Friday, April 30, 2010

Blue Collar Boys


A Ray Bradbury inspired flash, "Blue Collar Boys", is up at Every Day Fiction today. It takes a little Fahrenheit 451 background knowledge to "get", so I'm sure I'll get pounded in the comments. Such is life.

You see, Montag's wife overdoses on sleeping pills early on in the book, and a couple of "blue collar boys" arrive after the emergency call. From Fahrenheit 451:

"Hell!" The operator's cigarette moved on his lip. "We get these cases nine or ten a night...You don't need an M.D., case like this; all you need is two handymen, clean up the problem in half an hour."

Just like plumbers. Man, I love that book.

And before you go, please sign up for the newsletter using the link under the title header (top of the page). I'm working on migrating my whole website to the blogger format--it's so much easier to update.

I know I can't compete with Shroud's offer if you sign up for their newsletter, but I will send a free, unpublished story to my new subscribers. That's worth something, isn't it? Maybe?

Yeah, and finally, the followers thingy is back. A few comments convinced me it's for the readers as much as anybody. I'll climb a ladder to the moon for my readers, so tada...

Have a great weekend.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Old Dogs, Newsletters, and Homecoming Queens

So I'm starting a quarterly newsletter with updates about my schtuff, interviews of other authors, free stories, and other goodies. Sign up in the grey box at the right. You have my no-SpamTM promise. There will be quarterly giveaways just for newsletter subscribers, so what do you have to lose, right? (It only takes half a second to click "delete" an unwanted email.)

Speaking of sign up thingys...

Hey! Where's the "followers" thingy?

I've dropped it to the bottom of the sidebar. (scroll down)

I might drop it completely. I love my blog readers; I don't like feeling I'm in some sort of a popularity contest. What are your thoughts on the purpose of the followers thingy?

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

WIP Wednesday: Slow and Steady

No 3K day on Borrowed Saints this Tuesday, but I did stick with my 1K words a day schedule. 33,063 words and counting...

Remember the ghost train? Well, it seems not everyone can see it:

“How about that, Charlie?”

Charlie shot Tucker a look of puzzlement. “How about what? Where should I point the camera?”

“You didn’t…you didn’t see?” Tucker felt like a boulder had flattened his chest. He gaped for breath. The few dry leaves remaining on the trees over head shook with the breeze. “You didn’t see the train?”

Charlie lowered his camera. “Is a joke? I hope it’s a joke. If you’re pulling some bullshit with your new friends—your Haley Garret friends, I’m going to be pissed.”

I have State Speech and Drama this weekend, so it will be a no words Saturday/Sunday. If I can make close to 40K by then, I'll be pleased. I have another project in the wings that's starting to itch...

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Pictures Tell the Story

(yes I'm reading about buffalo...it's research...wink, wink)


Owen's been having some Cthulhu inspired dreams?


...and, oh goody-goody, I've seen a draft cover for The House Eaters, and it's spooky in a vintage pulp horror/Nancy Drew/paperback book from the '60s sort of way. I'm giddy. Drunk with giddiness.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

You Never Know Who's Reading

I stumbled across this mention at BestScienceFictionStories.com last Friday:

"...an enjoyable story, and it really made me wonder if I would have the guts to do what some of the people in this story did."

It seems "The World in Rubber, Soft and Malleable" is the story that just keeps on giving. I wish I could write another dozen like it...of course, then it wouldn't be special. Right?

Anyway, thanks to Rusty, the human behind BestScienceFictionStories.com. I hear you, and thank you for the kind words.

Andy prefers Krylon spray paint. (and no, he isn't paid for his endorsement)

Friday, April 23, 2010

#fridayflash Chaos and the Creative Process

Chaos rumbles into the bar with a hammer in one hand. He roars. He kicks over a chair or two. The patrons tremble and cower.

All except one. The Creative Process sits alone in a corner booth, sipping a Madori Sour.

Chaos turns to a window and hurls his hammer. It tumbles end over end toward the glass, strikes it dead center, and sends spiderweb cracks skittering to the corners. He roars again.

"Always breakin' stuff." The Creative Process leaves her booth and ambles over to Chaos. "Always breakin' stuff and making it look so pretty. Just look at those lines. Such a focal point...such raw energy." She points at the broken glass.

Chaos's lower lip quivers. His eyes droop.

"There, there," The Creative Process pats him on the back, "I'll buy you a drink. You'll feel better."

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

WIP Wednesday: The Taint of Teenage Angst

I love writing.

There. I said it.

