End of the World Age celebration–Dec. 21

Maya calendar

Image courtesy William E. Shawcross

Mark your calendars for 6-8 p.m., Dec. 21, and plan to be at Wired Coffee, 3860 Lindbergh Blvd., Sunset Hills, Mo., for an End of the World Age party! I have a few ideas up my sleeve (more on that later), but would love to hear from you about how you’d like to celebrate the end of TWO world cycles, according the Maya–a 5,125-year cycle and another of almost 26,000 years. If that’s not worth celebrating, what is?

I’ll share a little history and a brief excerpt from my book, ZERO TIME. After all, Zero Time IS Dec. 21, 2012.

 

 

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/end-of-the-world-age-celebration-dec-21/

Giant book sale Cyber Monday!

Reprinted from LIterary Underworld:

ZERO TIME is available on CyberMonday at Literary Underworld for only $10!

Sure, there are plenty of places you can buy books. But it matters how you buy, and from whom. Did you know that traditionally published authors make much more money per book if they sell directly to you than if you buy it at a store or other bookseller? Most authors get about 7 percent when you buy from a store. But if you buy it directly from the authors, they could keep as much as 40-50 percent. The Literary Underworld is an author/small-press cooperative. We travel around conventions to bring small-press speculative fiction to new readers, and our web store offers the very best science fiction, fantasy, horror and paranormal romance directly to readers. The prices are set by the authors, and because we don’t use distributors, they’re sometimes cheaper than anywhere else, including Amazon!

Paperbacks starting at $4.00
50 percent off select authors
Free ebooks with Elizabeth Donald and Angelia Sparrow books
Discounts off select publishers
Free music download with every purchase
More than a dozen new titles
Free copy of The Black Garden with every purchase
Free shipping on purchases over $25
and more!!

ZERO TIME is available on CyberMonday at Literary Underworld for only $10!

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/giant-book-sale-through-cybermonday/

Sale! ZERO TIME $10 thru Monday

Amazing Black Friday-Cyber Monday deals at Literary Underworld, including a great deal on my book!! Some of them go away when the break is over, so hurry to LitUnd – you can use this code for an extra discount: WELCOME2012

(ZERO TIME only $10 this weekend only! Regularly $16.95.)

http://www.literaryunderworld.com/

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/sale-zero-time-10-thru-monday/

BRoP interview: Jason Jack Miller

Jason Jack Miller

Happy Thanksgiving! Today I’m thankful for the opportunity to introduce you to Jason Jack Miller, who I met via Heidi Ruby Miller (more about that connection later).

Jason hails from Fayette County, Penn., as in, “Circus freaks, temptation and the Fayette County Fair,” made famous by The Clarks in the song, “Cigarette.” He is a writer, photographer and musician. An outdoor travel guide he co-authored with his wife in 2006 jump-started his freelancing career; his work has since appeared in newspapers, magazines, literary journals, online, as part of a travel guide app for mobile phones, and in a regular column for Inveterate Media Junkies.

He wrote the novels Hellbender and All Saints during his graduate studies at Seton Hill University, where he is now adjunct creative writing faculty. In 2011, he signed a multi-book deal with Raw Dog Screaming Press. When he isn’t writing he’s on his mountain bike or looking for his next favorite guitar. He is currently writing and recording the soundtracks to his novel, The Devil and Preston Black, and writing his next novel, The Revelations of Preston Black.

Don’t miss the rest of Jason’s BRoP interview at:

  • Part 2 @ Em – Friday, Nov. 23
  • Part 3 @ Sandra – Monday, Nov. 26
  • Part 4 @ Dean – Tuesday, Nov. 27
  • Part 5 @ Terri– Wednesday, Nov. 28

PART 1: ABOUT YOU

BRoP:  When and why did you begin writing?

Jason: There are more than a few writers who knew very early on that they only ever wanted to write. They excelled in high school English and nurtured their craft—submitting poems and stories, working closely with mentors in college—before becoming writing professionals.

My path looked nothing like this. In college I drifted from major to major like an iceberg toward warmer waters, my only real passion being my summer job. Working as a white-water raft guide was more than a way to meet girls and collect a paycheck. Floods and thunderstorms, snakes, treacherous mountain roads, and a cast of characters straight from the bad and ugly sides of The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly provided me with a wealth of experiences no college degree could.

