Tag: speculative fiction

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – J.A. Grier

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    jenred

    J.A. Grier is a speculative fiction writer and poet whose work is closely informed by her formal background in planetary science and astronomy education.  More than three dozen of Dr. Grier’s poems and stories have appeared in venues such as Mad Scientist Journal, Eternal Haunted Summer, Eye to the Telescope, Liquid Imagination, Mirror Dance, and an anthology of the Maryland Writer’s Association entitled “Life In Me Like Grass On Fire – Love Poems.”  Other writing credits include the textbook “The Inner Planets” published by Greenwood Press.  Dr. Grier teaches workshops in poetry, and has served on panels and offered presentations at conventions including BaltiCon, HallowRead, and the Tucson Science Fiction Convention.  Dr. Grier is a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, and the Horror Writers Association.  She is currently seeking homes for two speculative novels, as well as finishing a book of childhood horror poetry.

     

    Wolf: Welcome to Wolf Notes. If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?

    J.A.: Of course I’d be a cat-dragon.  But another interviewee already mentioned cat-dragon because cat-dragons are amazing.  I have a cat-dragon in one of my novels, and it is so cool.  But I’ll move to plan “B” here and say I’d be a couatl, which is a creature from the original AD&D.  It’s a beautiful rainbow-winged serpent – highly intelligent, noble, and virtuous.  A couatl is magical, has psionic powers, and keeps treasure.  It destroys demons in its righteous wrath.  It’s also occasionally worshiped as a deity which seems like a nice perk.

    couatl
    Image Credit:  My pic of a couatl and stats from the hardcover AD&D book sitting right here on my shelf.

    Wolf: What is the strangest food you’ve ever eaten?

    J.A.: I’m very timid about trying new kinds of food, but a few possibilities come to mind.  Octopus maybe?  Black squid ink pasta?  Bear?  Not sure which to pick.  One person’s strange is another person’s everyday.

    Wolf: If you had to pick a weapon, what would it be and why?

    J.A.: That would be my razor-sharp wit.  No wait.  This woman appeared out of a lake and gave me a sword.  She was saying something like I’m supposed to rule something or other but I wasn’t really listening.  It’s awesome for cosplay.

    Wolf: What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    J.A.: So, one character was captured by the bad guys and tortured.  It was nasty.  Husband says he’s never going to be the same after reading that scene, so I guess the scene works?  But really the meanest thing I’ve done is to have one of my characters win the war for cosmic supremacy.  Now she’s stuck ruling the universe and the job sucks.

    Wolf: You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.

    J.A.: I’m an ocotillo blooming in the desert.  I’m strange but somehow compelling, and my flowers are used to cure ailments of all kinds.  The full Moon touches the tips of my spines like Sleeping Beauty’s finger on a spindle.  A coyote hunts the javelina snuffling at my roots.  I understand the speech of the moths.  I dream of rain.

    Wolf: That sounds really cool. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    J.A.: Cat person.  You might have guessed that from the whole cat-dragon thing.  I mean, dogs have an amazing history and relationship with humans – they can predict seizures and detect cancer, just for starters.  But cats … cats purrrrrr.

    crayon
    Image Credit:  My childhood cat “Crayon” hiding in the ivy.  Adored this kitty.

    Wolf: If you could have a super power, what would it be?

          J.A.: Probably teleportation, otherwise I want the power to choose the perfect wine to go with any meal.  Actually, I do have a super power – I get to decide the order in which the Christmas presents are opened.

    Wolf: The world is about to end. What is the first thing you do?

          J.A.: After I stop screaming I contact my scientist colleagues. Fortunately, we’ve been studying asteroid hazard mitigation strategies, so we know just what to do.  We launch a specially designed explosive that should change the asteroid’s orbit.  The world watches, unable to breathe, as the asteroid approaches closer and closer to the Earth.  The explosive detonates.  The asteroid … sweeps by harmlessly!  We all change our pants and celebrate!  (Little do we know that we’ve now altered the orbit of the asteroid so it hits … well … that’s another story.)
    Wolf: Thanks for saving the world. I could have used your help to stop the cataclysm in my novel, STAR TOUCHED. What story are you working on now?

    J.A.: I can’t work on just one thing.  I have poems, stories, and novels all going at the same time.  One work in progress is a book of poetry that I’ll call ‘childhood horror.’  It explores the fears of childhood, both real and imagined.  It has some poems with speculative elements like magic or monsters.  Other poems could be considered literary poems with themes like illness, grief, and war.  I’ve published several of the poems separately in various journals and other venues.  However, the full book completes an emotional journey as it flows from beginning to end.  You’ll have to read it to find out more, so keep your eyes peeled for when I finally get this thing out!

    Until then try some of my other published stories and poems that are free to read online:

    (1) A flash sci-fi piece entitled “The Gods of Home” – published in The Arcanist  https://thearcanist.io/the-gods-of-home-a46a36fd0dd4

    (2)  A bit of pagan magic in short story form called “Bonfire Night” – published in Eternal Haunted Summer https://eternalhauntedsummer.com/issues/summer-solstice-2017/bonfire-night/

    (3)  A couple of dark fantasy poems –

    “It Snows on Camelot” http://www.mirrordancefantasy.com/2013/12/it-snows-on-camelot.html

    “Stop Praying, Girls” https://liquidimagination.silverpen.org/article/stop-praying-girls-by-j-a-grier/

    Wolf: What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    J.A.: Well, no doubt I should be reading if I’m not writing.  But instead I’m probably thinking about writing, or planning writing or blogging about writing … okay I’m probably playing video games like Mass Effect, Dragon Age, or Skyrim.  Or I’m going wine tasting.  I am also a paper artist in a form called ‘Quilling’ so you might find me working on art projects (my quilling blog is at storiesstonesandspirals.blogspot.com)  Barring any of those I guess I’m working at my day job in which I’m researching impact craters on other worlds or sharing planetary science with the general public.

    fullmoon copy

    Learn more about J. A. Grier here:

    Twitter – @grierja

    Blog and Website – jagrier.com

    Goodreads Author Page – www.goodreads.com/author/show/6429911.J_A_Grier

     

    Startouched front cover2

     

     

    STAR TOUCHED

    Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population. Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble. Will Tatiana flee or stay and fight for the new life she has built? Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

     

    “A unique and finely crafted debut novel, the characters touched my heart as I was drawn into their plight and compelled to finish!”

