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Welcome to my official blog. If you're looking for something in particular, you might want to type keywords into the search feature on the left-hand side of the page. And I've added a BLOG INDEX on its own page (a bit more complete than the one below) to make it easier. Poking around is also encouraged.

And please do leave comments! Don't be confused by the "author" field in the comment form. When you are writing a message to me and my readers, you are the author. (Nice role reversal, huh?)

ABLit

 

Represented by Andrea Brown Literary Agency

My Blogroll of Awesomeness

Anne Allen's Blog
Shooting Stars Magazine
Naughty Book Kitties
Teen Book Scene
Teens Read Too
Compulsive reader
Reading Junky
The Page Flipper
Young Adult Books Central
Enchanting YA
What Women Write
A Girl and Her Books
And Another Book Read
She Reads Novels
My Half of the Sky
YA Fresh
Donna's Blog Home
It's Just Life As I Know It
Pages
The Book Scout
Becky's Book Reviews
Chick Lit Reviews
A Good Addiction
Lost For Words
Read Sam, Read!
DeRaps Reads
Steph the Bookworm
There's a Book
The Library Lurker
Once Upon a Review
Reclusive Bibliophile
The Hiding Spot
A Reader's Adventure
The Book Butterfly
Up the Tower of Books
Catherine, Caffeinated
The Worm Hole
Notes of Life
Debs Riccio
Becky's Book Reviews
Queer YA: Fiction for LGBTQ Teens
A Patchwork of Books
Sarah's Book Reviews
Book Chic Club
Amy Reads
Claire King
A Writer in a Wheelchair
Ex Libris
Echoes of a Wayward Mind
Book Pleasures
Teach Mentor Texts
YA Book Shelf
Chew & Digest Books
Elisa Rolle's Journal
Reading Before Bed
Good Books and Good Wine
Dreaming in Books
The Broke and the Bookish
Frazzled Book Nommer
Read. Write. Suffer.
A Patchwork of Books
Harmony Book Reviews
This Little Life of Mine
Melody M. Nunez
Word Harlot
Points West
Bookish Blather
Helen's Book Blog
Roof Beam Reader
Cari's Book Blog
Bookalicious
Emily's Reading Room
The Book Phantom
Maestra Amanda's Bookshelf
Christa's Hooked on Books
Books: A Pathway to New Worlds
Reader's Edyn
Sarah's Book Reviews
Chica Reader
Me, My Shelf and I
Taming the Bookshelf
My Reading Room
My{Reads}Da
Good Choice Reading
Books Complete Me
The Introverted Reader
Random Things Through My Letterbox
The Littlereader Library
Blog It All (Katy Pye)
Chick Lit Plus
Samantha March
Tea and Scribbles Book Reviews
The Book Bag
Storm Goddess Book Reviews
Mrs. Mommy Booknerd's
Jessa Russo Writes
The Bookish Mama
Jersey Girl Book Reviews
The East Village
The Geekery Book Review
Read Along with Sue

 

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My Blog

Entries from June 1, 2013 - June 30, 2013

Thursday
Jun202013

Better Than Blurbs: The Other Man: 21 Writers Speak Candidly About Sex, Love, Infidelity & Moving On

Because I no longer write blurbs, but still very much want to help other authors, I'm launching a blog series called Better Than Blurbs. The authors and I will have in-depth discussions about their books, which I hope will help readers identify whether they'd enjoy reading them. This is the third post of the series. The author is really the editor in this case, though he is very much an author. He is my friend Paul Alan Fahey, and the book is The Other Man: 21 Writers Speak Candidly About Sex, Love, Infidelity & Moving On

Let's jump right in. Paul, please tell my readers a little about the book.

Paul: The Other Man: 21 Writers Speak Candidly About Sex, Love, Infidelity, & Moving On is a collection of personal essays by and about gay men and their relationships. Several of our most acclaimed writers, many Lambda award winners and finalists, relate their experiences being the other man, suffering the other man or having their relationships tested by infidelity. The book represents a three-year labor of love and was designed as the “gay” companion to Victoria Zackheim’s wonderful anthology, The Other Woman. And to accentuate more positives, a portion of the profits will benefit the It Gets Better Project, a charity near and dear to all of our hearts.

One of our contributors designed a very intriguing one minute video that can be viewed HERE.

The essays in The Other Man are varied in tone, voice and writing style. These examples will give you an idea of how a few writers tackled the topic of infidelity:

Glen Retief, in his early thirties and living in Spain with the man he believed was “the love of his life,” experiences the ultimate betrayal when he confronts his lover’s deception head on in “The Rival With a Thousand Faces.” 

