could they have dropped, or lowered, or
introduced into that pulsating dark? What would you put down there? It would be almost impossible not to try. Curiosity
is like an itch, it’s hard to stop scratching, once you start.
So how to start? Maybe with something easy, something
already in that storage room—a push broom, maybe. Hold the handle, poke the
bristles into the hole. But what if something tugs back?
Maybe an empty bottle, or a can? How about a full one? How
about a high caliber energy drink? Monster energy, ha ha. If it comes back
opened, would take you take a sip?
How about a pocket knife?
How about a bread knife?
How about a gutting knife?
How about your phone? Would you want it close to your face,
afterward? What if there are photos on it, now, that you never took?
Or how about a book? Would the pages come back wet? or singed?
or bare of words? Or with an entirely new story inside? And what would happen
to you if you read it, if you put that story inside your mind?
Curiosity is a terrible thing.
Have fun.
Winner of the Bram
Stoker Award and Locus Awards, finalist for the Philip K. Dick Award, and named
one of io9.com's "Top 10 Debut Science Fiction Novels That Took the World
By Storm." With a new afterword by Maryse Meijer, author of Heartbreaker
and Rag.
"Black. Pure black and the sense of
pulsation, especially when you look at it too closely, the sense of something
not living but alive." When a strange hole materializes in a storage room,
would-be poet Nicholas and his feral lover Nakota allow their curiosity to lead
them into the depths of terror. "Wouldn't it be wild to go down
there?" says Nakota. Nicholas says, "We're not." But no one is
in control, and their experiments lead to obsession, violence, and a very final
transformation for everyone who gets too close to the Funhole.
Buy Links: Meerkat Press | Amazon | Barnes & Noble
Kathe Koja writes novels and short fiction, and creates and produces immersive events. Her work has won awards and been multiply translated and optioned for film. Her most recent books are VELOCITIES: STORIES and THE CIPHER, from Meerkat Press.
Author Links: Website | Twitter
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Friday, September 18, 2020
Where Writers Write: Wile E. Young
Welcome to another installment of TNBBC's Where Writers Write!
This is Wile E. Young.
Wile is from Texas, where he grew up surrounded by stories of ghosts and monsters. During his writing career he has managed to both have a price put on his head and publish his southern themed horror stories. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in History, which provided no advantage or benefit during his years as an aviation specialist and I.T. guru.
Wile and Stephen Kozeniewski recently collaborated on the horror novel The Perfectly Fine House, released this past March with Grindhouse Press.Where Wile E. Young Writes
I’ve had the privilege to write all over the world due to
the time I spent studying abroad for college. Ski slopes in Zermatt,
Switzerland; cafes in Budapest, Hungary; my dormitory in Vienna, Austria… All
of these places were joys to experience and, more importantly, feed off of for
inspiration, but nowhere has quite the allure of my family’s lake house on Caddo
Lake.
Located on the Texas/Louisiana border in Uncertain, Texas,
it has served as my home away from home for several years. I think I was around
ten when my family first purchased the house.
It was originally envisioned as a place that each main
branch of our family would take a weekend of the month to use: my parents and
myself, my paternal uncle and aunt along with their respective children, and my
grandparents. However, my grandparents took their first weekend and never left,
which just goes to show the pull that this place has.
The whole area is a mass wetland of rivers, bayous, and
creeks that run out into a vast lake, and like most places that trace their origins
back past a century, it’s filled with its own stories and legends.
Purported to be the oldest natural lake in Texas, Caddo
was supposedly formed in the Great Madrid Earthquakes of 1811-1812. The lake
was used to ferry supplies between Jefferson, Texas and ports in Louisiana, and
even all the way down to New Orleans.
When the Great Log Jam on the Red River was removed, it
lowered the lake by a good ten feet and destroyed the steamboat industry. As of
2020, there is only one steamboat that still plies its trade on Caddo Lake and
that is the Graceful Ghost, though
even it has been berthed until it undergoes repairs.
But the best part of growing up down there were the
stories and characters that resulted. It was partially because of these
characters and locations that I set my debut novel Catfish in the Cradle there, which takes place mainly in the town
of Uncertain. From the time I was very young we would take a sojourn to eat
breakfast at Shady Glade Café.
