Thursday, June 23, 2016
TBR: Flicker
This looks like a fun urban fantasy with fae instead of the usual werewolves and vampires. (Even though I write about vampires, I'm pretty tired of the same old same old.)
Labels:
fae,
Urban Fantasy,
vampires,
werewolves
Freebie Fiction: Spite
My historic, horrific take on "Sleeping Beauty" is free right now. Get your copy of Spite, a longish short story.
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Guest Post: Patricia Abbott
Novelist Patricia Abbott, whose debut novel Concrete Angel is a nominee for the 2016 Macavity Award for Best First Mystery, discusses some of the thorny issues facing writers of crime fiction.
The Difficult Centerpiece of SHOT IN
DETROIT
SHOT INDETROIT is the story a female photographer desperate to find artistic success.
Through her relationship with a mortician, she comes up with the idea of photographing
young black men who have died in Detroit over a six-month period. I wrote the
character of Violet Hart as ambitious, a loner, a pest in getting what she
wants. An artist in other words. She lives on the outskirts of conventional
society--at least in her mind--reasoning that an artist is given license to
bend societal norms. Or is she? Does Violet exploit the men she photographs or
does she honor them? Is it somewhere in between? These are the issues I
wrestled with in writing SHOT IN DETROIT. Both in creating a character who
thought like this and in making her the book's centerpiece. And was I guilty of
the same transgressions?
I set SHOT
IN DETROIT almost totally within Detroit. It's a city often accused of
exemplifying transgression: the murder capital of the world plunged into
bankruptcy, suffering the lowest rate of high school graduation in the country,
imprisoning the most black males, enduring the most extreme poverty. The art
and literature coming out of Detroit was edgy, bleak, transgressive. How could it not be? To find a Detroit prompting a
different story, I'd have to have set it much earlier. Even in Joyce Carol
Oates' brilliant THEM, set in the fifties and sixties in Detroit, the plunge is
well underway.
Early
readers of SHOT found Violet a difficult sell. An agent gave me this advice:
change her name, make her younger, give her girlfriends, find her a best friend
who isn't a gay Filipino who sells drugs. Make her more appealing to women:
they buy the books. I took some of his advice. But each time I stepped farther
away from the Violet in my head, the story felt off-beam. If the central
premise of the novel was going to work, Violet could not be the sort of woman
who sat on PTA boards or lunched with former sorority sisters.
Labels:
Concrete Angel,
Detroit,
Joyce Carol Oates,
Patricia Abbott,
Shot in Detroit,
Them
Monday, June 20, 2016
Cover Reveal: Deus Ex Magical
My alter-ego Kat Parrish will be releasing a new paranormal romance novelette next month called Deus Ex Magical. It's my first story set in the Pacific Northwest and my first foray into paranormal romance. The cover is by Serena Daphn and you can find a gallery of her covers (she does premade as well as custom covers) here.
I love the play of color and black and white. And that hot pink really pops. I am very pleased with this cover!
I love the play of color and black and white. And that hot pink really pops. I am very pleased with this cover!
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Sunday Sweepstakes: Nalini Singh
If you're a Nalani Singh fan--and who isn't a fan of the best-selling PNR writer?--you might want to check out this chance to win ANY one of her books plus get entered in a contest to win other great giveaways. I'm way behind on my Nalini reading, so there are four or five of her books I wouldn't mind winning, including this one.
check out
check out
Friday, June 17, 2016
Cover appreciation: Animal Farm
Everyone reads George Orwell's Animal Farm in school (along with Brave New World and Lord of the Flies). As a result, each new version of the book seems to get a new cover. This seems to be the latest cover, and I like it. Srikingly graphic. Clean.
The cover of the edition I read was the one on the right.
It's memorable enough that I can still pick it out from a gallery of covers the book has had over the years. Of the three dystopian novels every high school kid has to read, this one was probably my favorite, although I actually preferred 1984 to Animal Farm. I should probably go back and reread it. Somehow the current presidential election cycle seems to suggest it's time.
The cover of the edition I read was the one on the right.
It's memorable enough that I can still pick it out from a gallery of covers the book has had over the years. Of the three dystopian novels every high school kid has to read, this one was probably my favorite, although I actually preferred 1984 to Animal Farm. I should probably go back and reread it. Somehow the current presidential election cycle seems to suggest it's time.
Labels:
1984,
Animal Farm,
Brave New World,
George Orwell,
Lord of the Flies
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Review: Death of a Dyer by Eleanor Kuhns
Death of a
Dyer by Eleanor Kuhns is the second
of her Will Rees mysteries about a Revolutionary War veteran-turned-itinerant
weaver.
They didn't
have Facebook back in the 18th century so hearing unexpected news about an old
friend rarely meant something good had happened. For Will Rees, learning that
Nate Bowditch is dead is not only unexpected; it's unbelievable.
"Dead?”
Rees repeated, staring at George Potter in shock.
“Dead?”
A spasm of unexpected grief shot through him. Although he hadn’t seen Nate
Bowditch for eighteen years, not since Rees had marched away with the
Continental Army in
1777,
as boys they’d been closer than brothers. “Are you sure?”
Potter
put down his cup with a clink. “Of course I’m sure. His wife herself told me of
his death.”
“I’ve
never met her,” Rees said.
“After
almost twenty years? He lives— lived on the other side of Dugard, not the
Atlantic Ocean. What happened? You were such good friends.”
Rees
shrugged; that story was too long to tell. “We . . . went in different
directions.”
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