Rhea Rose's Blog, page 2

July 22, 2014

Cottage Bistro Host ChiZine Reading Series

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Colleen Anderson is the host(ess) for the ChiZine reading series for west coast speculative fiction writers. Tonight belonged to Oregon readers, Cameron Pierce, Kirsten Alene and Alan M.Clark.


The three readers regaled us with their weird and wonderful fishy tales of fun and horror. Think sushi shaped like naughty bits, dead man dancing underwater and troutenomics and you begin to get an idea of the speculative fic scope. The setting was quiet but intimate. The bistro is one of the betters venues in town for readings but it’s food prices are too high!


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Cameron Pierce reads from 3 trouty short stories


 


Ranging from surreal horror to fables about fishing and the outdoors, Cameron Pierce’s books include the Wonderland Book Award-winning collection Lost in Cat Brain Land, the controversial cult hit Ass Goblins of Auschwitz, and forthcoming from Broken River Books, The Incoming Tide and Our Love Will Go the Way of the Salmon.


His books have been praised by New York Times bestselling authors like Piers Anthony and Thomas F. Monteleone, legendary cult filmmaker Lloyd Kaufman, The Guardian, Cracked.com, Flavorwire, Fangoria, Rue Morgue, Dazed & Confused, and more.


He has also edited four popular anthologies and serves as the head editor of the Lazy Fascist Press, publishing the work of authors such as Sam Pink, Scott McClanahan, Stephen Graham Jones, Blake Butler, Molly Tanzer, Noah Cicero, Alan M. Clark, and Patrick Wensink.


Cameron lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife, author Kirsten Alene.


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Kirsten describes naughty shaped sushi


 


Kirsten Alene lives in Portland, Oregon. She is the author of Japan Conquers the Galaxy (2013), Unicorn Battle Squad (2012) and the novella, Love in the Time of Dinosaurs (2010). Her work has been published in The Magazine of Bizarro Fiction, In Heaven Everything is Fine: Fiction inspired by David Lynch, Housefire’s Nouns of Assemblage, Innsmouth Magazine, Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens, New Dead Families, Small Doggies Magazine, The Battered Suitcase, Ellipsis, and Rivets.


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Alan M. Clark reads from his novel, a scene where a dead man dances underwater.


 


http://bizarrocentral.com/312-2/alan-m-clark/


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Published on July 22, 2014 23:53

June 16, 2014

How to Train Your Dragon 2


 


 


 


 


I know I’m probably a bit of a late comer to this movie, but hey, LOVED it!  I know what costume I’m making for Halloween 2014. The medieval version of the statue of liberty was very effective. And one of my favorite movie scenes of all time is now the image in the sky where the mysterious dragon rider cuts up through the clouds to get a good look at our reflective, dragon riding hero, Hiccup.  Dragon rides in the sky are great scenes and I can’t wait until the rides arrive at Disney, so I can book my next trip down. Great movie.  It gets a little heavy toward the end with the dark side getting some good licks in on a few of our favorite characters, but if you’re going to play with dragons, then you’re going to get burned. I give it 5 dragon scales out of 5.


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Published on June 16, 2014 21:51

October 24, 2013

Dead North Launch Tonight at the Storm Crow Tavern — Come for a bite, 7pm

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See you there.  Zombie talk happening after the readings.  Linda Demeulemeester and I will be reading, talking and doing some zombie walking. See you there!


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Published on October 24, 2013 07:53

October 23, 2013

Bitten By Books Launches Tesseracts 17 Today and a $50 Gift Certificate

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Today is the book launch and here is the link:


stop at Bitten by Books today to interview the authors.


Tesseracts Seventeen Launch event starting at noon CST.


The following link gives you 25 extra draw slips for the $50 gift certificate.


Rhea Rose’s story is: The Wall (it’s spooky)


http://bittenbybooks.com/65777/online-launch-of-tesseracts-17-anthology-and-50-00-amazon-gift-card-give-away-1023-rsvp-here/


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Published on October 23, 2013 07:22

October 14, 2013

Gravity * Off to Orycon * Happy Thanksgiving (Canadians)

Lots has happened.