Mark Canavera, while working for a large international organization in Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast), discovers that men, gay or straight in that culture, would never think of divulging an indiscretion to their partners. Telling would be viewed as an insult. In “Complicity,” we discover, as expected, that other man troubles are universal in scope. 

Perry Brass responds to an intriguing letter from a married—soon to be separated—fan in “A Pitiless Love” and finds himself sucked into an “emotional vacuum” that threatens his mental and physical health.  

Erik Orrantia is in a committed relationship when he falls out of love with his partner. Unable to make a clean break, Erik invites his new lover to move in with the unhappy couple. We learn from “Ballad Echoes” the importance of honesty, especially in matters of the heart, and that triangles are best left to the study of geometry.

David Pratt’s partner juggles two other men on the side while pursuing his dream of becoming a professional actor in the Big Apple. In “Way Off,” Mr. Pratt offers a personal tour of the Great White Way and points out the traps and pitfalls for those seeking fame and adulation on the Broadway stage. 

In “Husbands,” Austin Bunn looks back on his thirties in Louisville, Kentucky. Loneliness leads him to a succession of liaisons with married men: a chief researcher at a public health office, the boss of an automotive business, a lawyer, a pastor and a professor at a Christian college. Somehow, there is always an abundant and available supply.

Even with an excellent agent and with what many considered a well-written book proposal, The Other Man didn’t happen over night. It took a year-and-a-half to land a publisher and by the time the book contract was signed, I’d gone through nearly two different contributor lists—Many of my writers thought the book wasn’t happening and went on to other projects. As you can see, The Other Man finally happened, and it’s thanks to JM Snyder of JMS Books for believing in the book’s concept. You can read more about The Other Man on my website.

Me: I remember something you said as we were corresponding about the anthology. You said, “Pretty explicit here and there but I’m very proud of it.” I’m interested in the “but.” Of course, explicit content is neither right nor wrong, but the “but” suggests you might have a mild discomfort with it. Which I completely understand. When one of my books with sexual content goes out there (like the reissue of Funerals for Horses) I find myself thinking of the wide range of people who will read it and feeling uneasy about what some will think. Care to speak to this at all?

Paul: This is the first time I’ve attempted anything like this LGBT anthology. I write mainly short stories and nonfiction/memoir and have written relatively nothing about my life as a gay man until recently. Given my ten years apprenticeship editing a college literary journal, Mindprints—now sadly defunct—and online critiquing in a flash fiction workshop for many years, I had the confidence needed for the technical aspect of the book, but the content was another matter. 

In May 2012, I had the great good fortune to find a wonderful LGBT publisher, J M Snyder of JMS Books who liked my first novella The View from 16 Podwale Street and published it as an e book. Podwale Street was my first venture into LGBT lit, and I was completely surprised when the book won a 2012 Rainbow Award; both events encouraged me to attempt more semi-autobiographical novellas over the past year and gave me the confidence to be more honest in my writing. Most wonderful things in my life have come about mainly by chance and without any pre planning on my part: running off to Africa in my early twenties as a Peace Corps volunteer and staying nearly five years in Ethiopia; going on for advanced education degrees; and of course, meeting the wonderful anthologist, Victoria Zackheim, at the Central Coast Writer’s Conference who encouraged me to edit the “gay” companion to her very successful anthology, The Other Woman.

So getting back to the “but” in my statement, I think there’s still a part of that Irish Catholic kid from the 1950’s inside me who became adept at hiding who he really was. Some old habits are hard to shake. They hang around longer than they should even when you think you’ve overcome them. I guess at my advanced age, I still have some work to do in letting down my guard and being me.

Me: One thing that struck me as I was reading the book was the difference between how men approach sex, as opposed to women. I think this is somewhat masked in heterosexual relationships, because the man often wants to meet his female partner halfway. With two men, it can just be what it is. And yet I also see in the book that emotional level where—no matter how much you might view sex openly or casually—the mind has a heart of its own and tends to get involved. Any thoughts on this? Do you picture this book crossing over to a female readership?