The place was like a real life Mos Eisley Cantina. You’d
have the old fishermen talking about their catches or what they’d seen out on
the river, tourists from Houston and Dallas eating their fills of that
Uncertain cuisine, and the owners and staff bustling around chatting up the
regulars.
There were so many meals partaken in that place after
both tragedy and triumph. When my grandfather passed, we ate in his memory
under his picture on the walls (he was quite popular there, even had a meal
named after him) and I ate there the morning following the engagement to my now
wife.
You can find me in Shady Glade from time to time, typing
away. If you recognize me, sit down; I’ll buy you a coffee.
Caddo
had a lot of legends; twenty-foot alligators, giant fish, ghosts in the trees,
etc. All of these are probably based on some truth where someone saw something
that they couldn’t quite explain. After all, Caddo has more sightings of
Bigfoot than anywhere else in East Texas and people have caught some truly
astonishing fish there.
This has all contributed to stoking the fires of my
imagination, the legacy of the swamp and river running like muddy water through
my veins. It truly is a land of infinite stories and I could spend an eternity
sitting out on the river letting the muse take over and I’ve often commandeered
my grandfather’s desk to do just that.
This is where I love to write the most. My grandfather
conducted most of his business here and it’s where I feel the most connected to
him so I can continue carrying on his storytelling tradition.
Every
time a boat passes, an owl hoots in the night, or I hear a gator hissing from
somewhere, all I can think about is that it’s good to be home and what a
pleasure it is to be able to write here.
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Jason Tanamor's Would You Rather
Bored with the same old fashioned author interviews you see all around the blogosphere? Well, this series is a fun, new, literary spin on the ole Would You Rather game. Get to know the authors we love to read in ways no other interviewer has. I've asked them to pick sides against the same 20ish odd bookish scenarios....
Would You Rather
Jason Tanamor
Would you
rather write an entire book with your feet or with your tongue?
Feet, as I’d hate to get paper cuts on my tongue. I was so happy when stamps went to self-adhesive backs.
Would you
rather have one giant bestseller or a long string of moderate sellers?
One giant bestseller, as I think the success would yield interest in the other books which could then propel them to moderate seller status. Then I could have both.
Would you
rather be a well known author now or be considered a literary genius after
you’re dead?
Known author now. Part of the joy of writing is reaping the success that comes with it. You wouldn't get that if you’re dead. Plus, you couldn’t defend yourself to those who think you’re not a genius.
Would you
rather write a book without using conjunctions or have every sentence of your
book begin with one?
One man fell down a cliff and tumbled to his death. One witness reported the incident. One television statement reported the news. One person attended his funeral. One million dollars was left on a stranger’s doorstep. One person did not know what to do with the good fortune.
That didn’t seem too difficult, AND I like conjunctions too much.
Would you
rather have every word of your favorite novel tattooed on your skin or always
playing as an audio in the background for the rest of your life?
Playing as an audio in the background. I’m not very tall, so eventually some of those words would be on top of each other. No one would know what it read. Plus, could you imagine people coming up to you who haven’t read the book? They’d be like, “Don’t move. One more chapter.”
Would you
rather write a book you truly believe in and have no one read it or write a
crappy book that comprises everything you believe in and have it become an
overnight success?
Sometimes to get on the radar you have to quote unquote sell out. I’d rather have a crappy book that everyone knows with the hopes that readers look for my other books. I could live with that. Eventually that book would be forgotten.
Would you
rather write a plot twist you hated or write a character you hated?
Character. This happens a lot. So long as that character is really compelling to some degree, there is this weird feeling inside that causes you to feel sorry or bad for him/her. Regardless if you hate this character or not. When you have a bad plot twist or one you’re not keen on, it seems to derail a lot of the story.
Would you
rather use your skin as paper or your blood as ink?
Last time I used my blood as ink I became blood brothers with my friend Maurice. We wrote up a contract to be unrelated brothers and signed our names in blood. I haven’t seen him in years when his family moved away. This time around I’d use my skin as paper. But not the words of my favorite novel. See above for why.
Would you
rather become a character in your novel or have your characters escape the page
and reenact the novel in real life?
