Published May 23, 2023 by Creative James Media Submerged in a toxic relationship and disconnected from everyone, she turns to the sea to de...
Feature Fiction || When Oceans Rise by Robin Alvarez
Published March 2, 2023 Droves of the rich and beautiful have invaded the small town of Brawlton, forcing out the many generations of good...
Author Spotlight || Matt Micheli, Author of Scratched
What attracted you to the genre(s) you write in?
What part of writing do you consider a chore?
Where were you when you first thought "I need to write this story?"
Did publishing your first book change your process of writing?
What's your favorite "bad review" that you've gotten?
What comes first for you - the plot or the characters?
Do you have any writing superstitions?
Is there a word you find yourself using too often when writing?
A lot of authors have a soundtrack while writing. Are there any songs you had on repeat?
Do you have a favorite line that you've written? What is it and why do you like it?
If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?
What advice would you like to pass on to aspiring writers that is unconventional but true?
Do you have a WIP? If so, can you tell us anything about it?
Which of your characters was your favorite to write and why?
Would you and your main character get along?
Killing off characters your readers love - Risky or necessary?
Did any of your characters surprise you while you were writing?
Which animal (real or fictional) would you say is your spirit animal and why?
Would you rather live in a haunted mansion or a cottage surrounded by fairytale creatures?
What would you say is your weirdest writing quirk?
You wake up in the middle of the night from a nightmare. What was it?
What cliched tattoo would your main character have?
What movie completely scarred you as a child?
What's the strangest thing a fan (or other author) has said to you?
If animals could talk, which one would be the rudest?
Your main character is at the hardware store. What do they buy?
What are your SM links? Can we follow you and pretend we're besties?
Published February 7, 2023 by Tor Nightfire E ric Ross is on the run from a mysterious past with his two daughters in tow. Having left his ...
Book Review || The Spite House by Johnny Compton
Published February 7, 2023 by Tor Nightfire
Published February 13, 2023 With a past shrouded in mystery and a childhood spent constantly on the move, David Rose has lived a life witho...
Feature Fiction || Between Shadow and Flame by C.T. Bryce
Published February 13, 2023
The Two-Dollar Hustle by Heather and S.D. Vassall Pirating an author’s manuscript is what I refer to as a two-dollar hustle. You steal someo...
Guest Post || The Two-Dollar Hustle by Heather and S.D. Vassall
The Two-Dollar Hustle
by Heather and S.D. Vassall
Pirating an author’s manuscript is what I refer to as a two-dollar hustle. You steal someone’s work, sell it, collect your profits, and call it a day. Career pirates will sell their ‘booty’ through other sites quickly; that way they make money, not only from their first upload—that will most likely be taken down within sixty days—but through those secondary sources which might never be removed.
It’s not sexy or glamorous, and it doesn’t provide large sums of money like a big heist, but unlike a heist, it’s a low risk enterprise. And, best of all, it likely provides a steady stream of cash. One two-dollar hustle might not bring in big bucks, but a few hundred of them and the pirate has sustainable income flowing in. Most pirates are career criminals They’ll set up 100 two-dollar hustles over the course of a weekend. Even better for the pirate is the fact that their income is tax-free.
It’s hard to protect a manuscript from being pirated. What makes it worse is the large corporations make piracy easier. They tend to have loose policies and multiple departments that don’t communicate with each other. It’s common to get bounced back and forth between departments till you finally reach someone who can finally get the situation resolved. We spent the last week sending email after email, talking to reps from different departments, filling out forms, and the process is still ongoing.
It's disheartening that there’s so much piracy taking place in the book industry. The pirates aren’t going to quit. They’ve found their niche and they’re going to stay there. And the ones running their two-dollar hustles aren’t really worried about what might happen to them. They’re good at their business, and they tend to remain anonymous, even when their acts are discovered. The worst that generally happens to them is their pirated book gets taken down. They aren’t worried about legal actions or punishment; corporations and law enforcement agencies generally aren’t going to devote much energy, time or resources towards tracking down and punishing someone doing a two-dollar hustle.
