Authored by Julie Ann Weinstein
Magic without the hocus pocus, these stories explore the ethereal blur between reality and not, between dream and sleep, between love and 'other than' love. They
present relationships with a tender wackiness. Tossed into the mix are mischievous ghosts, who give the talking plants and even the seductive and vocal grains of sand a run for their money.
Quirky and offbeat, these stories will touch your heart, although they may tug at
your funny bone first.
About the author:
Julie Ann Weinstein has published over ninety short stories and is a Pushcart Nominee. She is an editorial
consultant and a flash fiction workshop leader in the Southern California area. Julie is also published under the name Julie Ann Shapiro. She currently lives in Encinitas, California, where she is working on future short story collections
A blog about our books, our authors, publishing news and trends, published and upcoming titles, and more.
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Women of the Round Table
Authored by Phibby Venable
Women of the Round Table centers on a group of friends who meet regularly around a kitchen table.
Nothing is as it appears, and none of these women are ordinary. Each of these characters shares a
common ground which gradually becomes invested with greater meaning ... bound together by
generations of birth, death, and the miraculous ... a crystal has been handed down to a pair of sisters.
It has power in it: each holder can make one wish.
About the author:
Phibby Venable is an Appalachian poet and writer whose works appear in numerous
anthologies, magazines, ezines, and journals, both nationally and internationally.
When she's not writing, Phibby is an avid photographer, and also devotes time to
humanitarian and animal rescue efforts.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
THE FLASH
GUEST BLOG BY THE MASTER OF FLASH, SAL BUTTACI!
My first encounter with the flash was in 1948 during the Golden Age of Comics when all us kids in Brooklyn, New York, read those super-hero comic books. My favorite was “The Flash” who dressed as the Greek/Roman god Mercury and, though he could not fly like Superman, he could run faster than the eye could see. We waited anxiously for the release of the next Flash comic so we could delight in our hero’s vanquishing still again his arch-enemy “The Shade.”
During that same time, Illustrated Classic Comics were also popular. My sisters and I collected them in a huge cardboard box until vacation time when we’d drag the box out of the closet and then dive into masterpiece literature. Years later a college professor of mine in an English Literature course marveled how I was able to discuss so many of the classics. He suspected I may have read so many of those thick tomes, and that amazed him, but the truth was much more believable: I read the comics! Of course, I didn’t share that flash bulletin with him.
Only in the past ten years have I come to learn about another kind of flash, one that applies to writing. Like the comic books that delivered in its few pages complete stories, flash fiction, sans illustrations, delivers quick stories too.
While the words “flash fiction” originated in 1992 with Flash Fiction, an anthology of short-short stories edited by Denise Thomas, James Thomas, and Tom Hazuka, the short-short story is not new at all to the literary scene. In fact, it’s been an art form that can be traced back thousands of years. Aesop’s fables were quick writes. So were the parables of Jesus. The Chinese writers of old called their very brief tales “minute fiction” because of the short time it took to read them. Other names included “the smoke-long story” because reading one took as long as smoking a cigarette; “the pocket-size story”; “the short-short story”; “sudden fiction”; “postcard fiction”; and a long list that most have replaced with the popular term “flash fiction.”
The flash is right up my alley. From the time I can remember, I’ve never been able to sit still. My mother used to say, “We need to tie you up with rope so you sit still!” I was always going somewhere, doing something, moving on to go someplace else, do something else. I’d sit and do my homework and squirm like the proverbial boy with ants in his pants. Sure, I loved to read, but only in small doses, something my wife Sharon finds strange. Sharon who can sit and read a novel in just a couple of days!
So it seemed a good idea, after years of writing short stories, to try my own hand at writing much shorter ones. I joined two computer sites. Six Sentences and Pen 10, and submitted work to each as often as I could. One requires a limit of six sentences to tell a story. The other limited the story to ten sentences. From there I joined Smith Magazine so I could tell stories in six words. Then I joined another called Thinking Ten. There was no stopping me! Finally, I wrote a collection of 164 of these short-short stories, called it Flashing My Shorts, and submitted it to All Things That Matter Press that published it in January 2010.
Flash fiction is short but how short? Not all writers agree. Just when the consensus appears to be “fiction between 300 and 1,000 words,” someone out there extends the maximum to as high as 2,000 and the minimum as brief as Ernest Hemingway’s famous story told in a mere six words, “For Sale--Baby Shoes, Never Worn.”