Paul: I think there is just as much variance in gay relationships as there is in straight ones, especially when sex is concerned. To be honest when I was reading the essays for the first time, I was struck by how easily I could envision several of my straight friends relating the same kinds of episodes in their lives: casual hookups and one night stands; open marriages that both thought worked but often didn’t; being married to someone you viewed as “the love of your life” only to discover a partner’s infidelity or having been drawn themselves at one time or another to someone outside the relationship; and relationships that endured in spite of the ups and downs and those that faded. Several of my female friends have read The Other Man and have said they see parallels in straight relationships. Whether they’re talking about themselves or others I have no idea, but even reviewers have pointed this out. Lisa Horan of The Novel Approach wondered if  “monogamy was a natural human state, or if it a was a concept which sounds lovely in poetic theory but is not practical in the reality of interpersonal relationships?” I don’t think you can get more universal than that. So yes, I do believe the book does have crossover appeal to a female readership.  

Me: I once (co)edited an anthology, though it never found its way into print. But I know there’s a lot involved when you’re interfacing with so many different personalities. And a writer’s ego tends to thread through each work. Can you tell us about your editing experience? Any good stories? Ever feel like you were herding cats? 

Paul: I think I was incredibly lucky with the professional level of the writers I worked with on The Other Man project. Being an editor as well as a writer, I tried to be sensitive to the issues I faced when my work was edited for journals and anthologies. Did I spell the writer’s name correctly? Is the contributor bio up-to-date? Did I fiddle too much or intrude on the writer’s voice or style? Did I respect the writer’s wishes when he disagreed with my suggestion(s)? Along the way I discovered that, for me at least, my job as an editor was to make suggestions but not to push my opinions and just get out of the writer’s way. I hope I succeeded. JMS Books also has a staff of incredible editors—I’ve worked with several over the past year—and I felt that they as well respected the writer’s voice and writing style. 

So as far as stories go, I don’t think there are any memorable ones to share related to The Other Man; however, I had tons of problems with some of the writers who submitted their work to Mindprints—mainly issues relating to the professional side of submitting work for publication. In most cases these issues centered around submissions that could best be described as first drafts; thankfully, I was doubly blessed that this didn’t happen with The Other Man, and again this was due to the highly professional nature of the writers I worked with. 

Me: We are both of a certain age, and I know we both remember when LGBT…well, anything…was less openly discussed. (And, when it was, was called something far less P.C.) Can you reflect a little on how much has changed in your lifetime? Are there moments in history, such as the progress in marriage equality, that you didn’t think you’d live to see? 

Paul: I’d have to say that almost everything that’s happening now I never thought I’d live to see. As I mentioned earlier, growing up on the San Francisco Peninsula in my teens and early adulthood in the 1950’s, and before I left for Peace Corps, I lived a fairly closeted life. I’d had plenty of encounters and one that almost turned into a relationship but at that time, I was too immature and afraid to follow through on my feelings, especially given the climate of the times. When I returned from overseas in late 1972, and arrived home in the San Francisco area, I was amazed how much the social climate had changed. I’d missed Stonewall, most of the early stages of Gay Lib and hadn’t even heard of Mart Crowley’s amazing play and film, The Boys in the Band. It was like another kind of culture shock: one related to my “re-entry” to the states, and the other to the gay liberation that was going on all around me. 

I was very wild with the sexual freedom of the 1970’s—well, wild for me. I met my partner, Bob, in Santa Cruz and began a long and wonderful relationship with him in the mid-1970’s. Then AIDS struck and we lost nearly all of our friends. We both retreated from the gay scene. My mother was dealing with the last stages of ovarian cancer and I was emotionally a mess for most of the 1980’s. We moved back east in the early 1990’s and lived in a very small, isolated area in upstate New York where I taught college. Isolated, out of the mainstream and with very little contact with gay friends. Sound familiar? To be honest, looking back I can’t recall any gay friends during that time. The late 1990’s brought us back to California, for another teaching position. We’re still not very involved today in the gay social world around San Luis Obispo, other than for my LGBT novella writing and the writer friends I’ve met along The Other Man trail. I hope somehow this will change, but at the back of my mind, I wonder if it might be a bit too late. Age has a way of cementing you in your ways, so the jury is still out on that one. We’ll just have to see what develops.  

Me: I always close with this: Please write your own question, and answer it. 

Paul: I have a lot of important questions, mostly relating to our health, but none I would dare write about. (Catholic guilt strikes again as well as the pessimism I was brought up with: “Sing before breakfast, cry before dinner,” so I’ll leave those concerns alone.)

1. Right now I’m wondering if I’m doing all I can to promote The Other Man, especially since so many wonderful writers are involved as well as the It Gets Better Project? 

2. I’m also in the final lap of finishing the first draft of my WIP and wondering if I’ll ever finish it?  But that’s two questions.

The answer to both: I only hope I can. 

Me: Please visit Paul at his website at www.paulalanfahey.com.

