OUCH!


https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1939844363/
The lauded Publisher's Weekly has posted a review of the anthology
that has the misfortune of having my story in it.
https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-939844-36-1
It had some great things to say of Jen Chandler's and Erika Bebee's stories:
"The most moving of the entries carry resonances of rural American folk tales, 
including Jen Chandler’s Appalachia-inspired “The Mysteries of Death and Life” 
and Erika Bebee’s “The Wheat Witch,” which evokes the healing mystique of Kansas agriculture."
Then, there is my story:

"Roland D. Yeomans’s “Sometimes They Come Back” is an ambitious but lackluster Poe-esque excursion into the grotesque; 
it’s larded with references to humanity’s graven images, some familiar and some perhaps better left forgotten. 
Few new insights stir the imagination here."
{Scratches his head}
As a former English teacher, I know my story has its roots in Ray Bradbury 
and obviously the reviewer has not read Poe in a long time to liken my story to his prose.
But then, I remember a review of Thinner when Stephen King was using Richard Bachman to sell more novels:
"This is the way Stephen King would write  if Stephen King could write."
In essence, bad reviews are the price of writing.
What matters is if our prose lives on or dies horribly like characters in Stephen King's novels.
And that depends solely on the future the details of which none of us knows. 
I leave you with the words of Stephen King
The most important things are the hardest to say, because words diminish them.
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Published on May 12, 2017 08:34
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