     — New York Times bestselling Author Maria V. Snyder

    Amazon logo                                           Barnes & Noble

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Matt Fuchs

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives. Say hello to Matt Fuchs.

    megreenshirt3Matt Fuchs writes speculative fiction. In his novella Rise of Hypnodrome, published with CCLaP in 2015, a political faction called the Lifestyle Party rises to power under the presidency of Deepak Chopra and rolls out a policy agenda to maximize personal happiness. Matt tells stories about enlightened AI and fringe political ideas taking over. Links to his work appearing in Compelling Science Fiction, Centropic Oracle, Allegory, Every Day Fiction, and more can be found at fuchswriter.com. Other endeavors include law review articles on the first amendment and magazine pieces about adventure eating. He hasn’t figured out yet how to combine the two topics.

    Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?
    Matt: The backward-aging jellyfish. When it starts to die, it can reverse the aging process to the larva stage and then it grows into an adult again.

    Wolf: That’s really cool. What is the strangest food you’ve ever eaten?
    Matt: I’ve tried a bunch of stuff including worms, crickets, and tuna eyeballs. But the food that I physically rejected, as in threw up on an East Village sidewalk, was a goat platter covered in a curry called p’haal, which is laced with spices that Indian farmers smear on their fences to keep elephants from their crops.

    Wolf: I think I’ll stay away from that one. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
    Matt: I turned a character into a god. Can’t beat that.

    Wolf: What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?
    Matt: Dying alone. It’s happened to quite a few of my characters!

    Wolf: You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.
    Matt: I need people’s emotions to photosynthesize. Sunlight and nutrients do nothing for me, but I crave human sadness, jealousy and enthusiasm, especially when these feelings are experienced within a few feet of my leaves. It makes me grow and blossom. Apathy makes me wilt.

    Wolf: If you could have a super power, what would it be?
    Matt: The ability to change the timespan of a given day from 24 hours to any duration of my choosing.

    Wolf: I’d love to have that one! If you had to pick a weapon, what would it be and why?
    Matt: It’d be a weapon of the mind like telepathy. I would communicate responsibly to make the world a better place, or I’d more likely end up planting ideas in people’s heads about me being ridiculously smart and good-looking.

    Wolf: What five items would you want to have in a post-cataclysmic world?
    Matt: Number one, a machine that magically produces rivers of cold brew coffee. My tennis racquet. At least one other person so I don’t have to make friends with beach balls. Books for entertainment since it’s boring when everything is destroyed, unless zombies are chasing me. Also right after the apocalypse a time machine would be great!

    Wolf: Great ideas. Describe a meal you would be served while visiting another world.
    Matt: Humans are the enemies of the species inhabiting this world, so I’ve disguised myself as another breed of alien, one that’s on better diplomatic terms, to avoid capture. I’m hanging out with the emperor, who serves me a delicacy stolen from earth. Pan-fried humans! What do I do?

    Wolf: Don’t have an answer for you. What story are you working on now?
    Matt: A single dad raising his young daughter who is 60 percent robot.

     
    Social Media Links: @FuchsWriter

  • “SUPPOSE” Is Now Available In Print

    “SUPPOSE” Is Now Available In Print

    Suppose

    For those eager readers who have been asking, “Suppose” is finally available in print: A collection of over sixty riveting tales, with new and expanded stories.


    Suppose: Drabbles, Flash Fiction, and Short Stories has undergone a complete rewrite, with new and expanded stories: over sixty tales of humor, horror, fantasy, sci-fi, romance, and life experiences so unbelievable that they have been disguised as fiction.

    Suppose you saw something you couldn’t explain. And then suppose it turned out to be something far stranger, or funnier, or more horrifying than you ever expected. That element of surprise, and a different way of looking at things, is what this anthology is all about. Most of the short stories take less than fifteen minutes to read, and the ultra-short drabbles take less than thirty seconds.

    Kathy Steinemann, Amber Hayward, A. L. Kaplan, and Donna Milward share their tales and fantasies in this book of drabbles, flash fiction, and short stories.

    Why would the government force an artist to paint portraits of despots or drug lords? Why would healthy people die for no obvious reason? Do you suppose that wishes could ever be dangerous? What’s a BioInterFace Fluxxatron? Do aliens watch reality shows? Why would someone pay double the usual rate to move a heavy trunk? Why is the mud from Sludge Flats so valuable?

    Discover the answers to these questions in this eclectic collection.

    For a limited time, readers can receive a discount on the print edition at CreateSpace, the company that produces books for Amazon. The reduced price of $9.99 USD is further reduced by $2.00 with the discount code below:

    DISCOUNT CODE: FPHUKVQB

    https://www.createspace.com/5572855

    And here are the other formats currently available.

    Digital Editions:

    Amazon.comAmazon.caAmazon.co.ukAmazon.deiTunesBarnes & NobleSmashwords

    Paperback Editions:

    Amazon.comAmazon.co.ukAmazon.deCreatespace