So when I ended up in Florida with the girl I loved and the mountains still whispering in my ear, I decided to start putting those stories and experiences on paper.

BRoP: Tell us about your early works—what was the first thing you ever wrote?

Jason: When I realized that my stories wouldn’t ever mean a thing to anybody besides myself, I created Henry Collins as a way to fictionalize them. And when I realized the stories needed more than just a character to bind them together, I created a plot that used my rafting experiences as a catalyst for something bigger. My first novel, White Road, told the story of how Henry’s guilt over an accidental drowning led him to the Maya ruins of eastern Mexico in search of a place to lay down and die. Instead, he found a girl and a reason to live. I’m reworking parts of this novel for a late 2013 release. All Saints, the new title, is a magical realism/dark fantasy Wizard of Oz in Yucatan. It makes me very happy to be able to keep this concept alive.

BRoP: When did you first consider yourself a professional writer?

Jason: Way back in 2005, my wife, Heidi, and I wrote a travel guide for Avalon Travel Publishing. The advance alone was enough to get us into the Authors Guild, which I thought was a mighty lofty pinnacle to have reached. But a nagging itch kept me from enjoying my status as a professional writer. I felt like I needed to be legitimized by the fiction community. So after I earned my master’s degree in Writing Popular Fiction, I spent years writing and querying.

When Amazon and Create Space made the opportunity to self-publish easier, I weighed my options and figured readers would help me prove the agents wrong. But preparing my books for publication consumed me to the point where I was spending thirty-five hours a week on formatting, proofing, covers, trying to line up cover blurbs, blog tour stops and reviews. Being in the book day in, day out changed my focus and perception, and this—not the degree or the advance from the travel guide—made me a professional. I suppose in the end it’s a bit ironic that the money or the legitimacy didn’t change me, it was the totally new lifestyle I’d jumped into. And my new perception and work ethic made it easy to work with Raw Dog Screaming Press, the publisher I met while hawking my self-published novel at a literary festival.

Still though, when I get a review like the one I got from PopMatters.com recently, it still seems a little like it’s happening to somebody else. When a reviewer writes, “HELLBENDER lives up to its billing and that’s no easy feat, considering how the last paragraph on the back cover reads…” It’s hard not to forget professionalism, and let out a little whoop.

Read the review here: http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/163349-hellbender-by-jason-jack-miller/

BRoP: What books have most influenced your life?

Jason: My influences reach the far and wide ends of the literary spectrum, which may explain why my own books don’t fit very neatly within a particular genre. The biggest books that influenced me as a kid were Stephen King’s The Shining and It, Tolkein’s The Hobbit and a few of Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman’s Dragonlance series.

When I got into college my ideas got bigger, so I needed bigger books. I enjoyed On the Road, but loved Kerouac’s Dharma Bums. There was a magical element in there I couldn’t quite put a finger on. Because of my intense interest in travel and travel writing, I found Gabriel García Márquez. I don’t know if I’ll ever read One Hundred years of Solitude again, but in it I found more of the magic Kerouac had hinted at. The level of magic in my own writing falls somewhere between that found in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues and Neil Gaiman’s American Gods. So they are the guys who affect my writing as much as, if not more than, any other.

It would be disingenuous not to discuss the influence music has had on my writing. For example, I’ve picked up some things from the lyrics of Dave Matthews and John Lennon. They both have a gift for manipulating phrasing and tempo that I try to emulate. From musicians, in general, I learned that passages in a novel should rise and fall like different tracks on an album, and in some ways, think about the parts of a novel as if they were parts of an album.

Side A:

Strong Hook

Keep It Steady

Now Build

Firecracker

Dynamite

Side B:

Regroup and Recover

Wait, It Gets Worse

Worse?

Get It Together

The Nuclear Option

BRoP: What is your favorite theme/genre to write about?

Jason:  As much as I like the magic and wonder of the unknown, love is always a theme whether it’s a romantic love or a familial love. I enjoy seeing a relationship grow when challenged by external forces, especially dark forces. I’d say in both Hellbender and in The Devil and Preston Black love is the only thing my characters have to hang onto when things are at their worst.

In my experience, without love, nothing else matters. It’s the best motivator, the greatest grail, and it’s a theme that will be around forever.

