James Dorr's Blog, page 178

October 5, 2014

Bloomington Writers Guild First Sunday Prose Includes The Calm

I had originally considered “The First Hundred Years,” a pre-Romero zombie tale based on a Jamaican legend and originally published in my second prose collection, DARKER LOVES:  TALES OF MYSTERY AND REGRET.  But, as I thought further, I asked myself if a tropical setting would really be best for a story specifically read in October to help build a mood for the StrangeMissDRegionsupcoming Halloween season.  Instead, thought I, how about New York state in the Taconic Mountains, perhaps in Colonial times, in a town that’s not found on any maps and with — dare one suggest it — perhaps a Lovecraftian atmosphere to it?  And thus the story I finally chose for this month’s “First Sundays Prose Reading & Open Mic” (cf August 14, 3, et al.) was “The Calm,” originally published in NEW MYTHOS LEGENDS in 1999 and later reprinted in my first prose collection, STRANGE MISTRESSES:  TALES OF WONDER AND ROMANCE.


First Sundays Prose is a monthly feature sponsored by the Bloomington Writers Guild and host venue Boxcar Books and includes three featured readers for about fifteen minutes each, followed by a chance for audience members to read.  In fact this was the second time I was a featured reader, the first being at the second “First Sundays” ever in February last year (cf. February 4 2013) where I read THE TEARS OF ISIS’s “River Red” (first published in the 2009 Canadian anthology ESCAPE CLAUSE).  This month the other readers were Michael Manis, a visiting lecturer at Indiana University where he teaches creative writing and composition, with excerpts from a novel he’s currently working on set in 1870s Kansas, and Bloomington poet, prose writer, Writers Guild founding member, and chairperson emerita Patsy Rahn who read a scene from what will be a radio drama series based on the legend of Psyche and Eros.


More on the Writers Guild, including upcoming scheduled activities, can be found here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 05, 2014 14:40

October 3, 2014

Cthulhu Haiku II Limited Audio Edition?

Once upon a time (well, about a year ago less a couple of weeks — see October 25 2013; also this year May 5 and January 7) I sent some poems to Popcorn Press’s CTHULHU HAIKU II, AND MORE MYTHOS MADNESS, and five were accepted and subsequently published early this year.  None of these were actually haiku, but Popcorn Press is generous with its definitions as long as the work is short, including accepting flash fiction at up to 1000 words.  Of mine, one, “Bad Vacation,” was a shadorma, a six-line form somewhat like a lune and a haiku smushed together (cf. August 5 2013), while the others were free verse, “Slow-Motion,” “It Must Have Been That New Fish Food,” “The Vampiress Dreams of an Evening in Innsmouth” (my personal favorite!), and “With the Economy What It Is, Maybe We’ll Take Any Job We Can Get.”


Meanwhile life goes on, new books get published (right now they’ve been reading for a second HALLOWEEN HAIKU volume, for more information on which press here; for the original volume see November 2 2011).  But you can’t keep a Mythos monster down forever either.  Thus in today’s email came the notice with permission request to use my poems for a limited audio edition of CTHULHU HAIKU II.  As Popcorn Press’s Diane Severson Mori put it:  “Last year about this time you had some of your work publishecthulhu-haiju-ii-coverd in Lester Smith’s antho CTHULHU HAIKU II.  As part of the effort to drum up more support for the Kickstarter I offered to do an audiobook version if the amount reached a certain level.  It did and so I really should do the audiobook.  However, due to many extenuating circumstances I haven’t done it yet. Mostly, though, it’s because Lester didn’t get permission from all contributors right away. You are one of the contributors that he never heard from. So, it’s my turn to contact you.  I bet it just got lost in the shuffle!”  [note from me:  it apparently did, which unfortunately sometimes isn’t all that hard with email these days]


She went on to explain that it would be produced under a Creative Commons license and distributed only to the contributors and the backers of the Kickstarter.  Also that it would not be sold commercially, although some individual re-distribution might be permitted under CC rules.  I emailed back that I thought it would be fine and she had my permission to record my poems (there was an option for me to do a recording myself, but I declined — “Caveman of Computing” and all that, you know), so we shall see what the future will bring.