We, as authors and publishers have to keep trudging forward. We have to keep writing andpublishing. We have to stay diligent in our best efforts to protect our work. It’s hard, and it can be disheartening, but we have to keep moving forward. The only way we’ll have any success against piracy is to keep striving. It takes patience. And tenacity—remember that word!
Our emotions have run the gamut this week from shock to fear to disbelief and finally to rage. How dare someone do this to one of our authors! How dare someone do it to us! We’ve spent twenty plus hours talking to four different departments at Amazon, filing copyright infringement claims, searching for other pirated copies online, updating readers, and working with our publicist and lawyer. We’ve talked to other publishers and authors. We’ve agonized over how to protect our other authors and the next two upcoming book launches. It was exhausting. But we’re not giving up; we’ve got loads of tenacity (if you only remember one thing from this article, remember that word!).
We’ve put together a survival list for publishers, for if and when they get plundered by pirates.
Many thanks to Andrew at Dark Lit Press for the tips he provided.
What you’ll need to survive piracy:- Coffee. Don’t skip this step.
- Open communication with the author and/or artist. Remember that the theft effects you
- both, but for them this is bigger than that. This is a violation.
- Make sure your whole team knows, including your publicist, bookkeeper, and lawyer.
- Continually update your team.
- The contract between the author and publisher.
- The contract between the cover artist and the publisher or author.
- Screenshot of where you got the ISBN (be sure to get your own ISBN).
- Screenshot of any other dashboards where you have the book published.
- A cease-and-desist letter from your lawyer.
- The tenacity (don’t forget this word) to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again.
- A sense of humor.
- A support group. Reach out to other publishers, editors, and authors you know. Gather as many tips as you can.
- The tenacity (there it is again!) to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again.
- Learn to channel your rage and frustration into perseverance.
- Patience.
- Sleep.
- Exercise and/or meditation of some kind. Self-care is key if you’re going to keep fighting.
- The tenacity to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again (we’re tenacious in our attempts to make sure you remember tenacity!).
We hope other writers and presses don’t have to deal with their work being pirated. Unfortunately, as common as piracy is, most of you will have to deal with it at some point. Just remember—if and when it happens—not to lose heart or give up. Be patient, be tenacious (we can’t stress that enough!), and keep moving forward. It’s all we can do.
Ad astra per aspera!
The Two-Dollar Hustle by Heather and S.D. Vassall
- Coffee. Don’t skip this step.
- Open communication with the author and/or artist. Remember that the theft effects you
- both, but for them this is bigger than that. This is a violation.
- Make sure your whole team knows, including your publicist, bookkeeper, and lawyer.
- Continually update your team.
- The contract between the author and publisher.
- The contract between the cover artist and the publisher or author.
- Screenshot of where you got the ISBN (be sure to get your own ISBN).
- Screenshot of any other dashboards where you have the book published.
- A cease-and-desist letter from your lawyer.
- The tenacity (don’t forget this word) to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again.
- A sense of humor.
- A support group. Reach out to other publishers, editors, and authors you know. Gather as many tips as you can.
- The tenacity (there it is again!) to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again.
- Learn to channel your rage and frustration into perseverance.
- Patience.
- Sleep.
- Exercise and/or meditation of some kind. Self-care is key if you’re going to keep fighting.
- The tenacity to keep calling and keep submitting forms over and over again (we’re tenacious in our attempts to make sure you remember tenacity!).
W elcome back to another round of the Scaredy Cat Reading Challenge. If this is your first time here, be sure to look here for the origina...
Scaredy Cat Horror Reading Challenge - My Picks 2023
Are you ready for my picks?