My posts may have been a bit mopey lately (thanks to some loyal readers for helping me see the trend), and I want to point the finger squarely at my MCs in Borrowed Saints. See, Phoebe's alienated herself from her only friend at a new school...and she's started cutting again. (It's the only to stop the voices, okay?) Tucker is being "taken over" and he doesn't know it, but boy does it make him a grumpy bastard. I had another 3K Tuesday, but felt down and depressed at the end of the evening.

Stupid teenage protags!

(I love you guys.)

I've always been weirdly hypersensitive to things like this...in my senior play, I was a suicidal character. Even though the show was a farce (I know, suicide and comedy=not so funny, right?), I felt soooooo depressed that semester. When I read House of Leaves, I developed the worst case of existential angst. (Anyone who has read the book knows why).

So yeah. Teenage angst and all. Have I mentioned that Phoebe is my favorite character in Borrowed Saints? We always hurt the ones we love...

Just a little cut, the voice said. Just a little tiny bit of pain.

Phoebe nodded. The hateful image in the mirror smiled. Good, it said.

The blade was cold in her fingers, and had it not been for the dark bloom in the mirror, she wouldn’t have known the razor pierced her skin at all. She pushed harder.

The image in the mirror smiled.

A door slammed below. Phoebe felt the impact jar through her body. She looked down at the red streaks on her forearm. Pretty red ribbons.

“Phoebe?” EG’s voice came from another planet, far away.

She ran the blade under the tap, rinsing away the blood. It slid neatly under the towels in the bottom drawer of the cabinet. It would wait for when she needed it again.

Word count total = 24,450. Whoot!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

I've Got This Devil on My Shoulder...and It's Talking About the Kindle

...or maybe I have too much Rain Man playing in my head. (Three of my classes watched the first half today...a little comparison/contrast thing I do with Of Mice and Men).

Today at JA Konrath's blog, A Newbie's Guide to Publishing, he interviews Karen McQuestion, a self-pubbed Kindle author with some serious sales numbers. Go ahead. Read the article. Be wowed.

I am. I tossed up The Bottom Feeders and Other Stories a few weeks ago, knowing short story collections are a hard sell in the real world, let alone via ebook. Thanks to you lovely blog-reader people, I've sold a few copies. Nothing to write home about.

It was an experiment. Still is.

And now I'm prepping another one. There are so many ways to fail as a writer, I might as well try them all, eh? With The House Eaters forthcoming from Virtual Tales and Loathsome, Dark, and Deep on sub with a publisher with whom I'd really like to work, I still have one decent novel floating around in a drawer. One I haven't really worked to hard too sell. (we won't mention the unmentionable books hiding in the darkest reaches of a hard drive)

Stay tuned...or not.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Me = Social Networking Fail...or Not?

I topped 20K in Borrowed Saints this weekend--big news in my world because I'm aiming for 50-60K for the final book. With all luck, I'll crest halfway this week. My minimum word count/day has been over 1K . I saw 2K on a few occasions (3K on that glorious Tuesday). I know Brendan...word count race and all that.

But I mention the word counts simply because it's what I can do when I make writing the first focus. When I sit down in front of the monitor, I open the Borrowed Saints file and start working. I don't sit down at the computer and check my email, blogs, forums, Twitter...

Of course, I feel like I've missed something. An opportunity. A social occasion. Something. I feel like I should work harder drumming up readers, followers, whatever. I feel like I'm failing, not because of my writing, but because I'm not spending enough time building my "platform". And I don't like that feeling. I hate it. This race feels like it goes to the best salesperson. Exposing people to your product without annoying them and pushing too hard is a tricky proposal, especially in writing because you are the brand. The product. Love it or hate it, it's true. (There's a reason I label these posts "shameful self-promotion"...I'm just not comfortable...)

I know what I should do as an author (writing is the prime directive), but how do I chase away the demon of doubt? How do you make your "product" accessible without alienating an audience?

Friday, April 16, 2010

#fridayflash Special Collections

First and foremost, Alan W. Davidson is the winner of The Devil's Food. Mr. Davidson, if you'd be so kind as to send your mail address to aaron_polson(at)hotmail(dot)com, I'll send the book your way. Enjoy.

For the Friday Flash today, I cheat. You'll have to head to Yellow Mama to read "Special Collections". As usual, I love the art Cindy Rosmus has chosen to go along with the story. Thanks Cindy, for taking on Mr. Harper's story.

Enjoy.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Money Ain't All That Dirty

Today is the last day to enter the contest for a free copy of The Devil's Food.

Looks like Robert Swartwood read my mind again with his latest post. The title alone should grab any writer by the throat: "I'm Not Looking for More Money/Readership".