In the meantime, however, should any be interested in reading CTHULHU HAIKU II now in the original print or Kindle edition, more information can be had by pressing here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 03, 2014 14:09

September 30, 2014

Lo Mein on the Menu at Halloween Forevermore (Another Lagniappe); Year’s End, Other Untreed Reads Books on October Sale

At last it can be read!  “A Bucket of Lo Mein” (cf. September 22) is now up on HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE along with a selection of other stories and features.  Even without my flash fiction piece as an appetizer, however, the site is one worth dipping into — scroll down below (September 24, 22) for references and links to two other features at least I found interesting over the past few days.  But eBucket-of-Lo-Meinspecially check out “A Bucket of Lo Mein,” a flavorful tale of (shall one say) uncanny Chinese cooking and why bicycle delivery persons should always watch the road to avoid spills. To see for yourself, you need only press here.


And once you are finished, for an overview of HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE, including more stories, articles, reviews, and a featured interview this week of horror writer Lucy Taylor, look for the “You are here” line just above “A Bucket of Lo Mein” and press where it says “Home.”


Then, speaking of horror, YEAR’S END:  14  TALES OF HOLIDAY HORROR with my lead story “Appointment in Time” is one of a number of horror and mystery titles on special sale at the Untreed Reads Publishing site for the month of October.  But let Editor Jay Hartman tell you himself.


“In October, we’ll be discounting everything in the Horror and Mystery sections 25% through October 31st.  This is part of our annual Halloween celebration on the site.  This sale has already begun.


“ONLY titles currently appearing in those sections will be discounted.”


To find out more, check out the Untreed Reads Store by pressing here, then look for direct links on the left side for Mystery, Horror, and Paperback titles included.  And remember these special pre-Halloween prices are available only at the Untreed Reads site, including (to quote again) the following:


“On October 31st we will have a one-day Trick-or-Treat promotion.  These are full-length titles that we will lower to $0.99 for one day only.


“We will also be doing “Treat of the Week.”  This is a title that is deeply discounted for one week only and is featured on our homepage.  . . .   The Treat Weeks are as follows:


“October 5th -11th

“October 12th – 18th

“October 19th – 25th

“October 16th – November 1st


“Paperbacks will continue to be 25% off, and buyers can continue to get the ebook edition free with the purchase of the paperback.


“There will be another special promotion the week of the 12th through 18th as Untreed Reads participates in San Francisco Litquake 2014.”


Again, to find out more, check out the Untreed Reads Store by pressing here, or if (as I hope) you’re especially interested in YEAR’S END (an anthology of New Year’s Eve horror, remember, including my “Appointment in Time), you can go to it directly by pressing here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 30, 2014 11:16

Lo Mein on the Menu at Halloween Forevermore; Year’s End, Other Untreed Reads Books on October Sale

At last it can be read!  “A Bucket of Lo Mein” (cf. September 22) is now up on HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE along with a selection of other stories and features.  Even without my flash fiction piece as an appetizer, however, the site is one worth dipping into — scroll down below (September 24, 22) for references and links to two other features at least I found interesting over the past few days.  But eBucket-of-Lo-Meinspecially check out “A Bucket of Lo Mein,” a flavorful tale of (shall one say) uncanny Chinese cooking and why bicycle delivery persons should always watch the road to avoid spills. To see for yourself, you need only press here.


And once you are finished, for an overview of HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE, including more stories, articles, reviews, and a featured interview this week of horror writer Lucy Taylor, look for the “You are here” line just above “A Bucket of Lo Mein” and press where it says “Home.”


Then, speaking of horror, YEAR’S END:  14  TALES OF HOLIDAY HORROR with my lead story “Appointment in Time” is one of a number of horror and mystery titles on special sale at the Untreed Reads Publishing site for the month of October.  But let Editor Jay Hartman tell you himself.


“In October, we’ll be discounting everything in the Horror and Mystery sections 25% through October 31st.  This is part of our annual Halloween celebration on the site.  This sale has already begun.


“ONLY titles currently appearing in those sections will be discounted.”


To find out more, check out the Untreed Reads Store by pressing here, then look for direct links on the left side for Mystery, Horror, and Paperback titles included.  And remember these special pre-Halloween prices are available only at the Untreed Reads site, including (to quote again) the following:


“On October 31st we will have a one-day Trick-or-Treat promotion.  These are full-length titles that we will lower to $0.99 for one day only.


“We will also be doing “Treat of the Week.”  This is a title that is deeply discounted for one week only and is featured on our homepage.  . . .   The Treat Weeks are as follows:


“October 5th -11th

“October 12th – 18th

“October 19th – 25th

“October 16th – November 1st


“Paperbacks will continue to be 25% off, and buyers can continue to get the ebook edition free with the purchase of the paperback.