Gravity


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I saw the movie this week and it was a big winner.  There was much to love in this show.  The scenes of space as the backdrop for the beautiful bubble we call Earth are nothing less than stunning.  I don’t ever get tired at looking at those pictures. The big milk covered blueberry that is our planet makes your heart swell with pride. How many metaphors can you come up with?


Anyway, I thought Sandra Bullock hit her acting mark in this one and Clooney’s wonderfully understated roll as the side kick and potential hero was a nice twist. I thought it was a very clever movie; it took us through the evolutionary development of human beings and showed us the huge roll gravity has played in our development and survival, of course like any good movie, there’s more to it than that, but I don’t want to spoil it for those who haven’t seen it. That being said, this movie does a cool job of showing us where we’ve come from and where we are in terms of human potential, but it’s not a documentary. If you love the ISS and Commander Hadfield you’ll love this movie. If you’re a big ISS watcher like I am (it flies over my house on summer nights) than you’ll find the events in this one really interesting.


Vcon has come and gone and it was much fun.  I did a reading from my short story, “Leaf Man” published in the Masked Mosaic anthology: Canadian Super Stories, published by Tyche books,http://tychebooks.com/books/masked-mosaic/


Vcon’s pirate theme was compelling, hence, I wore my costume in the hall and won a small prize! First time ever. I distributed tarot cards at Vcon, 16 of the 22 major arcana, each a character in my Final Catch fantasy series. If you managed to collect all 16 different cards then you are the grand prize winner of a copy of the book — See Jane Pose – (First book in The Final Catch fantasy series) out in December 2013 at Amazon, published by RainWood Press.


I’ll be at Orycon where I will distribute more of those cards, so if you’re there, too, then look for these cards. I’ll post a couple here so you can see what they look like. I have much to do before I take off for Portland, like watch Portlandia!


Here’s are copies of some of the cards :


star card for blog                  Death Card for blog                Devil card for blog


While at Orycon I will be reading from my short story, “The Wall,” in the Tesseracts 17 anthology, published by EdgePress,http://www.edgewebsite.com/books/tess17/t17-catalog.html ,  and here’s a trailer for that anthology (Edge does some cool stuff for promotion) http://youtu.be/jzQqDgRPYWc


Oct 24th, this Thursday, (oops, I mean next Thursday) Linda Demeulemeester and I will be reading from our stories in Dead North: A Canadian Zombie anthology. We’ll be at the Storm Crow on the Drive.


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I’ve had my turkey both at home and at Vcon (turkey readings, very funny) oh I just typed and wrote, turdy readings.  If you were there then you know what I mean.  Gobble gobble, have a happy  thanks and givings day!


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Published on October 14, 2013 12:04

September 29, 2013

Vcon Writers’ Workshop Stories Critiqued

Next Sunday I will be participating in the Vcon writers’ workshop as a Pro (there is something odd about using that word) anyway, I’ve done this for many years now.  I used to run the writers’ workshops for Vcon.  I did that for many years until I handed it over to a skinny little blond haired boy named Don DeBrandt, who said he wanted to be a writer!! If you haven’t heard of him then maybe you know him as Donn Cortez or DD Barant, Google the man.


For those of you coming into the workshops as new authors you should know that I used to be a participant in these workshops, oh, so long ago.  I remember Michael Coney giving a critique of our stories, in a imperious and hilarious style that only he could achieve.  He accused all of us of not having written a single story in the bunch, but that he really enjoyed my story because it had alien sex in it!  That comment kept me going. However, I stopped writing about alien sex, because it felt strange to be singled out for that particular quality! But I decided that if I could catch his attention with that then I could catch an editor’s attention with my writing, eventually.  Anyway, kids, those were the good old days when we used to walk to school bare foot in nine feet of snow, or in Vancouver’s case, wade to school in nine feet of water.