Funny how (some) writers, being the self-flagellating lot we are, try to pretend we don't "deserve" any compensation for our craft.

I can't say I set out to look for those things, and they aren't the only reason I write, but I'll take them. Pay and readership are not things I expect. If I'm to have either, I must earn them, just like any writer.

From what I've seen/read/learned in the last three or four years, unless a writer hits the James Patterson/Dan Brown/Stephen King lotto, the money sucks. Money can't be the sole motivator--if it is, I'm a monumental failure. (Really, do you want me to work out how much I make per hour at the keyboard?) I'm still going to write, regardless of the payoff. Being paid is nice. Being read is nice. Being paid and read--which often go hand-in-hand--is even nicer. (well paid publications can pay well because they are supported by advertising and readership, right?)

That being said, I prefer writing and submitting to markets of my choosing. I've only had a few "commissions" (okay, maybe one). I find it hard to write specifically for money and a particular market on request. I don't enjoy those stories as much. There isn't the exhilaration/agony of submission and rejection/acceptance. I write for the thrill of the story and the double thrill of being able to share it, to tell it. And yes, even get paid a little at times (um, very little) when I've done my job well.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

WIP Wednesday: "Monster" Day

I wrote more than 3,000 words yesterday--the first 3K day I've had in nearly a year. I also managed to finalize formatting of Barry Napier's The Final Study of Cooper M. Reid. How did I do it?

Let's just say it didn't hurt 2/3 of my students were gone to math competition. ;)

From Borrowed Saints:

It thundered from the shadows on the other side of the bridge like a fountain of steam. Tucker’s mouth hung open as he watched, his brain spinning in broken circles like the web of a drunken spider. The train was transparent, a razor-thin sliver of pale smoke painted against the starry gap. It rattled over the bridge, first the engine and a coal car, several passenger cars, a few freight cars, the caboose. And like smoke, it dissipated at the near side, crumbling into the sky as a puff of spectral dust.


And how did I end yesterday's writing session? With this exchange between one of my protags and a mystery girl:

“The third tragedy…something awful about it. Something intelligent.”

He offered a weak smile. “Okay.”

“Something that wants you dead.”

Thus ends Act I.


Tuesday, April 13, 2010

How I Found My Plot

I made a "breakthrough" this weekend in my latest YA novel effort. All the ideas were there, floating around in a cerebral stew, but I couldn't quite nail it. I couldn't quite get them all to cooperate and gel into something plot-like.

I'm a little ashamed to say I found my lost organization in this book:


Book in a Month has some major flaws--the most salient being it is set up like a screenwriting course. Is that what every modern author is supposed to aspire to be, a screenwriter? Almost every example in the book is related to popular movies, and I found that a little vexing. But--because of this book, I began to think of my book as a series of related scenes, each leading to the next and each with a purpose. A lightbulb clicked on.

I scribbled like mad, and now I have thirty odd scenes and lots of other tiny bits and I wish I could write faster.

Oh, and I'm calling this book Borrowed Saints. Thoughts?

Monday, April 12, 2010

Dark Pages Volume 1, Other Updates

The right honorable Brenton Tomlinson has posted cover art for Dark Pages volume 1 from Blade Red Press. It's pretty and has my name on the back. Check it out at Mr. Tomlinson's blog.

The TOC:

"The Stain of the Psychopomp King" by Lucien E G Spelman
"Heart Of Ice" by Martin Livings
"Neptune’s Garden" by Lisa A Koosis
"Dust" by Naomi Bell
"To Die For" by S D Matley
"The Franchise" by Joe L Murr
"Clip Notes" by Marty Young
"Blood on Green" by Victoria Anisman-Reiner
"Cargo" by Aaron Polson
"Nepenthe" by Felicity Dowker
"Yellow Water Pike" by Derek Rutherford
"Surveying The Land" by B D Wilson
"Nightwork" by Robert Neilson
"Hand And Cradle" by Trent Roman

And I'm quite honored to be listed among such fine folks.

As I type, I'm listening to:



Which is, sad to say, out of print. The line up features some rare film scores. I'm sure you can find a used copy out there. It is the interweb, you know.

In the way of attention deficit blogging, I'm happy to report "supernatural" won the monster poll. 18/31 voters agree, with both humans and psychological "monsters" taking in 11 votes for second place. Go supernatural critters!,

If you didn't follow Spider and I, I've posted the whole story in one place over at Dark Flotsam. And the contest. Don't forget the contest to win a copy of The Devil's Food.