“There will be another special promotion the week of the 12th through 18th as Untreed Reads participates in San Francisco Litquake 2014.”


Again, to find out more, check out the Untreed Reads Store by pressing here, or if (as I hope) you’re especially interested in YEAR’S END (an anthology of New Year’s Eve horror, remember, including my “Appointment in Time), you can go to it directly by pressing here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 30, 2014 11:16

September 28, 2014

Last Sunday Poetry Readings Resume: Preversions (a Lagniappe)

As for concerns, drivers have also noted that the lanes where buses park to pick up and drop off passengers are too narrow for easy access from the street.

And while the traffic signal at Smith Avenue and Walnut Street will turn red when buses exit the center, traffic is still congested from vehicles stopped for the stoplight at Walnut and Third streets.

[One driver’s] concern focuses on the facility’s public restrooms.

“We have a lot of people — who knows what they’ll do in there,” he said. “It’s one of those things we’ll have to wait and see.  Hopefully, they take care of it and don’t abuse it.”


(from “Bus riders impressed with Bloomington Transit’s new center,” by Lauren Slavin, Bloomington Herald-Times, Tuesday August 19 2014)

hybrid-bus-300x225

The building at Third and Walnut streets is much more user friendly to those who use the local bus system than the structure at Fourth and Washington it’s replacing.  It has an air conditioned lobby, public restrooms, WiFi, indoor and outdoor seating, and lockers and racks for bicycles.  It’s modern in every sense of the word.

While that all sounds nice, the friendliness of the place could be a double-edged sword.  It’s a public amenity and city government owes it to the public that it remains clean, safe and well cared for.  All over the country, there are bus stations — transit centers if you will — that are none of the above.


(from Tuesday, August 19, 2014, The Herald-Times, editorial)


Fast forward a month and a half to the present, and time for the Bloomington Writers Guild’s Last Sunday Poetry Reading & Open Mic (cf. May 25, et al. — due to Labor Day Weekend’s Spoken Word Stage on August 30-31, there was no Last Sundays reading for August).  Yes, I had written a poem about the newspaper items cited above, spiced by 1970s nostalgia when, hippie-bashing having become passé, a wave of homophobia had swept over the local university community with sometimes hilarious results.  I hadn’t intended to read it though, it being in the class of what I call “The Devil Made Me Do It” writings — and anyway possibly being offensive.  I had prepared instead a suite of four short poems about, among related subjects, the perils of blind dates when vampires are involved.  But at the library earlier that afternoon I had, on impulse, printed out a copy along with the background articles quoted above — well, just in case. . . .


The featured readers were Thomas Tokarski, “a Bloomington poet and environmental/social activist who writes to fend off despair and cynicism,” and Ciara Miller, “a native of Chicago, [who] is a poetry MFA candidate and an African American/African Diaspora Studies MFA candidate at Indiana University.”  Both readings, and especially Ciara’s, oozed power and social discontent, rising at times to the level of anger — but always stopping just short.  Both stimulating and exciting readings!


Sometime during the readings the thought came to me, why not?  Or was the Devil whispering again in my ear?  Anyhow, the poem now seemed relevant to the spirit of the session, and so (and as a lagniappe for you, who read this account — so be warned, be warned!) when my time came I started by quoting some of what I’ve cited above, and then continued “with a tip of the hat to Colonel ‘Bat’ Guano, from the movie DOCTOR STRANGELOVE” with the poem below.


The audience loved it.


PREVERSIONS


“Sure, the new city terminal’s fine,”

the bus driver said,

“but what I don’t like is they got public restrooms.

I mean, like they’re clean enough now,

while they’re new,

but what happens six months, eight months down the road

after the word’s got out?

Drug users shooting up, that kind of stuff too —

everyone knows that —

but what’s worse is when all them sexual preverts

start doing their thing in the public toilets.

You know, their preversions, you know the kind I mean

you can’t get the smell out when they’re finished

either —

you bring in your janitors with mops and buckets,

they do their best, sure, but how can they keep ahead?

Great waves of body fluids gushing beneath the doors,

flooding the waiting room — bring in the cops too,

but what can they do?

They make some arrests, but its preverts I’m saying,

doing their sex preversions wherever they find a spot

for it,

maybe jail cells too — just ain’t no stopping ‘em —

you hose down with Lysol but that makes no difference,

’cause what I’m saying is this,

if you’re gonna have public restrooms

it’s just an excuse for ‘em, as if they needed one.     