It was in the humble beginnings of the Vcon workshops that I got my start.  I remember being told about Vcon workshops by a young woman named Susan Wood. I believe she was an English prof out of UBC whose writer workshop I’d participated in. I was a terrible writer in those days, but I kept at it.  Through her I met Eileen Kernaghan and Bill Gibson, who did a few writerly things together. I remember Susan Wood told me to go to Vcon and attend the reading of Bill Gibson because she knew him through UBC.  So, I went to Vcon and listened to him read one of his short stories in the lobby of the venue. There were a few of us sitting around, listening, as Bill awkwardly flipped through his typed up pages.  At that time Eileen and Bill were possibly the only two people in Vancouver having any success as fantasy and science fiction writers.


From there I’d heard of Clarion East and wanted desperately to go, but the east was another land and I couldn’t figure out the money or the time, much less write a story well enough to get in. Time went by. I kept writing and Clarion West popped up.  I applied, never expecting to get in, but I did…after that I sold my first short story to Judith Merril for the first ever Tesseracts anthology and my second story immediately sold to Phyllis Gotlieb for the second Tesseracts anthology. My esteemed instructors at Clarion were: Norman Spinrad, Suzy McKee Charnas, Vonda McIntyre, Arthur Byron Cover, David Hartwell and Terry Carr. Can you believe that line up! I appreciate it more today, I think, then I did at that time.  Now I’ve come full circle and all though many of those folks are gone, they are not forgotten. I completed my MFA in creative Writing at UBC last year (it’s only taken me a life time to get there) and here I am, back in the writers’ workshops again!  Can’t wait to see the newbies :)


We’ve come a long way baby.


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Published on September 29, 2013 12:31

August 23, 2013

Summer Movie Madness Finals

Elysium (Spoiler Alert)





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By now lovers of SF movies will be forgetting Elysium.


In an earlier post I mentioned my excitement about this one and had high hopes. There was lots to love in this movie, but once again story loses over special effects. I LOVE SFX’s, but not at the cost of story.


Okay, enough of that. Here’s what I noticed: Director Neill Blomkamp’s continues to expose the unjust world of those who are left to live in a ‘dumpster-dive’ fringe when greed and self-indulgence aren’t shared — albeit the message of ‘medical care for all’ needed to be buried a bit more. It was too on the nose, as they say, (even though I personally agree with that message),and evil Secretary Rhodes, Jodie Foster’s character, nice to see her take on the roll of a villain, but her character was not believable when she wouldn’t accept medical aid to staunch her severed carotid artery, thus, committing herself to death!! In a world that has magical medical beds (like 3D printers for the human body).


Why does Matt Damon get top billing as the star in this and Jody Foster doesn’t?? It couldn’t be because she’s a middle aged woman, could it?  Or was it because of that other SF movie she made, what was it called, uh, oh, yeah, Contact. Enough said. If you’re a summer movie goer you’ve seen Elysium.


What was really cool — my sister worked on the set of Elysium and took me on a tour of the paradise world. It looked a lot more real in the movies!


 


OOPS — almost forgot my movie ratings!  I give Elysium 7.5 agent Krugers out of 10


We’re the MILLERS



Okay, I’m a Jennifer Aniston fan, what can I say?  However, my guilty pleasure got left at the theatre when I couldn’t bring myself to pay nearly $40 to go see this movie.  It was in the cinema’s VIP theatre (which they didn’t happen to mention in movie listings) and I don’t know about you, but I have to have a large popcorn and a drink (and maybe twizzlers) when I go to a show.  Add that to the 40 bucks and if you start rounding up (like they do with pennies here) you’re nearly at 100 dollars for the movies, for two.  So, I will wait 6 months if that to watch it on TV for 4.99 and make popcorn in the micro.


That’s it for Summer Movie Madness!  The weather has finally cooled and I don’t need to sit in the theatre for hours to stop sweating!


If you’ve followed my novella writing this summer then you know I’ve posted chapter 12, the last chapter in Book One (maybe) to this wordpress site (also in wattpad).


I am probably going to move on to Book Two, unless I make it part of Book One….writers out there, you know what it’s like!


ttfn, as those of us who teach wend our ways back into the dusty ole classrooms.