Finally, for a Monday reading treat, head over to Dark Recesses to read Cate Gardner's "Events at the Wigwam Rock Diner, Nevada"

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Spider and I (part 6) and a Contest

You can win a copy of the short-produced The Devil's Food (see below).

I slipped through the window and scanned the floor. Dark gouts of fresh blood streaked the nearest pillar. My stomach sank under the weight of Spider’s last meal. He slept in his corner, covered with the blanket. I took a few furtive steps toward the glistening, fresh blood. Behind the pillar, I found her shirt—the little pink one with a puppy on it—drunk with blood. Spider and I had scavenged around the building when we first came to town, and I remembered the broken concrete walls with exposed rebar below. I crept down the stairs into the deeper layers of the old building. Something sharp, I thought, something that would do the job quickly.

A long segment of bent and rusted rebar jutted from a half-smashed wall, and I wrapped my hands around it. It wiggled with pressure, and I leaned against the iron bar and twisted. The metal squeaked and groaned, and a long segment, about two and a half feet, broke from the wall. I held up the bar and examined the broken end, a sharp, shiny point.

Spider slept soundly, especially after feeding. He always slept so soundly, almost peacefully save for the carcass and blood. I knew I had to finish it quickly…for me and Spider. For years, he was my only family. Now, I forced myself to see the monster. I forced myself to see that he was mortal, just like me—frail and weak, or I wouldn’t have pushed him away from the car last night. If I hadn’t saved him, that little girl…

I yanked back his blanket, exposing those naked eyes, and he flinched—woken by the bright daylight, I’m sure. Maybe he knew—maybe he saw me. I hope not. His awful hands flashed to his face and covered his glassy eyes. I held my breath and pushed the point to his chest.

“Jackie?” he mumbled. My stomach lurched. My heart cried—for Spider. For Amanda.

I leaned on the rebar, forcing it through his chest and to the floor, pushing all my weight behind it. An arterial spray caught me in the face as Spider lurched, snatching at the bar with his long fingers. I stumbled backward, across the room, while the heavy blood leaped from his chest, swelling into a pool and soaking his old blanket. He made some noises, gibbering and squeaking like a monkey, stumbled a few times, and collapsed with one hand spread toward me.

“Jackie…” His voice was weak, fading. My own lips trembled as the tears broke free. I sank against the wall, sobbing.

His body twitched for a while before I moved. Eventually, I stood, stripped off my bloody shirt and pants, rubbed the tears and blood from my face, and stuffed the rags in the old burlap sack. I slept for the rest of the day—a black sleep void of dreams.

When dusk came, I gathered my filthy clothes. Behind the old building, just around the corner from the park, there were some old barrels—the steel kind for fuel or grease. I pushed the soiled clothes inside an empty barrel and mixed in a few handfuls of dry leaves. Fishing out the matches, I struck one and ignited the trash; it took a while, but soon the flames licked at the top of the barrel. I stood there, watching the fire and wondering why Spider never killed me. What was I to him?

Maybe I should have attempted a prayer. My mouth opened, but no words would come.

The night grew cold, and I turned away. Shouldering my duffle, I returned to the highway. There really wasn’t any traffic on a Sunday night, so I turned south and walked down the silent road.


__________

I don't know who I feel more sorry for, Spider or Jackie.

The old factory in Clay Center that inspired "Spider and I" is going to be a rubble pile soon. I'm a little sad. It stood empty for nearly forty years...and now they're tearing it down.

Sigh.

I was lucky enough to receive my contributor's copy and a purchased copy of The Devil's Food (in which "Spider and I" originally appeared). I don't need two, especially when there's plenty of good stories which are going unread.

So I want to share, but I only have one with which to part. So here's the deal: I have my fingers in too many cookie jars right now, especially The Bottom Feeders ebook and Strange Publications...

Help me promote The Bottom Feeders and Other Stories by tagging it on Amazon.com or writing a review or mention one of Strange Publications' projects on Twitter or via a blog (like Barry Napier's chapbook, The Final Study of Cooper M. Reid--of which a few copies are still available--or Cate Gardner's forthcoming collection, Strange Men in Pinstripe Suits and Other Curious Things, and I'll enter your name in a drawing for the spare copy of The Devil's Food. Heck, if you feel about as swell as I do about promoting stuff (i.e., don't like it), just mention the contest and you're in.

Drop me an email at aaron_polson(at)hotmail(dot)com and let me know what you've done (and I appreciate the hell out of anything, even a tweet or two), and I'll put your name in a virtual hat (random.org). (if you've already tweeted, etc., I've got your name on the list) The deadline is this Thursday (4/15) at midnight central standard time (US). I'll announce a winner on Friday. I might even have a Friday Flash this week.