Just ask me, I know,

like back in the old days,

back when there wasn’t even talk about public toilets

I can’t tell you how many of ‘em I caught

just doing their preverted things on the bus.”  


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 28, 2014 23:43

September 26, 2014

A Robot, a Cyborg, and a Martian Were Running a Bit Late

Another short trip in the wayback machine:  how many recall A ROBOT, A CYBORG, AND A MARTIAN WALK INTO A SPACE BAR. . . . (cf. May 28, 26)?  To quote from Publisher Nomadic Delirium Press, “[a]s you might be able to guess, or at least we hope you can guess, this is an anthology of comedic science fiction.  So, if you think you can tickle our funny bone with your SF story, we want to see it. . .  We will also consider fantasy humor, but we would prefer SF.”  Originally the book was scheduled to come into being just after Halloween, on November 1.  Well, you know how these things go, try to get even three Earthlings together for an appointment at a given time.


So in this case another book ahead of it on the publisher’s schedule suffered an unexpected delay and, again from the horse’s mouth, “we thought we’d post an update here.  . . .  We’re hoping to release this collection in December, but the reality is that it will probably be January.  Everything is still on course, and we still want to use all the stories that we’ve already accepted.


“For authors who have stories appearing in the collection, you can expect contracts in late November or early December.”


Such is the life of the publisher, the writer, and also sometimes the reader.  My story in this one is titled “Toast” and, perhaps ironically, is about breakfast (well, possibly one or two other things too).  So maybe in  time for a post-New Year’s brunch. . . ?


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 26, 2014 12:52

September 24, 2014

More from Halloween Forevermore — Tales of Edgar Allan Poe

HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE is turning out to be a treasure trove of cool stuff.  So here’s another one to share and, while the vampire article Monday may have seemed more basic, this one’s a review of a cutting edge film.  But first a short trip in the wayback machine cdf9a17e36930d844cafb67ce57d44b4_largeto this summer’s NASFiC (a.k.a. Detcon1) in Detroit, noting my “having missed the Masquerade (hey, they ought to have pictures of it in LOCUS), opting instead for that night’s ‘Film Festival — Horror Shorts #4,’ which included a premiere of ‘The Tell Tale Heart,’ the first of three stories in TALES OF POE directed by Bart Mastronardi and set to premiere as a whole in Hollywood next month” (see July 23).  Thus it came that TALES OF POE had its Hollywood world premiere as promised on August 20, and guess who happened to be in attendance, HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE managing editor/reviewer Terry M. West!


So now we know what the other two stories are, for one thing:  “The Cask” (based on “A Cask of Amontillado”) and “Dreams” (a put-together sequence of various Poe themes).  For another, I can say from just seeing the first part that the film as a whole is on my list to be on the lookout for.  Might one hope for a Midwest premiere at the Indiana University Cinema?  Or, at least, perhaps a screening at next year’s Diabolique Film Festival?


Maybe not, but one can find the picture reviewed — including a trailer — at HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE by pressing here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 24, 2014 12:37

September 23, 2014

More About Vampires — the Curious Case of Mercy Brown

For readers who punched the button in yesterday’s post for the HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE piece by Donna Marie West on “The Historical Vampire,” a bit more on the critters, or at least on those believed to be vampires right here in the United States.  I addedburne-jones-le-vampire_edit a comment which one can find there, but the gist of it was a reference to the article’s statement, “If bitten you could break the spell by burning the vampire’s heart and consuming it.”  That reminded me that that’s exactly what was done in the case of Mercy Brown, the last American vampire — hers was one of a flurry of cases of suspected vampirism in Connecticut and Rhode Island toward the end of the 19th century and has also been said to have been in part the inspiration for Bram Stoker’s novel, Dracula.  Then for more I offered a link to one account about Mercy Brown which can also be found here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 23, 2014 12:36

September 22, 2014

A Bucket of Halloween? (and a “Sort of” Lagniappe)

“We DO pay for flash fiction,” the guidelines read.  “Halloween theme gives you an edge, but we will consider all forms of horror.  Keep it to a PG-13 level, as we do expect a mixed audience.  Pays five cents per word to 500 words.  No reprints, please.  We will respond to every submission as quickly as we can, but expect 2-4 weeks.”