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Published on August 23, 2013 13:54

August 2, 2013

Movie Madness Musings


 


WOLVERINE 2


 


Is it just me or did the makers of Wolverine 2 get together with those at Pacific Rim and say, “Hey, let’s have a 2013 summer theme.  Let’s make big mechanical robot like creatures a.k.a. transformers and use Japan as a backdrop? ”  My reaction to this movie is echoed in my review of Man of Steel. It’s okay, but unless your a big Hugh Jackman fan, I’d wait till this one comes out on TV or Vid on Demand, or whatever your equivalent. The two possible love interests confused me. One did turn out to be love, the other is a body guard! Oookay.  Maybe it was just the really bad popcorn I paid big money for at Metrotown SilverCity that made this movie so-so.  I’m looking forward to Elysium! Hoping it will be the movie to rock my summer! I give Wolverine 2   hmm, 2.5 samurai out of 5.


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Published on August 02, 2013 10:57

July 24, 2013

Three More Summer Movie Madness Mumblings


The Conjuring


Yikes!  I finally found the nerve to go.  The theater was packed.  The movie scared me, yes, I’d say it was certainly a ten finger movie.  You know, some scary movies require that you peek through five fingers, well, I found myself peeking between all ten of my fingers.  I didn’t see much new here.  Same old horror. I’ve seen it all before in other stories and movies.  It didn’t have the originality that the Blair Witch Project did.  The Conjuring’s premise is: a house possessed by an evil spirit takes over a mother and makes her want to do nasty things to her children.  Then there’s an exorcism.  But just because you know that doesn’t mean you won’t SCREAM!  I give it 3.8 scary doll out of 5.



RED 2


Never saw the first RED but I hear this one is the better movie.  I thought they were movies about Russians (apologies if that is npc).  Loved this movie because my expectations were low.  Such a power cast having a ton of fun, how could I not love this movie. John Malkovich finally plays a character I like, and Bruce Willis’ character is acceptable.  I especially loved Helen Mirrin and her line to Byun-hun, “Show me something” and Lee Byun-hun drifts the corvette, so that Helen can take care of the bad guys!  Gave me goose bumps.  I can’t explain it, you just have to go see for yourself!  It’s fun just to see who walks onto the set.  I give it 3.75 grenades out of 5.



Monsters University


Once you’ve seen all the other movies of the summer go see this one, especially if it’s hot out and you need to cool down somewhere.  Sit in an air-conditioned theater. Find a kid if you can, take her, too. Monsters University is the prequel to Monsters Inc. 1 and 2.  I’m not up to date on my Monsters movies.  I saw number 1 and then my son grew up, thus, I missed number 2.  But I remember loving the first movie, so much so that I actually bought a Monsters towel for the beach, for my child of course!  The  movie is cute, funny, loveable, all the things you’ve come to expect from these movies, but it’s didactic and that part of the movie clunks.  Somebody cheats in a competition. That’s all I’ll say. I don’t think it reaches the bar that the first movie, Monsters Inc., put up.  I give it 3.5 screams out of 5.


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Published on July 24, 2013 12:43

July 18, 2013

More and More Summer Movie Madness!

Saddle Shoes

Saddle Shoes


Pacific Rim


Loved it!  Yes, it has issues.  This movie has no real stars in it, except Ron Perlman (don’t know that he counts as a star, but he’s an interesting quirky character, and of course the director GDT, who seems to have a shoe fetish). Godzilla meets Transformers for grownups.  If you liked those movies you’ll like this one.  This one does a great job of making the viewer feel the clash between the titans, alien monsters hiding in the trench in the pacific rim (hence the title, which is a  little too National Geographic for my taste), and giant transformer like Rockem Sockem robots.  Okay, there are a few too many subplots: Father and daughter, brother and brother, father and son, pilot and pilot brain meld…Loved the SFX and the gritty steampunky type setting and the director’s (Guillermo del Toro) homage to his Pan’s Labyrinth’s little girl. I give it 4 Jaegers out of 5.


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Published on July 18, 2013 18:11