Vampire - The Thirst byFlint Maxwell
Female Author - The Insatiable Hunger of Trees by Samantha Eaton
Dark Fantasy - Unholy Terrors by Lyndall Clipstone
Body Horror
Gothic - A Multitude of Dreams by Mara Rutherford
#1 in Series - Crazy as a Loon by Hailey Edwards
Indie Author
Witch
BIPOC Author - The Haunting of Alejandra by V. Castro
Western - Lone Women by Victor Lavalle
Werewolf - Creature by Flint Maxwell
Holiday
YA
Comedy - Suckerville by Chris Sorenson
Dark Fairytale - Nightwood: All Fairy Tales Were History Once
Isolation
Aquatic - Sacculina by Philip Fracassi
Anthology/Collection
LGBTQ+ Author - The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw
Demon
Female Author - The Insatiable Hunger of Trees by Samantha Eaton
Dark Fantasy - Unholy Terrors by Lyndall Clipstone
Gothic - A Multitude of Dreams by Mara Rutherford
#1 in Series - Crazy as a Loon by Hailey Edwards
Witch
BIPOC Author - The Haunting of Alejandra by V. Castro
Werewolf - Creature by Flint Maxwell
Holiday
Comedy - Suckerville by Chris Sorenson
Isolation
Aquatic - Sacculina by Philip Fracassi
Anthology/Collection
LGBTQ+ Author - The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw
Demon
Published November 1, 2022 by Windstorm Press Jane’s nightmares are back—and this time, they’ve unleashed a brutal killer. Jane Walker’s ni...
Guest Post || In Search of a Setting by JP McLean
Published November 1, 2022 by Windstorm Press
Jane’s nightmares are back—and this time, they’ve unleashed a brutal killer. Jane Walker’s nightmares aren’t imaginary—they’re glimpses into the traumatic past; and the past can be dangerous, especially now that Jane’s protective birthmarks are gone.
Worse, she’s no longer invisible within her dreams—and learns this the hard way while using her power to incriminate a ruthless killer. Inadvertently revealing her ghost form, she launches him on a relentless hunt to track her down.
Even more disturbing, Jane knows this man. She once tried to use her power to save him from injury, but instead set him on a path of violent crime. Now, he’s targeted the man she loves, and Jane must keep one step ahead of this cold-blooded assassin before he gets rid of Ethan permanently.
Jane has one last chance to fix the mistake that altered this man’s history, but that means taking her most dangerous dream journey yet—one from which she might never awaken.
Ghost Mark is the second installment of the Dark Dreams Series by JP McLean, an author whose writing the Ottawa Review of Books calls “relentless and original.”
in search of a setting
by jp mclean
No matter the genre, all works of fiction have a setting, and every setting requires research, even the fictional ones. But choosing a present-day setting, like New York, or Paris, requires a deeper dive. Why? Because even if you have never visited the location you choose, your readers may have. If the location details aren’t authentic, you’ll lose credibility with your readers.
Getting the details right is important
Setting is more than a location on a map. In order to pull your reader into the setting, and keep them there, you have to evoke the senses, create an immersive experience. When researching a location, consider the sounds (cars honking, frog song), the scents (exhaust, wood smoke), the sights (high rises, fields of corn), the textures (cool glass, weathered wood), and the local cuisine (fast food, fine dining).
Setting your story in a place you’re familiar with is one way to get the details right. Most of the settings I choose are cities I’ve lived in. I know the street layouts, the neighbourhoods, the feel of the places. Indoors or out, downtown or suburb, I know where to find a suitable place for each scene. But what do you do when the setting is unfamiliar?
Any excuse for a road trip
Location research is a writer’s best excuse for a road trip! I’ve driven across Canada and down the west coast of the United States many times to see and feel for myself the places I’m using. I take copious notes and every opportunity to talk to locals. Most places have visitor information centres that are useful resources. The knowledgeable people who work there are happy to talk about the location and its famous or infamous residents. Does your story call for a name drop? Often, brochures and pamphlets are available for useful tips on everything from local festivals and markets to tourist hot spots, hikes, beaches, and restaurants. You’ll find plenty of detail to add layers of richness to your settings.
Servers at local restaurants are also a tremendous resource, and if you catch them during a slow time, they’re usually happy to talk. A server in the Napa Valley, in California’s wine country, gave me a piece of writing gold when she asked if I was in town for the crush. I learned that was local lingo for the annual grape harvest.
One mistake I’ve made on past road trips is not having a list of questions and scene-specific
requirements. It’s easy to get sidetracked when you’re on a road trip, so I like to know what locations the book calls for. Do I need to find a city park? A high rise? A derelict warehouse? Having a list may be easier for writers who plot, but even those who don’t plot, can keep a daily travel diary, and include the five senses they encounter while they’re out and about.
But what to do when you don’t have the flexibility to travel?