PRESTONHELLBENDER

BRoP: What format is your book(s) available in (print, e-book, audio book, etc.)?

Paperback and eBook

HELLBENDER: Although the Collins clan is steeped in Appalachian magic, Henry has never paid it much attention. But when his younger sister dies mysteriously Henry can’t shake the feeling that the decades-old feud between his family and another is to blame.

Strange things are happening at the edge of reality, deep in the forests and mountains of West Virginia. Let Jason Jack Miller take you to a place where love is forever even when death isn’t, where magic doesn’t have to be seen to be believed, where a song might be the only thing that saves your soul.

Jason Jack Miller’s MURDER, BALLADS and WHISKEY series is a unique blend of dark fiction, urban fantasy and horror. It’s Appalachian Gothic, Alt.Magical.Realism, Hillbilly Horror. It’s Justified with witches. It’s the Hatfields and McCoys with magic. It’s Johnny Cash with a fistful of copperheads singing the devil right back to hell.

Please let us know where your readers can stalk you:
Blog: http://jasonjackmiller.blogspot.com/
Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jason-Jack-Miller/174282479295487
Goodreads author page: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4729752.Jason_Jack_Miller
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JasonJackMiller
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Jason-Jack-Miller/e/B004FV7JQI/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
Other: http://www.rawdogscreaming.com/

 

 

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/brop-interview-jason-jack-miller/

BRoP interview: Lynda Williams

LyndaChicon7

It’s my great pleasure to introduce this week’s Blog Ring of Power guest, LYNDA WILLIAMS. I met Lynda through Broad Universe.

LYNDA is the author of the ten-novel Okal Rel Saga (Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing) and the editor of the Okal Rel Legacies series (Absolute Xpress). She hosts the Writer’s Craft on the Clarion Blog with David Lott. On Reality Skimming (okalrel.org/blog), she works with David Juniper, Tegan Lott and Michelle Carraway to celebrate the Okal Rel Universe in particular and the joy of writing and reading in general. See http://okalrel.org/blog/contribute/ for how to take part on Reality Skimming to promote your work or share your love of words and ideas.

Don’t miss the rest of her interview at:

  • Part 2 @ Em – Friday, Nov. 16
  • Part 3 @ Sandra – Monday, Nov. 19
  • Part 4 @ Dean – Tuesday, Nov. 20
  • Part 5 @ Terri– Wednesday, Nov. 21


PART  #1: ABOUT YOU

BRoP: How long have you been writing?

LYNDA: As long as I can remember. But I got serious about recording my stories as a teenager. See my write up of the origins of the Okal Rel Universe in my teen years at http://okalrel.org/saga/createhist/making_of/promised.html

BRoP: When and why did you begin writing?

LYNDA: As a child, I lived to play make-believe. My sister, Holly, was my first playmate. She organized my neighborhood friends to join the games. In later childhood, I gravitated to role-playing of the live action kind (make-believe) with one special friend, Kathy Perrault. My friendship with Kathy ended when she grew up and got serious about the real world. I met Alison Sinclair, the co-author for Part 4: Throne Price, in the Okal Rel Saga, at a calculus class in first year university at the University of Victoria. And the rest is history.

BRoP: Tell us about your early works—what was the first thing you ever wrote?

LYNDA: Probably a rhyming poem inspired by the poetry my father read aloud to me. I can’t remember. The first book I remember creating was a picture-story of a little girl who slipped out to dance with fairies while her parents watched the news on TV. I must have been about eight or ten. My mother loved it, and I believe I still have it somewhere. It had yellow construction paper covers and was colored in pastels, if memory serves.

BRoP: When did you first consider yourself a professional writer?

LYNDA: When Alison and I sold Part 4: Throne Price to Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing, at the end of the 1990s. I have written for pay as a newspaper reporter in the early 1980s and sold a story to Circlet Press (Amel’s first story in print) earlier. But I wanted to be novelist. And this sale came before the possibility of indie publishing. I believe in the power of a good story backed up by real feeling as well as good technique. I always knew I would publish any way I could if I never found a publisher. But I am so very grateful I did.

BRoP: What books have most influenced your life?