Many of my characters have some bit of “me” in them, so seeing them jump off the page and reenact in real life would be great to see. Especially if the scenery changes along with them.
Would you
rather write without using punctuation and capitalization or without using
words that contained the letter E?
I’d write an entire novel without punctuation and capitalization if it meant that people would wonder if I’d dictated the entire manuscript through my talk to text app.
Would you
rather have schools teach your book or ban your book?
Teach, definitely. If someone reading my book can take away a theme or passage that changes his or her life, the book is worth writing.
Would you
rather be forced to listen to Ayn Rand bloviate for an hour or be hit on by an
angry Dylan Thomas?
How many pick-up lines does Dylan Thomas have? This, in itself, could go on longer than an hour. At least with Ayn Rand talking for an hour straight, I could tune the conversation out. I’m really trying to answer this question objectively.
Would you
rather be reduced to speaking only in haiku or be capable of only writing in
haiku?
I like to have a cadence or tempo in my books. Writing haiku would satisfy that requirement. When I speak, I use a lot of words at times, so I don’t think I could live with the standard 5, 7, 5 pattern.
Would you
rather be stuck on an island with only the 50 Shades Series or a series in a
language you couldn’t read?
If those are the only items I could have, then the 50 Shades series, only because if I hadn’t learned the language of the other series when I had all the resources available, I wouldn’t learn it stranded on an island.
Would you
rather critics rip your book apart publicly or never talk about it at all?
Lucky for me, I’d had both. See some of my past reviews, but also, I’d had reviewers email me telling me that they couldn’t say anything nice about a book so they’d decided not to review. Both are fine. Every person is different, and every person has an opinion.
Would you
rather have everything you think automatically appear on your Twitter feed or
have a voice in your head narrate your every move?
May I ask who the narrator is? Makes all the difference.
Would you
rather give up your computer or pens and paper?
Pens and paper. I don’t even think I have paper in my house. Half the time I’m writing stuff down on napkins or the back of envelopes from discarded mail items.
Would you
rather write an entire novel standing on your tippy-toes or laying down flat on
your back?
Standing on my tiptoes because I love me some tone calves.
Would you
rather read naked in front of a packed room or have no one show up to your
reading?
I’d rather have no one show up to a reading, only because no one needs to see that image.
Would you
rather read a book that is written poorly but has an excellent story, or read
one with weak content but is written well?
My weakness is writing. My strength is story idea. I’d give writing a pass if the story keeps my attention. I’ve read novels that had won writing awards and afterward I’m thinking that the story wasn’t very good.
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Jason Tanamor is the critically acclaimed author of the novels "Anonymous" and "Drama Dolls." His new novel "Vampires of Portlandia" is a NA urban fantasy about Filipino folklore - aswang. His writings have appeared in more than 250 publications. He's interviewed personalities such as Billy Corgan (Smashing Pumpkins), Pete Rose, and Dane Cook, and has covered U.S. President Barack Obama. Tanamor currently lives and works in the Portland, Oregon area.
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
Jason Teal's Guide to Books & Booze / Fall Edition
Fall means
football, dead leaves underfoot, early frost, new beginnings. End of the line.
Last stop. This is the way we change, perpetuate life. Our deity Marjorie, the
focus of my book, was inspired from this place of starting over—which we do
multiple times throughout the text in order to understand the problems plaguing
story and time across hauntings, apocalypses, dystopian realms.
All season fare Winking Owl wine was within arm’s reach and what
my mom had on hand to frame the book among her fantastic fall decor. I had
to outsource this project to those with the means, obviously.
Marjorie Cameron Parsons. Famed occultist, Thelemite, strikingly
Iowan, Navy volunteer, poet, artist. This book has nothing to do with her. Or
is it the key to the universe? You, reader, have summoned the Three,
intertwining your fate with their own. Relationships are mutable and the world
spins into another year. WE WERE CALLED SPECIMENS is Jason Teal's first book of
flash fictions. The collection centers on a mythical, supernatural Marjorie
untethered to time and space. Follow her into the bleakest, harshest storms of
humanity--and flee with her from the onslaught of dreamers and villains
alike.