When it comes right down to it, there are no hard and fast rules about the number of words in a flash piece, That is usually decided upon by the editor or publisher to whom flash fiction is submitted. One needs to read the guidelines first. And there are types of quick fiction that must subscribe to an exact word count. I mentioned the six-worder, but there are also the 100-worder called the drabble, and the 50-worder understandably called the half-drabble. My short-short stories run the gamut of 50 words to 1,000, with most of the stories ranging between 250-400 words.
It makes sense that e-zines would favor a shorter fiction than was popular before the advent of computers. Sitting before a computer screen to read page after page of a short story is a literal eyesore. Add to that, it seems nowadays anyway, the general attention span in our society has fallen somewhat, making it harder and harder to keep readers hooked to a story. The longer they sit, the more those pesky ants bite, so it makes good sense to tell a story in the shortest amount of words.
But a flash story is still a story! It must satisfy the elements of a story. It must have at least one character (two is also good ), a setting, a problem to be solved by a protagonist and an antagonist to make the resolution a kind of tug-of-war struggle. Flash fiction does not have the luxury of descriptive expansion, drawn-out dialogue, more than absolutely needed exposition. But it must, like its short-story cousin, hook readers immediately, keep their eyes focused on each line, and at the conclusion release them completely satisfied a story has been told and resolved.
Writing flash fiction forces writers to revise their work, a writing step some writers ignore. They feel indebted to their first draft’s inspiration and won’t change a word. Flash fiction changes that mindset. It helps writers learn how to eliminate the unnecessary words, to tighten their writing so that, though short, their flashes can stand tall.
In my flashes I try to come up with a hook of a first sentence, one that jumps into the middle of the story’s action without back story or anything that will slow the story down.
I let action and dialogue reveal the characters’ motives and in the end I try to show some change in one or both of my main characters, usually for the better.
If you haven’t tried writing flash fiction, you might want to do a computer search on the subject and visit the different sites that offer hints in writing it and places where you can submit your work.
I had intended to keep this blog under 1,000 words, but then I said to myself, “This is a blog, duh! It’s not a flash story!”
One last thing: If you are looking to read some flash fiction, if you are like me, a reader who can’t sit still for long, who wants a story, whole and entire, in the space of no more than two pages, why not visit Amazon.com? There are plenty of books to choose from. I would recommend my own:
Flashing My Shorts at http://tinyurl.com/2bkms9w
which is also in Kindle edition at http://tinyurl.com/2clo8pq
I also recommend Flashes from the Other World by Julie Weinstein, soon to be released by All That Matters Press.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Rachel's Children
Surviving the Second World War
Authored by Jean RodenboughThe stories of warfare as experienced by children may take a lifetime to understand and describe. For some it took many years before they were able to reflect upon the meaning of the war as they lived through it. What
happened to children across the world during the Second World War, in the years 1930 to 1945, shows a common theme of emotional upheaval, fear and hunger. The author was a child living in Hawaii when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and remembers what the war years were like. She has gathered accounts from others to include along with hers. These are their stories.
About the author:
Jean Rodenbough is a retired Presbyterian minister living in Greensboro, NC. A poet and
writer who has published books on fiction, poetry, and pastoral care, she is active with organizations working for peace and justice. Jean's interests also include chip carving and playing the recorder.
A PROVOCATIVE NOVEL
Authored by Robert Rubenstein
"He was so close, he could smell them. He didn't want to hurt Hitler. Who would want to hurt Charlie Chaplin? He just wanted to give him a love tap from the Jewish nation."
Joshua Sellers and Bobby Gillman have been given the chance of a lifetime. They have made the American Olympic team and are poised to run as Jewish-American athletes in front of Adolf Hitler . The place is Berlin; the time, 1936. An almost certain victory awaits the pair in the 4x100 meters relay. Joshua knows it will make a difference -a victory by Jewish athletes.
But what happens to him when he is told on his twenty-first birthday by his own coaches that though he is fit and able, he cannot run in Germany?
Racing with irony through the veins of inevitable, bitter, history, brimming with palpable life from the Coney Island shores to the cherry blossomed streets and cabarets of Berlin, Ghost Runners exposes the far-reaching menace of American Anti-Semitism. Whether on a local Berlin train, or at a lavish party at the Air Ministry, Joshua must test his courage against hard truths about the betrayal of an American Dream. Haunted by love for a heroic German-Jewish athlete he left behind, Joshua believes his fate is hers to share, despite the distance or the waning breath of dying memories. What happens to Joshua in the high Southwestern desert? History has passed him by, but wisdom may yet be seen in the hopeful eyes of disabled Native American children. An American always, the hope of the Jewish people becomes a universal anthem for him.