And so it happened I had a story, if not of Halloween per se, at least Halloween-like, at a little bit over 500 words, but it could use tightening.  I did what was needed and then sent it out — and a week and a day later the email came from Managing Editor Terry M. West:  “Yes, I would like to run this one on September 30.”


The publication is called HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE and the story in question, “A Bucket of Lo Mein,” the saga of a restaurant bicycle delivery person who works for a man who is not Chinese, but looks a little like Bela Lugosi.  In full disclosure, this is actually the second story I’d sent to HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE, the first, about chocolate, having been deemed perhaps a bit too much toward the bizarre.  Might I have, instead, something on more of a classic trope?


But of course, I thought — and also about food! — so, for the result, keep an eye out for HALLOWEEN FOREVERMORE in just another week and a day, “a place,” according to the web site, “that celebrates Halloween and the horror genre 365 days a year.  Our goal is to satisfy the casual fan as well as the diehard enthusiast with exclusive content for all things Halloween and horror:  fiction, movies, reviews, interviews and we also offer cool Halloween and horror-themed merchandise all year long.”  And so for a sort of lagniappe — I say “sort of” because this time it’s not my own work I’m offering — I ran across some interesting facts on “The Historical Vampire” in the current issue.  If interested in seeing more, one need but press here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 22, 2014 13:15

September 21, 2014

Short Film Wallow Marks Diabolique Finish

To quote from the program book:  “Chip returns home to find his mother brutally murdered and a sessile space alien living in her house rent free.  A somewhat xenophobic and bureaucratic government agency called Science Team is brought in to eliminate the extraterrestrial threat.  Drama ensues.  People die. Inner and extraterrestrial demons are engaged.  Men in pink suits use cool-looking technology.  Events culminate in a destructive orgy of violence as people’s minds are literally blown out of their heads.”  One of the film’s introducers called it “hopefully the most bizarre film you’ve seen all year.”  I don’t know science-teamwhether I necessarily agree with the latter (I see an awful lot of films), but feature-length SCIENCE TEAM (2014), in a block with short films DEARLY DEPARTED (a fiancée won’t let a little thing like her intended’s death get in the way of the honeymoon), FRANKY AND THE ANT (a hit man’s ethic that centers on loyalty), and UNCANNY VALLEY (an animated look at a robot’s attempts to win his human Mistess Celina’s love), all of these films from the USA, did offer an interesting end to the 2014 Diabolique Film Festival.  While hard to describe, SCIENCE TEAM might be considered retro science fiction/horror with a deliberate attempt “to make it like an ’80s horror comedy” (Director Drew Bolduc interview in FANGORIA, June 27).


This was the last of six two-hour blocks (generally one and a half hours of film followed by a half hour Q and A/break between blocks) that offered a wallow of short films for Saturday’s participants, starting with two more or less family friendly programs but growing progressively darker (or, in the final set, maybe bizarro) as the day progressed.  I had other obligations earliDIFF_AcademicSymposiumer, notably the September meeting of my writers group at 12:30 that afternoon, but I did make the final four blocks, from 4 p.m. to a bit after midnight, totaling 27 films in all ranging from 2 minutes long (SANTA, Greece, from the fourth block, subtitled “The Chilling”) to 80 minutes for the aforementioned SCIENCE TEAM.  Other highlights for me were, from the third block subtitled “The Disturbed,” LIVELY from Canada (a babysitter, an escaped killer, a precocious nine year old boy) which also won for Best Cinematography; from the fourth block, EVIL TWIN from Germany (an epic fight through space and time involves two sets of brothers), WATERBORNE from Australia (zombie kangaroos), and Best Makeup winner THE VISITANT (a mother defends her child from a demon — or does she?) from the USA; and from the fifth, “The Perverse,” EXTREME PINOCCHIO from France (a re-imagining of the tale involving a junkie dwarf and a sexual predator with a Geppetto fixation, also winner of Best Screenplay), and the Spanish TIMOTHY (another babysitter story, this involving the psychopathic host of a children’s TV show who visits still wearing his giant rabbit costume).


And there were many more of interest:  KVISTUR (Canada) and COUNTER PARTS (USA) in the third block; LA LLORONA (USA), THE CARRIAGE, OR, DRACULA & MY MOTHER (Canada, also Best Director), and ODD ONE OUT (Canada) in the fourth; SERVICE (USA), PITY (USA), and THE HEAT (Poland, winner of Best Short and Best Actor) in the fifth.  And more beyond that, with précis of all to be found here.


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 21, 2014 01:14