Maybe.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Spider and I (part 5)

I walked the rest of the night, past the dawn, and into the morning. Spider was hungry. I was hungry. I shed tears for my parents, but could I hate him? Last night, he was so helpless—just an old man stumbling in the road. The air felt colder, inviting winter. The weather would work against us soon; we needed to find a spot to hold up for the long, dark months. I wove through rows of little houses—little bungalows tucked behind fading trees. Eventually I had to go back, and I was empty-handed.

Once I found the highway, I turned toward the park. Our world usually slept on Sunday mornings. A car flashed behind me, zipped past, but stopped abruptly just in front of me. I kept my head down as I walked beside the car.

“Jack?” Meghan’s voice shot from the car. “What are you doing out here?”

I shrugged. “Just walking.”

“Jack,” she said and her voice wavered, “have you seen Amanda?”

I bent to see inside the car. Her eyes looked dark, rimmed with red. “Your sister? No.” I shook my head, trying to shake out the thoughts that materialized inside.

“She ran away…Amanda was so upset, must’ve slipped out of bed in the dark, looking for Patches. She wasn’t home when we got up. I think she left early this morning.” Meghan leaned over and pushed the passenger door open. “Get in; I can take you home.”

My stomach flipped. “No thanks, really. I just want some air. I tell your sister to hurry home if I see her around.” I stepped to the car and slammed the door shut. “Thanks though.”

Meghan nodded, and with a quick growl the car was gone. I hesitated for a moment, frozen inside, but quickly ran toward the park, the old factory, and Spider.

Concluded tomorrow...

Friday, April 9, 2010

Spider and I (part 4)

(How about this blog-color compromise?)

If you haven't been following: part 1, part 2, part 3

I'll have some news about Spider and an offer on Sunday. Have a good weekend.

__________

The kids played below while I listened to Spider breathe all afternoon. I thought about killing him sometimes, how I’d do it. He didn’t exactly hold me hostage, but I didn’t know any other life. He started mumbling, mostly incoherent ramblings, when the sun crawled really close to the horizon. I looked a my bag, this old army duffle with everything I owned—three shirts, another pair of jeans, some underwear, a pair of dull scissors that I used to hack off my hair every couple months, some other stuff. Mostly junk I’d lifted from various stores while we drifted.

“Jackie, mmmm,” Spider called, waking. “So tasty.” Spider stretched in the dim light, casting the old wool blanket to the ground. His long, leg-like fingers danced toward the gray ceiling. My skin shifted, not quite a shiver; I could never quite swallow the parts of him that weren’t human.

I’d cleaned up the bits of dried blood as best I could, but now that he mentioned it, the smell came back, swimming around the empty building and driving into my nose. My stomach cried out. I hadn’t eaten anything all day.

“Look, I’m going to go find some grub, for me. I’m hungry.”

Spider lurched toward me, the waning daylight slicing across his pale face in bands as he moved across the floor. “Jackie, so lonely when you go.” His breath hissed from his mouth and I caught a face full of the awful, stale-blood smell. Spider usually reeked of that smell.

“I’ll be back, promise.” I backpedalled to the window and slipped down.

__________
The park below our building stretched out blackly, tucked in the shadow again. But across the street—away from the library—a convenience store glowed like its own little sun. Some people, kids I figured, milled around their cars, crawling around the lot like insects.

The soft lights in the library were kind; those humming things inside the store accused me, scrutinized my face and the dark lines under my eyes. I jiggled the change in my pocket, counting my scavenged wages from the park by the feel of the coins. The lady at the counter, this little buzzard with swept-back grey hair and a vicious beak, zeroed on me the whole time, right up until I dumped my change on the counter and scooped away a pile of candy bars and peanuts, making for the exit.

I pushed on one side and the door yanked out in front of me. Startled, I dropped my loot, the plastic wrappers crinkling when they hit the sidewalk. Two giggling girls brushed past, trailing a sweet smell of something alive. I pushed my eyes to the ground, away from them.

“Jack?” Meghan’s voice stabbed me in the ear.

I burned again, flayed open under the nighttime sun of the bright parking lot. “Hey,” I muttered, kneeling to gather my food.

“Looks like…um, a nutritious dinner.”

When I looked at her, she smiled. I wanted to run, crawl into the shadows under the building. “Yeah,” I said as I stood up. My hands shook slightly, rattling the wrappers.