Happily, there are many other resources writers can tap. To get an overview of the area, a roadmap or Google Maps are good places to start. Supplement the big picture with Google Earth to hone in on the types of buildings in the area (residential/industrial), the architecture (gothic/modern), the scenery (lush/barren). Use traffic cameras to gage how busy the streets are, what kind of trees, billboards, or buildings line the highways. These are the streets and conditions your characters will encounter.
Search the internet for the scents and sounds of the place (seriously, type in scents and sounds of X city and you’ll be surprised how much you can glean). Find the local restaurants and look at their on-line menus. These are the meals your characters will order.
Check the weather charts and sunrise/sunset times to be sure you’re true to the timeframe you’re using. Research the flora and fauna your characters will encounter. Interview people you know who have been to the location. I’ve also used local real estate listings to get a feel for neighbourhood homes and condos. Most real estate listings these days come with drone footage, 360-degree views of the interior, and sometimes the architectural plans. This information can help round out interior scenes or lend flavour to scenes staged in the general vicinity.
Not everything you find will make its way to the page
You’ll often end up with much more information than you can use in your story. But the research is never wasted, because even if you don’t use the crush, knowing about it helps you understand the setting and the people, and that knowledge will infuse itself itself into your writing, pull in the reader and hold them in the story.
JP (Jo-Anne) McLean is a bestselling author of urban fantasy and supernatural thrillers. She is a 2021 finalist for the Chanticleer Paranormal Award for Supernatural Fiction, and the Wishing Shelf Book award for Adult Fiction. Her work has won a Readers’ Favorite Award, a Gold Literary Titan medal, and honourable mentions from the Whistler Independent Book Awards and the Victoria Writers’ Society. Reviewers call her work addictive, smart, and fun.
JP holds a Bachelor of Commerce Degree from the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business, is a certified scuba diver, an avid gardener, and a voracious reader. She had a successful career in Human Resources before turning her attention to writing.
Raised in Toronto, Ontario, JP has lived in various parts of North America, from Mexico and Arizona to Alberta and Ontario. JP now lives with her husband on Denman Island, which is nestled between the coast of British Columbia and Vancouver Island. You can reach her through her website at jpmcleanauthor.com.Website | Twitter | Facebook
in search of a setting
by jp mclean
No matter the genre, all works of fiction have a setting, and every setting requires research, even the fictional ones. But choosing a present-day setting, like New York, or Paris, requires a deeper dive. Why? Because even if you have never visited the location you choose, your readers may have. If the location details aren’t authentic, you’ll lose credibility with your readers.
Setting is more than a location on a map. In order to pull your reader into the setting, and keep them there, you have to evoke the senses, create an immersive experience. When researching a location, consider the sounds (cars honking, frog song), the scents (exhaust, wood smoke), the sights (high rises, fields of corn), the textures (cool glass, weathered wood), and the local cuisine (fast food, fine dining).
Setting your story in a place you’re familiar with is one way to get the details right. Most of the settings I choose are cities I’ve lived in. I know the street layouts, the neighbourhoods, the feel of the places. Indoors or out, downtown or suburb, I know where to find a suitable place for each scene. But what do you do when the setting is unfamiliar?
Any excuse for a road trip
Location research is a writer’s best excuse for a road trip! I’ve driven across Canada and down the west coast of the United States many times to see and feel for myself the places I’m using. I take copious notes and every opportunity to talk to locals. Most places have visitor information centres that are useful resources. The knowledgeable people who work there are happy to talk about the location and its famous or infamous residents. Does your story call for a name drop? Often, brochures and pamphlets are available for useful tips on everything from local festivals and markets to tourist hot spots, hikes, beaches, and restaurants. You’ll find plenty of detail to add layers of richness to your settings.
Servers at local restaurants are also a tremendous resource, and if you catch them during a slow time, they’re usually happy to talk. A server in the Napa Valley, in California’s wine country, gave me a piece of writing gold when she asked if I was in town for the crush. I learned that was local lingo for the annual grape harvest.