Monday
Jun172013

A New Story Collection...Free

I wish I knew why so many people don't seem interested in short stories. You would think that, with our world getting busier and our attention spans getting more compact, short fiction would be the perfect form of reading entertainment. Yet most people tell me they still want a big, thick novel, despite barely having time to read.

Then again, an awful lot of people tell me they don't want to read an ebook because they "love the feel of a book in their hands." Nothing wrong with that sentiment, but often if I ask whether they've tried an ebook, it turns out they haven't.

So for those of you who enjoy reading short stories, this new collection of mine, Subway Dancer and Other Stories, is free in Kindle ebook format today, tomorrow and Wednesday. For those of you who don't, I have to ask: When's the last time you read a collection of stories? Maybe it's one of those changes worth trying. After all, at this price, you don't have much to lose. 

If you have a Nook, or other non-Kindle reading device, CLICK HERE for conversion information.

Try something new in your reading today. It's on me.

 

Friday
Jun072013

For Kobo and EPUB people ... a Freebie!

Most of my indie (in the U.S.) books start out as Amazon exclusives. And almost all of my free ebook promotions are for Kindle. I know that's frustrating to some Nook and Kobo reading device owners (though I have instructions on how ebooks can be converted). Still, the last thing I want to do is make a segment of the reading public feel left out.

So, starting now, and through at least noon Friday (June 14th), my novel Second Hand Heart is free on Kobo. No strings attached. Just go get one, and hopefully enjoy it. More and more of my novels and other books will be available on B&N and Kobo as time goes by, so I hope this will encourage some new EPUB readers to try my books.

Happy reading, and feel free to let me know what you think! 

Friday
Jun072013

Another Audiobook Giveaway

Working on the assumption that none of you get sick of free stuff...

While I was away at Yellowstone, a package turned up on my doorstep. In it were three MP3 audiobooks of my latest, Walk Me Home. Why? Not sure. I had already requested some audiobooks (one or two would have been fine) from my editor and received five CD sets and two MP3 sets. So I gave away three of the five CD sets.

I never need more than two of any one edition to archive. So now I have three extra MP3 audiobooks, and it's silly for them to go to waste sitting on my shelf.

So, as always, just leave a comment if you want to be in the running for one. Leave your name in the comment form. (Don't fall prey to the mistake of leaving my name because it says "author"--it means author of the comment. That's you.) And leave your email in the space for email in the comment form. That way it won't show publicly. Don't leave it in the body of the comment unless you want everyone to see it. I only need your email address so I can contact you if you win. I don't keep email lists and I promise I won't use it for anything else.

Good luck!

Monday
Jun032013

Cover Reveal for Where We Belong

Where We Belong is my next forthcoming novel, and it's due out here in the U.S. in July.

I finally have a final cover to show, and here it is.

The cover image was shot specially for this book by my artist friend Leslie Moroney, the same photographer who did the cover for Always Chloe and Other Stories.

I've created a new page for Where We Belong, so you can read more about it.

Meanwhile I wanted you to see the new cover.

Comments welcome, as always!

Monday
Jun032013

The Bet 2013: Even Pigeons Can Sing

Itsmyluckyday, the bum.For those of you who follow this blog, you probably know all about The Bet. Three crazy authors, Brian Farrey, Kimberly Pauley and Andrew Smith have a yearly bet with equally crazy me. We each choose a horse in the Kentucky Derby. The person whose horse comes in first (only compared to the other three--it makes no difference who actually wins the race) assigns a story title to the second-place finisher, who has to write a short story to go with that title. And who also assigns a title to the third place finisher, etc. The person who comes in dead last doesn't get to stick anybody with a title.

Lucky me. I was dead last.

Brian came in first, so will not be writing a story. He will, however, be acting kingly and sitting in judgment, along with a fair amount of trash talking. His story title for Andrew, who came in second, is "Journey, Crimson, Nightmare, Name." Andrew gave third-place finisher Kimberly the title "The Druggist and the Apostrophe." Kimberly gave me the title "Even Pigeons Can Sing." She was rather specific about the fact that the Uncle Mo meme could finally end this year.

I set out to write a story with all new characters. But the title and theme led me right back to Tim and Brian. And as soon as I got there, I realized that, after last year's story, we just had to know what was hiding up in Uncle Mo's closet.

In case you want to read these interconnected stories in order, here is the full set of links:

2011: The Art of Being Stuck Here

2012: Uncle Mo Holds a Grudge

2013: Even Pigeons Can Sing

As soon as Kimberly and Andrew have posted their stories, I'll add links to them in a follow-up.

Happy reading!