“Some friends and I are just, you know, hanging out.” Her head nodded toward the others inside. “Not much to do in Springdale, right? You’ve probably already figured that out. Look, you haven’t seen a little dog, have you? Our dog ran away. Amanda—my sister—she’s really worried.”

I opened my mouth, but caught a glimpse of something trying to move across the road before the words came out. Spider, trying to cross the street. My heart scraped against my ribs, swelling like a balloon in my chest. I glanced at Meghan, the artificial sun showing her green eyes, and then shifted back to Spider. He staggered into the street, holding his long hands in front of his face, shielding his eyes from the headlights. The cars moved so quickly, one—

I ran. Meghan shouted something behind me, but I ran. I hit Spider at full sprint; we were close enough to the curb that the impact sent us tumbling to the grass. I rarely touched him—I can’t remember touching him. His body felt so bent and brittle. The car honked, and the driver poked out a finger and yelled “assholes” as he sped away.

“Jackie,” Spider muttered.

I scrambled to my feet, glanced back at the convenience store. Meghan was inside now, looking this way but talking to her friends. When I looked at Spider on the ground, those black orb eyes poking out of his pale head and his wiry body sheathed in old military fatigues, I just saw an old man.

“C’mon, you should stay hidden,” I said.

__________

Spider and I sat up most of the night, regarding each other in darkness and silence. I hovered on the ledge, dividing my attention between the window and his odd expression. He fidgeted nervously, weaving invisible thread with his long, needle-fingers. The sky started changing, started moving slowly toward the new day, when he spoke.

“Jackie?” He didn’t move from his shadows.

I looked at him, thinking about the last few years. Spider never really expected much, just a little something to eat and my company. Moments of real freedom drifted through that time, but everything else floated beneath the surface. I missed my parents. I didn’t have much choice when they died, I didn’t have much choice in those foster homes, and I didn’t have much choice when Spider came to get me in the night. I could have let that car crush him on the highway.

“Jackie, the car tonight. Thank you.” His voice sputtered slowly, hissing between his crooked lips.

“You’re welcome, all right?” My knuckles whitened as I grasped the ledge. I glanced at Spider. “Couldn’t have you splatted, could I?”

We sat in silence until Spider looked at me. “You were so little when your parents died.” His body jerked, snapped forward as he leaned on his grabbing hands and started crawling. He stopped the advance, dropping to the floor at rest. “Jackie...” His head tilted from side to side as he spoke, and the waning moonlight sparkled off his black eyes. Then he stopped, resting on his haunches.

Cold washed over me; I turned my attention to the window and then quickly back him. My eyes flicked to the bag on the floor and back to the window. Spider remained motionless. My body went numb, full of nothing, like a bag of dust. We sat in that empty, silent space until the silence grew monstrous and nearly swallowed me.

“Jackie?” More silence. “Jackie, I’m hungry.”

My parents—I couldn’t help them, but I saved this thing. What was I now? What had I been most of my fifteen years? The memories burned. I burned. Spider’s stench—the smell of decay and rot—grew into an obscene thing. I leapt from the window, stumbled down the fire escape, and ran across the grass in the dark.

Continued tomorrow...

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Long Time Gone

No, I haven't left the dark side. I've just bleached the blog. How's it look? Does black type on white work better for reading? Should I go dark again?

I feel like a good cleansing after receiving a 300+ day form rejection this morning. Although it's an honor to be held by the particular publication, 300+ days and a form rejection leaves a foul taste in my mouth. Kind of like I swallowed bleach.

I just sent a query for a 120+ day rewrite request (the original piece has been out...are you ready for this...783 days). No one is holding his breath (namely me).

What's been your longest wait to hear about a story's fate? How long is too long?

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

WIP Wednesday: Four Projects of the Apocalypse

Since this is a blog about writing (for the most part), I'll start with my latest WIP...the now-desperate-for-a-title YA ghosty-type story. I've only just begun in earnest, adding at least 1K words a day for the past few. The flip flop between brother and sister's POV (all 3rd person, of course) is making for an interesting narrative with nice parallel stories. I'm pleased.

An excerpt (from Phoebe's storyline):

Lunch in the cafeteria was hell. Phoebe gathered her brown bag from her locker, shut it gently, and slunk through the bustling corridors toward the auditorium. No one would be there between fourth and fifth period. The auditorium had been her secret, her hiding place, her sanctuary...