LYNDA: Good ones. And some not so good ones with the power to comfort me when my bold determination to see the world as it really is gets too scary. Books are like friends to me and it feels like a betrayal not to mention every single one. I read widely in popular history and science, fiction of all kinds, old English poetry, some modern Canadian poetry and smatterings of genre fiction. I read books I discover in second hand stores or at SF cons as well as “best sellers”. There’s a sameness about “best sellers” which is disappointing to the explorer in me. I read books from different cultures and eras for the mental exercise, even when they bother me.  Two books I’d recommend to any writer wanting to get a handle on cultural differences are: Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond and A Distant Mirror by Barbara W. Tuchman.

BRoP: What genre do you write?

LYNDA: Science fiction. The Okal Rel Saga “looks” like fantasy sometimes because of the larger-than-life nature of Sevolites. But the Sevolites themselves are the bio-engineered technology even if though they reject the fact. I focus on human dilemmas and the social contract rather than the gadgets, so I suppose my sub-genre is social science fiction. Or space opera, if you focus on the lives of the characters. I do love the characters. But I’ve always viewed them, at the same time, as vehicles for exploring important ideas in ethics and social control. Outside the saga, Okal Rel stories can feel like horror or mysteries or love stories or fantasy tales and legends. It depends on the narrator and, in the case of the Okal Rel Legacies series, the author.

BRoP: What is your favorite theme/genre to write about?

LYNDA: Ethics. And sustainability despite ambition. The meaning of life with and without the thrill and terror of power dynamics. What relationships have to do with these things. And how to avoid being so stupid we destroy everything worth fighting for. If one thing makes me want to scream and tear my hair, it is the “win at all costs” attitude on the part of people who are too short sighted to grasp they are just stupid. Not clever. There’s a reason why our species has a moral sense and it’s a useful one. But it isn’t necessarily evolved to content with the sort of toys we have to play with these days.

BRoP: If you couldn’t be an author, what would your ideal career be?

LYNDA: I work in the field of applied technology for education. I’ve also worked as a reporter for a newspaper, a programmer, a crisis counselor and half a dozen other things. I love to teach and have taught applied computing for many years. I think, however, if I had to do it all over again and couldn’t be a writer, I might study bio-science and do research in genetics. Or be a lawyer specialized in either digital rights or bio-science complexities. The real dream job, though, would be Ranar’s. Ranar is the cultural anthropologist in the Okal Rel Saga who comes from a very civilized world but is fascinated by the violent dynamics and genetic capital / sexual politics of the Sevolite empire.

BRoP: What format is your book(s) available in (print, e-book, audio book, etc.)?

LYNDA:

  • Trade paperback (the Saga)
  • Print on demand (Legacies)
  • Kindle (all)

BRoP: Please let us know where your readers can stalk you:
Website:  http://okalrel.org/

http://www.edgewebsite.com/books/healerssword/hsw-catalog.html

Blog: http://okalrel.org/blog

Facebook page:  http://www.facebook.com/okalrel

http://www.facebook.com/relskim

Goodreads author page: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/644584.Lynda_Williams

Twitter:  https://twitter.com/okalrelsrv  @okalrelsrv

Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/Lynda-Williams/e/B001K8GBD6

Other:  http://clarionfoundation.wordpress.com/tag/lynda-williams/

HealerSword PART 7: HEALER’S SWORD — Ilse Marin goes to work for the Sevolite Empire’s eccentric leaders to solve a financial problem and winds up fighting for her life in the midst of a plague outbreak. She also falls in love — or is it lust? — with the man most certain to make her life impossible. Samanda O’Pearl gets Amel to visit her parochial home world to one-up her old rival but her “off the beaten track” adventures with him lead to a ban on him interacting with Demish society until she can convince the League of Women for the Betterment of Men to declare him respectable. Meanwhile, the Demish are out to stop Horth Nersal from fielding a commoner fencing team to make trade contracts work with the Reetions, under Sword Law.GatheringStorm

PART 8: GATHERING STORM — It was supposed to be a civilized cultural exchange between the Sevolite Empire and the Reetion Confederacy. But things were going off the rails over wedding plans and unplanned pregnancies even before the planet-threatening attack led by an extreme sect of Nesak priests. Amel dances with the wrong person, Eler performs an alarming play, Ilse avoids Horth, Samanda struggles to keep the Demish from leaving before Amel’s Bridegroom Ball and an unexpected visitor reminds everyone why the empire distrusts Lorel sciences.