A provocative first novel, twenty-five years in the writing, based on real events about the Eleventh Olympiad and the American athletes, Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller, GHOST RUNNERS is historical fiction with an edge. It hopes to generate a dialogue that needs to be had in order to put that sorry chapter of American history to rest.
About the author:
Robert J. Rubenstein is a retired teacher and evaluator of children with special needs. He has had articles, short stories, and two children's books published. A single parent with two sons, he lives near Coney Island and likes to swim and get sand on his feet. He travels frequently to the Southwest and likes being a minority among the Native-Americans. GHOST RUNNERS, historical fiction about two Jewish runners not allowed to compete in the 1936 Olympics, has been both his passion and his haunting for the past thirty years. He welcomes comments at RJRubenstein12@yahoo.com. His blog is http://scribblercom.blogspot.com.
Sunday, September 12, 2010
A WISE NOVEL ABOUT FEMININE RELATIONSHIPS
JUST RELEASED!
Shamrock and Lotus
Authored by Cassie Premo Steele
A compelling novel that intertwines the stories of people from Ireland, India, and America, their lives touched by the untold stories of global immigration. Claire is the American wife of an executive in the World Bank,
living in Dublin during the economic boom times. Brigid is a single Irish woman who, after spending
most of her adult live working as a midwife on Native American reservations, is now returning
home to Ireland. Padmaj is a man, originally from India and now an Irish citizen, who owns restaurant in Dublin. As they connect with each other across cultural differences and learn to face their histories of
violence and immigration with honesty and love, they learn that all people share common dreams of
a renewed world.
About the author:
Cassie Premo Steele is a Pushcart Prize nominated poet, a monthly columnist for Literary Mama, and the author of six books. She provides individual coaching, classes, and workshops through her Co-Creating
practice, which teaches people to live balanced lives through creativity and connections with the natural world. Cassie lives with her husband and daughter along a creek in South Carolina, and would love for you to visit her at www.cassiepremosteele.com.
Shamrock and Lotus
Authored by Cassie Premo Steele
A compelling novel that intertwines the stories of people from Ireland, India, and America, their lives touched by the untold stories of global immigration. Claire is the American wife of an executive in the World Bank,
living in Dublin during the economic boom times. Brigid is a single Irish woman who, after spending
most of her adult live working as a midwife on Native American reservations, is now returning
home to Ireland. Padmaj is a man, originally from India and now an Irish citizen, who owns restaurant in Dublin. As they connect with each other across cultural differences and learn to face their histories of
violence and immigration with honesty and love, they learn that all people share common dreams of
a renewed world.
About the author:
Cassie Premo Steele is a Pushcart Prize nominated poet, a monthly columnist for Literary Mama, and the author of six books. She provides individual coaching, classes, and workshops through her Co-Creating
practice, which teaches people to live balanced lives through creativity and connections with the natural world. Cassie lives with her husband and daughter along a creek in South Carolina, and would love for you to visit her at www.cassiepremosteele.com.
A MASTERPIECE OF SMALL TOWN AMERICANA!
Just released!
"South Wind Rising" is a deep, rich portrait of a boy coming of age in a South graced with the power of nature but troubled by lurking dangers. Bassett's forthright narrative is direct and compelling, and Barsh Roberts's sexual education is by turns funny, sweet, moving, and filled with surprises.
- Valerie Sayers, novelist and Professor of English, Notre Dame University
About the author:
A native of Roanoke, Alabama, Fred Bassett is an
award-winning poet who holds four academic degrees. His poems have been published in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Fred lives with his wife Peg in Greenwood, South Carolina, near their grandchildren.
South Wind Rising
Authored by Frederick W. Bassett"South Wind Rising" is a deep, rich portrait of a boy coming of age in a South graced with the power of nature but troubled by lurking dangers. Bassett's forthright narrative is direct and compelling, and Barsh Roberts's sexual education is by turns funny, sweet, moving, and filled with surprises.
- Valerie Sayers, novelist and Professor of English, Notre Dame University
About the author:
A native of Roanoke, Alabama, Fred Bassett is an
award-winning poet who holds four academic degrees. His poems have been published in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Fred lives with his wife Peg in Greenwood, South Carolina, near their grandchildren.
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