I've had a number of older stories I'm pretty pleased with, so, as most of you know by now (via Twitter, etc.), I put together an ebook collection. The free version of The Bottom Feeders and Other Stories includes ten previously published pulpy-horror tales. I wanted to release a Kindle edition, and since I can't offer a free version there, I added four stories, including two previously unpublished. I can't have people paying for the same thing they'd receive for free elsewhere. Because we live in an era of choice, I'm offering the "bonus edition" via Smashwords for 99 cents. If you like pulpy-horror tales, please give it a look. I consider this an experiment in 21st century storytelling. I'll let you know how it works out...



And I'm reading, of course. I took a break from Darkness because a used copy of Michael Moorcock's The Black Corridor landed in my mailbox the other day. I picked up the book after reading a mention of it in The Book of Lists: Horror under "the ten best sci-fi horror novels". I can't say I'm disappointed 50 pages in...more to come. The Black Corridor is out of print (the only copy I could find was via Half.com, but it was a quite affordable book club edition). Courting Morpheus also landed in the ol' mailbox on Monday, and I'm salivating for a crack at that. One book at a time, dear Aaron.




Finally, Barry Napier's chapbook, The Final Study of Cooper M. Reid, is available for preorder at Strange Publications. Strange will only produce 26 hand-lettered copies, all signed by the author (guess I should get him those signature sheets, huh?), and the price is too affordable to miss. As with all Strange chapbooks, it includes two previously published stories by Mr. Napier. You can also purchase a "subscription" to the first three chapbooks in the series for a considerable discount.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

What to Read Instead of the New Stephanie Meyer Book

To those who received a spam message from my email account yesterday, apologies. I blame it on my possessed computer at school...

Negativity is a big draw. I know from personal experience: the largest number of hits to this blog in a single day occurred when I posted a nasty note. Go figure.

I don't like negative, despite the marketing potential. Really. It's been my goal to keep things smiley, but WHAM, there it was all over Amazon.com: The Short, Second Life of Bree Tanner: (wait for it...) An Eclipse Novella.

Right. Hold me back before I buy fifteen copies. At the risk of alienating all the preteen girls who are obviously my potential fan base, I present:

Five Books to Read Rather Than The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner.

1-3: Three Vampire Tales (New Riverside Editions)

You can snag three great classics of vampire literature in one volume. If you claim to be a vampire aficionado and haven't read Dracula, I wag my finger at you. In fact, I've handed many of my students (who have devoured the Twilight books) a copy of Dracula and they couldn't finish it. Bah.

Pick up Three Vampire Tales, and you also have Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu and The Vampyre by John Polidori at your fingertips. Say you like the romance in Twilight? Who is sexier than the female titular character in Carmilla?



4. I Am Legend by Richard Matheson

Yeah, I didn't like the movie either, but this book puts the whole "vampire" thing in crazy perspective. Do you like bonafide twists in your endings? Brace yourself for the final denouement in Legend. Nothing is creepier than Neville's neighbor, the now-a-vampire Ben Cortman, shouting "Come Out, Neville!" all night long.


5. Some of Your Blood by Theodore Sturgeon

Did I mention romance? I mean, Some of Your Blood is a romance at heart, right? Not to mention one of the few books I actually put down at the end and felt a legitimate chill in my gut. Sturgeon takes the reader on a crazy ride in this one. Find a copy (if you can...I think it's out of print again).




And those of you who vote "at least they're reading" when they read Twilight, well, fine. And my track & field team is practicing on six-inch high hurdles.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Monday is for Monsters, Madness, and Magic

I just felt like a little alliteration today, okay?

First of all, head over to the Strange Publications blog and welcome Cate Gardner to the fold. I'm thrilled to say Strange will be publishing her short story collection, Strange Men in Pinstripe Suits and Other Curious Things. I'm speaking of magic here, folks. Magic.

As for the madness, well the NCAA Men's National Championship will be decided tonight between Butler and Duke. My estimate is about 90% of the country (that gives a shite) will be cheering for Butler. Sorry Dukies, the Bulldogs have a much better story. Maybe I'm wrong on this...I guess that would be more madness...

And monsters. Plenty of them.

Because I like monsters. In fact, I like monsters so much, I'm running a poll over in the sidebar. Your vote is appreciated through midnight (US central standard time) this Friday. Have a lovely week.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Spider and I (part 3)

I was four, maybe five when my folks died. Their car smashed up pretty good, sending bent steel and broken plastic to rend and tear their bodies. They had no close relatives. After that, I bounced a bit—had a rough time. Five years old made me too old for most to adopt.

Five years old, and I was garbage tossed around to foster homes for the next few years.

I had mostly forgotten everything about my real parents except the books they’d read to me before bed. When I scrunched into one of those fat chairs in the library, I imagined being a little boy again, sitting next to my folks, reading bedtime stories. Strange, but libraries had always brought sanctuary, a place I could almost disappear—a place no one would think to look.