One mistake I’ve made on past road trips is not having a list of questions and scene-specific
requirements. It’s easy to get sidetracked when you’re on a road trip, so I like to know what locations the book calls for. Do I need to find a city park? A high rise? A derelict warehouse? Having a list may be easier for writers who plot, but even those who don’t plot, can keep a daily travel diary, and include the five senses they encounter while they’re out and about.
But what to do when you don’t have the flexibility to travel?
Happily, there are many other resources writers can tap. To get an overview of the area, a roadmap or Google Maps are good places to start. Supplement the big picture with Google Earth to hone in on the types of buildings in the area (residential/industrial), the architecture (gothic/modern), the scenery (lush/barren). Use traffic cameras to gage how busy the streets are, what kind of trees, billboards, or buildings line the highways. These are the streets and conditions your characters will encounter.
Search the internet for the scents and sounds of the place (seriously, type in scents and sounds of X city and you’ll be surprised how much you can glean). Find the local restaurants and look at their on-line menus. These are the meals your characters will order.
Check the weather charts and sunrise/sunset times to be sure you’re true to the timeframe you’re using. Research the flora and fauna your characters will encounter. Interview people you know who have been to the location. I’ve also used local real estate listings to get a feel for neighbourhood homes and condos. Most real estate listings these days come with drone footage, 360-degree views of the interior, and sometimes the architectural plans. This information can help round out interior scenes or lend flavour to scenes staged in the general vicinity.
Not everything you find will make its way to the page
You’ll often end up with much more information than you can use in your story. But the research is never wasted, because even if you don’t use the crush, knowing about it helps you understand the setting and the people, and that knowledge will infuse itself itself into your writing, pull in the reader and hold them in the story.
Holy crap, how is it March already? Spring is around the corner and I, for one, am ready for it. While it hasn't been a bad winter in Vi...
This Month in Horror || March 2023
Holy crap, how is it March already?
Spring is around the corner and I, for one, am ready for it. While it hasn't been a bad winter in Virginia, I'm ready for green trees, later sunsets, and hitting the trails. And the best part of those long days is more time to read!
Get ready to pad your TBR, here are just a few of March's releases! If you've missed the previous lists for January and February, you can still check those out. And if you are looking for what's still to come, you can see the whole list for 2023 here.
If you have a book releasing this year and want to get on the list, click here and I'll get you added!
__________________________________________
Expected publication: March 7, 2023 by Feiwel & Friends
In this gothic YA remix of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, a teen boy tries to discover the reason behind his best friend's disappearance—and the arrival of a mysterious and magnetic stranger—in misty Victorian London.
London, 1885. Gabriel Utterson, a 17-year-old law clerk, has returned to London for the first time since his life— and that of his dearest friend, Henry Jekyll—was derailed by a scandal that led to his and Henry's expuslion from the London Medical School. Whispers about the true nature of Gabriel and Henry's relationship have followed the boys for two years, and now Gabriel has a chance to start again.
But Gabriel doesn't want to move on, not without Henry. His friend has become distant and cold since the disastrous events of the prior spring, and now his letters have stopped altogether. Desperate to discover what's become of him, Gabriel takes to watching the Jekyll house.
In doing so, Gabriel meets Hyde, a a strangely familiar young man with white hair and a magnetic charisma. He claims to be friends with Henry, and Gabriel can't help but begin to grow jealous at their apparent closeness, especially as Henry continues to act like Gabriel means nothing to him.
But the secret behind Henry's apathy is only the first part of a deeper mystery that has begun to coalesce. Monsters of all kinds prowl within the London fog—and not all of them are out for blood.
Expected Publication: March 7, 2023 by Zando
Grieving mother Magos cuts out a piece of her deceased eleven-year-old son Santiago’s lung. Acting on fierce maternal instinct and the dubious logic of an old folktale, she nurtures the lung until it gains sentience, growing into the carnivorous little Monstrilio she keeps hidden within the walls of her family’s decaying Mexico City estate. Eventually, Monstrilio begins to resemble the Santiago he once was, but his innate impulses—though curbed by his biological and chosen family’s communal care—threaten to destroy this fragile second chance at life.
A thought-provoking meditation on grief, acceptance, and the monstrous sides of love and loyalty, Gerardo Sámano Córdova blends bold imagination and evocative prose with deep emotional rigor. Told in four acts that span the globe from Brooklyn to Berlin, Monstrilio offers, with uncanny clarity, a cathartic and precise portrait of being human.