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/brop-interview-lynda-williams/

BRoP interview: Karina Fabian

KarinaI had the pleasure of meeting this week’s Blog Ring of Power guest, KARINA FABIAN, via Broad Universe.

Winner of the 2010 INDIE for best Fantasy (Magic, Mensa and Mayhem) and a Global eBook Award for Best Horror (Neeta Lyffe, Zombie Exterminator), Karina’s writing takes quirky twists that keep her–and her fans–amused. Nuns working in space, a down-and-out Faerie dragon working off a geas from St. George, zombie exterminators—there’s always a surprise in Fabian’s worlds. She teaches writing and book-marketing seminars online.

Don’t dare miss the rest of Karina’s interview (she has a chainsaw!):

  • Part 2 @ Em – Friday, Nov. 9
  • Part 3 @ Sandra – Monday, Nov. 12
  • Part 4 @ Dean – Tuesday, Nov. 13
  • Part 5 @ Terri– Wednesday, Nov. 14

PART 1: ABOUT YOU

BRoP: How long have you been writing?

Karina: Long enough to be good at it; not long enough to be bored with it.

BRoP: When did you first consider yourself a professional writer?

Karina: That’s a trick question because this year, I made the decision not to treat this as a profession any longer.  I am not making anything close to a living wage, but I have devoted 40-plus hours to it for a few years now, so it’s time to step back and regain some perspective about what I need to be doing with my life.  Writing will always be a part of that, and perhaps later, it will be a profession in the true sense of the word, but right now, my “profession” is wife and mother.

BRoP:  What books have most influenced your life?

Karina: The Bible (to guide my life), a Wrinkle in Time (to fire my imagination), Xanth novels (to groom my love for puns), the 1996 Writers Market (which started me on writing as more than just for me.)

BRoP:  What genre do you write?

Karina:  Whatever genre best fits the story, although I usually stick to science fiction, fantasy and horror, often comedic in tone, but sometimes very serious and even creepy.  I don’t want to limit myself, and if I have a “brand,” I’d say “looking at the usual in unusual ways.”

BRoP:  What is your favorite theme/genre to write about?

This may raise some eyebrows, but I don’t think hard on theme.  I write the story.  The theme just comes out in the process, so it changes with each new story.  I will say that I prefer stories where good conquers evil, friendships grow stronger, and love reigns.  Typical happy ending stuff.  Genre, like theme, will vary by the story, though I mostly stick with science fiction, fantasy, and horror, and very often liberally dosed with comedy.

BRoP:  If you couldn’t be an author, what would your ideal career be?

Karina: I ask myself this a lot, and I still don’t have a good answer.

Find Karina at:

Website: http://fabianspace.com, http://dragoneyepi.net, http://zombiedeathextreme.com

Blog:  http://fabianspace.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/karina.fabian

Twitter:  http://twitter.com/#!/KarinaFabian

Google +:  https://plus.google.com/103660024891826015212

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/10981939-karina-fabian

shambling

I Left My Brains in San Francisco

I LEFT MY BRAINS IN SAN FRANCISCO: Zombie problem? Call Neeta Lyffe, Zombie Exterminator–but not this weekend.

On vacation at an exterminator’s convention, she’s looking to relax, have fun, and enjoy a little romance. Too bad the zombies have a different idea. When they rise from their watery graves to take over the City by the Bay, it looks like it’ll be a working vacation after all.

Enjoy the thrill of re-kill with Neeta Lyffe, Zombie Exterminator.

Find I Left My Brains in San Francisco at:

Damnation Books: http://www.damnationbooks.com/book.php?isbn=9781615727643

Amazon: http://amzn.to/Nzm01L (paper) http://amzn.to/OBBmkL (Kindle)

More about it at http://zombiedeathextreme.com

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/brop-interview-karina-fabian/

Holiday Book Fair — Nov. 9-11

Left Bank Books in the Central West End is hosting a Holiday Book Fair Nov. 9-11, with more than 40 local authors represented. You can get my book, ZERO TIME, there! MORE

 

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/holiday-book-fair-nov-9-11/

October Broadly Speaking is up!