Lord of the Flies captured me that morning, took me to a little island. I meandered through the pages for a couple of hours before a little stiffness crawled into my legs. As I set the book down to stretch, I saw the girl from the park—the pink shirt with pigtails. Her little hand intertwined with the long, white fingers of another girl, older though, and my eyes couldn’t help but rest on her for a few moments. The older one had hair like coffee—the kind that truckers fired out of convenience store machines, sparkling and shimmering in the light. Her hair tumbled around her shoulders in curls, and she caught me looking with her dark eyes—green and thick. My neck burned, and I tried to remember the last time I snuck into truck stop for a shower. Such a stupid thing to worry about.

“Hi.” The tall one smiled. “Amanda told me you were in the park this morning.”

I looked at the little one and tried to smile in return. “Yeah.”

“Are you new here? Going to school?” She tilted her head and sort of thrust it around to take a look at my reading material. “I’m Meghan.” Her hand stuck out like I needed to touch it or something.

I pushed my own hand out, and my head suddenly felt lopsided and awkward, like it was stuffed with wet paper. Her long fingers brushed my palm as she took my hand and gave it a little shake.

“Jack,” I whispered. We were in the library, and I always wanted to fly a bit under the radar, so I kept my voice low. “Just moved here. I’m done with school though—nineteen.” I tried to straighten my back and look like a convincing nineteen-year-old.

“Right. Do you live near the park, or just out for a stroll on a Saturday morning?”

I shifted on my feet. “I just like the weather, that’s all.” I glanced down and spotted this little brown spider skittering across the dented hardwood.

“You like the weather.” She kept smiling, but I felt like some hobbled mouse that an alley cat would bat around for hours. “That’s why you’ve holed up in here reading, Lord of the Flies.” Her hands rested on her hips.

“Yeah.” A heavy feeling, like three pairs of eyes boring into my chest, grabbed me. Maybe it was because of the grand inquisition Meghan laid on me. I snatched the book and started for the counter. “I lost track of time.”

“See you around, Jack,” she called after me. I waved one hand without looking, dropped the book at the desk, and hurried down the stairs.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Spider and I (Part 2)

No foolin'. Two entries from "Spider and I" this week, starting with...

Morning light flooded through smudged glass. Scraps of Spider’s dinner lay about—a bit of blood sprayed on the square pillars and a few tiny snatches of fur. I never felt all that bad about the dogs. One of my foster homes had this little dog, Oscar, a little yipping thing that bit me once. Those folks worried more about the dog than me, took him to the vet, while I had to wrap my own hand with a t-shirt to stop the blood. That wasn’t even the worst of the homes.

Spider slept in the corner. Always in the corner. A light blanket covered him, something that would shield his nearly blind but sensitive eyes from the sun. The light bothered him—he had very thin eyelids, part of the “birth defect”. I felt at ease in the morning, pretty sure that Spider would never hurt me, but the way he ambled after his prey, skittering sideways and backwards on all fours, made my skin dance sometimes.

The little squeaks of children’s voices swelled from the playground. They weren’t at school, so I figured it was Saturday. I crept to the window, peering out at the little insects scurrying below. Spider always sought one of the highest buildings, and even as we hopped between these little towns, he seemed to find that one place that poked out of the prairie like a challenge to the sky.

Beyond the park, just across the street on the far side, was the town library. I liked to find the library wherever we traveled. Saturday meant reading, safe from anybody who’d want to know why I wasn’t at school. I’d been there last week, had overstuffed chairs tucked away in little nooks where I could hide all day and read. Where I could escape Spider for a while, escape the stench of our temporary home and imagine something different.

I crept out of the window, slinking down the fire escape into the grass below. As I started across the park, my eyes were fixed on the ground, scanning for loose change—quarters, dimes, and nickels that always fell out of the pockets of squirming children.

“Hey mister!”

The voice snapped my trance. I looked up and searched for its owner. A little girl, probably seven or eight with messy pigtails and dirty pink shirt—a brown puppy with sappy eyes on the front—trotted across the grass.

“Yeah,” I mumbled.

“Have you seen a little dog, a terrier? Her name is Patches.”

The smell of blood seemed to drift from the factory building. I shook my head and turned to walk away.

“Did you come from that building?” Her pudgy little finger poked toward the brown bricks.

“No,” I lied. I shrugged and played dumb. “That place? It looks dangerous—like it could fall down or something. I’d make sure to steer clear.” I winked and started walking again.

“Okay mister,” the little kid called after me.