Expected publication: March 7, 2023 by Flame Tree Press
After surviving a near-death experience, David finds himself haunted by ghosts in the old Victorian house he is renovating. These tortured souls beg for his help and offer him protection from a demonic presence that wants David dead for a crime he doesn’t remember committing. Even more surprising, he soon learns these are spirits of people who are not yet dead. Is this real, is he hallucinating, or is someone trying to drive him insane? As his paranoia ramps up, he discovers the truth is even more bizarre. The haunting won’t stop until he kills a man named “Fitz.”
Hell on High by Michael Clark
Expected publication: March 15, 2023 by Brigids Gate Press, LLC
Prepare for adventure as Juliana, a nineteen-year-old Brazilian, finds herself forced to run from an occult overlord, leaving her sister in peril. Temporarily safe, Juliana works to save money for Vilma’s rescue—and along the way, meets Patrick, a rich-boy mountain climber with friends in high places.
Angus Addison wants to see his corporate flag on the summit of Mount Everest—carried there by the first woman in history—but the Himalayas are no joke. Failure could cost both sisters their lives.
Juliana weighs the risks and rewards—for even if she raises the cash, she still must figure a way to free Vilma from the same man she ran from—a man known to his disciples as The Farmer.
Expected publication: March 14, 2023 by Tor Nightfire
A Head Full of Ghosts meets Hereditary in Piñata, a terrifying possession tale by author and artist Leopoldo Gout.
Carmen Sanchez is back in her home country of Mexico, overseeing the renovation of an ancient cathedral into a boutique hotel. Her teen daughters, Izel and Luna, are with her for the summer, and left to fill their afternoons unsupervised in a foreign city.
The locals treat the Sanchez women like outsiders, while Carmen's contractors openly defy and sabotage her work. After a disastrous accident at the construction site nearly injures Luna, Carmen's had enough. They're leaving.
Back in New York, Luna begins acting strange, and only Izel notices the chilling changes happening to her younger sister. But it might be too late for the Sanchez family to escape what's been awakened...
Piñata is a bone-chilling story about how the sinister repercussions of our past can return to haunt us.
The Memory Eater by Rebecca Mahoney
Expected publication: March 14, 2023 by Razorbill
A teenage girl must save her town from a memory-devouring monster in this piercing exploration of grief, trauma, and memory, from the author of The Valley and the Flood.
For generations, a monster called the Memory Eater has lived in the caves of Whistler Beach, Maine, surviving off the unhappy memories of those who want to forget. And for generations, the Harlows have been in charge of keeping her locked up—and keeping her fed.
After her grandmother dies, seventeen-year-old Alana Harlow inherits the family business. But there’s something Alana doesn’t know: the strange gaps in her memory aren’t from an accident. Her memories have been taken—eaten. And with them, she’s lost the knowledge of how to keep the monster contained.
Now the Memory Eater is loose. Alana’s mistake could cost Whistler Beach everything—unless she can figure out how to retrieve her own memories and recapture the monster. But as Alana delves deeper into her family’s magic and the history of her town, she discovers a shocking secret at the center of the Harlow family business and learns that tampering with memories never comes without a price.
A teenage girl must save her town from a memory-devouring monster in this piercing exploration of grief, trauma, and memory, from the author of The Valley and the Flood.
For generations, a monster called the Memory Eater has lived in the caves of Whistler Beach, Maine, surviving off the unhappy memories of those who want to forget. And for generations, the Harlows have been in charge of keeping her locked up—and keeping her fed.
After her grandmother dies, seventeen-year-old Alana Harlow inherits the family business. But there’s something Alana doesn’t know: the strange gaps in her memory aren’t from an accident. Her memories have been taken—eaten. And with them, she’s lost the knowledge of how to keep the monster contained.
Now the Memory Eater is loose. Alana’s mistake could cost Whistler Beach everything—unless she can figure out how to retrieve her own memories and recapture the monster. But as Alana delves deeper into her family’s magic and the history of her town, she discovers a shocking secret at the center of the Harlow family business and learns that tampering with memories never comes without a price.
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