BroadPod100Reprinted from Broadly Speaking:

This month’s Broadly Speaking features two lovely broads with some spooky treats for readers and writers alike. Author K.A. Laity announces some of her new releases including a dark fiction collection; author and illustrator Vonnie Winslow Crist offers some wonderful advice for authors about Thinking Outside the Dark Fantasy box beyond the usual vampires, zombies and werewolves.

Join your host Rae Lori for this very haunting episode of Broadly Speaking

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/october-broadly-speaking-is-up/

BRoP interview: Pippa Jay

I’m thrilled to introduce you to PIPPA JAY, this week’s Blog Ring of Power guest. She’s another writer I met through Science Fiction Fantasy Saturday, thanks to SFF author Heidi Ruby Miller. Pippa’s snippets are too good to miss, so take a peek! I’m looking forward to reading KEIR.Pippa Jay

Pippa’s a stay-at-home mum of three who spent twelve years working as an Analytical Chemist in a Metals and Minerals laboratory, She bases her stories on a lifetime addiction to science-fiction books and films. Somewhere along the line a touch of romance crept into her work and refused to leave. In between torturing her various characters, Pippa spends the odd free moments trying to learn guitar, indulging in freestyle street dance and drinking high-caffeine coffee. Although happily settled in historical Colchester in the UK with her husband of 19 years, she continues to roam the rest of the Universe in her head.

Don’t miss the rest of her interview at:

  • Part 2 @ Em – Friday, Nov. 2
  • Part 3 @ Sandra – Monday, Nov. 5
  • Part 4 @ Dean – Tuesday, Nov. 6
  • Part 5 @ Terri– Wednesday, Nov. 7

PART 1: ABOUT YOU

BRoP: How long have you been writing?

Pippa: For as long as I can remember. My earliest memory is of me badgering my dad to show me how to write out my full name (it was a long one) and practising it endlessly. You’d either find me with a book or a pen in my hand back then.

BRoP: When and why did you begin writing?

Pippa: As a child. I had a hard time understanding the world, and I was painfully shy. So writing was my way of escaping and trying to make sense of things by disappearing into worlds I’d created for myself. I was also a voracious reader, but stories didn’t always go the way I wanted, so I’d rewrite them as I thought they should be.

BRoP:  When did you first consider yourself a professional writer?

Pippa: When I signed my first contract and got all the paperwork and edits for it. Then it hit home that this was serious, and I wasn’t playing at being an author any more – I actually was one!

BRoP:  What books have most influenced your life?

Pippa: Hmmm, I have to say once I’d moved away from things like Enid Blyton, it was The Lord of the Rings, and books by Arthur C Clarke and Robert Heinlein. Then I discovered Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey and I got hooked on her work.

BRoP: What is your favorite theme/genre to write about?

Pippa: Science fiction, with or without romance, but I love to blend in elements of fantasy too. I once jokingly referred to myself as the Queen of Angst when trying to write a bio, and got told by my BFF “yes, you are!”. Tormented souls are my favourite type of characters to explore.

BRoP: What format is your book(s) available in (print, e-book, audio book, etc.)?

Pippa:  Keir is available in all digital formats and print. The Bones of the Sea is available in digital formats only via Smashwords.com

BRoP: Please let us know where your readers can stalk you:

KEIR: Cursed. Dyikeirng. Is Keir beyond redemption?

For Keirlan de Corizi–the legendary ‘Blue Demon’ of Adalucien–death seems the only escape from a world where his discolored skin marks him as an oddity and condemns him to life as a pariah. But salvation comes in an unexpected guise: Tarquin Secker, a young woman who can travel the start with a wave of her hands.

But Quin has secrets of her own. She’s spent eternity searching through time and space with a strange band of companions at her back. Defying her friends’ counsel, Quin risks her apparent immortality to save Keir. She offers him sanctuary and a new life on her home world, Lyagnius.

When Keir mistakenly unleashes his dormant alien powers and earns instant exile from Quin’s home world, will she risk everything to stand by him again?

 

 

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/brop-interview-pippa-jay/

Dark Visions open mic: poetry & prose & art

At Urban EatsA night of poetry and prose, art and food was enjoyed Tuesday at Urban Eats cafe. The St. Louis Writers Guild Halloween open mic was held in conjunction with John Schnellmann’s Dark Visions art exhibit.

And yes, some people did come in costume, in case you were wondering.

Permanent link to this article: https://twfendley.com/dark-visions-open-mic-poetry-prose-art/