BONES III

Perfect. Just in time for Halloween! ๐Ÿ™‚ the Kindle version of Bones III is now available on Amazon!! I have a story in this collection entitled “Hitchhiker.”
Do you remember that micro-fiction piece, “Hitchhiker” that I wrote for FF? Well, I decided to expand the story and you can now read the longer version in this anthology. ๐Ÿ™‚

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There are bones of the dead everywhere, and theyโ€™re sharp. Under your feet as you walk across your yard, in the cement of buildings, under the foundation of your home, in the coffee you drink, in the food you eat. Science estimates 100 billion human beings have lived and died. There are bones everywhere. There are skeletons everywhere, from universities to unnamed places we really donโ€™t want to know about. We love skeletons as we are walking skeletons. Thereโ€™s an old phrase about skeletons in the closet. What if the skeleton in your closet is real? When we look at strangers, friends and family we fail to see the skull behind the face. And the eyes of skulls are dark and deep. These works of art, poetry and short stories cut deep. To the bone.

Featuring the works of

James S. Dorr
Mary Genevieve Fortier
Robert Edward Petras
C. Rowe
Brian Barnett
Mathias Jansson
Judith Roney
DJ Tyrer
Patricia Anabel
Jerry Langdon
Lemmy Rushmore
Richard King Perkins II
Judith Skillman
Jane Blanchard
Alex S. Johnson
David Slater
David S. Pointer
Lemmy Rushmore
DJ Tyrer
Michael Tugendhat

Tonya L. De Marco
Rachel Anding
R.T.Sirk
Matthew Wilson
Essel Pratt
Alessandro Manzetti
Magenta Nero
Russ Bickerstaff

Scรกth Beorh
T Maxim Simmler
Steve Foreman
Phil Sloman
John Ledger
Alexander Sawyer-Irish
Dona Fox
David Schรผtz II
K.Z. Morano
Sheldon Woodbury
Kerry E.B. Black
Michael Kellar
Josh Pritchett
John W. Dennehy
Barry Rosenberg
Roger Cowin
Lesa Pascavis Smith
Doug Rinaldi
Michael Faun
Mike Jansen

edited by James Ward Kirk

cover art and illustrations by Jerry Langdon

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Amok: An Anthology of Asia-Pacific Speculative Fiction, Now Available in Paperback!

I can’t believe it! I’ve been so busy with 100 NIGHTMARES that I failed to update everyone on this awesome anthology. Thank you to everyone who supported the campaign and pre-ordered. It was a success. ๐Ÿ™‚

I’ve started reading my contributor’s copy and I can honestly say that this is one of my favorite collections. Seriously– forget my little story– the authors here are incredibly talented and the stories are so imaginative and well-written. The first few stories wowed me and I can’t wait to read all of them. If you like sci-fi, dystopian futures and fantasy with heart, do grab a copy. Each of the stories are set in various Asia-Pacific countries– Japan, the Philippines, China, Hawaii, Malaysia, Australia, India, South Korea and so much more.

My story in this book is entitled “Kitsune” (yes, it’s the one on the lovely cover by Jun Hun Yap) and it’s actually a simple love story and a re-imagined fantasy/mythology. ๐Ÿ™‚

The paperback version is now available on Amazon. Watch out for the Kindle version as well. xo

http://www.amazon.com/Amok-Anthology-Asia-Pacific-Speculative-Fiction/dp/0980508444/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1395911685&sr=1-2&keywords=Amok

Weekly Photo Challenge: Threshold

This week’s theme is Threshold

The beginning of summer โค

threshold

That perfect moment between day and night…

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I’m also waiting in breathless anticipation for the final copy of my new book, 100 Nightmares, due this month! ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ Oh, it’s almost time… The excitement is killing me! ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚

100 nightmares x900

Thank you, Padmini!

Thank you, Padmini, for finding time to share 100 Nightmares on your blog. Thank you for the kind words as well. ๐Ÿ™‚

See her post here (join blog blast here)

Padmini writes poetry, short fiction, haiku and haibun.
Occasionally, she also writes 100-word stories for Friday Fictioneers.
You can find some of her works in online haibun and haiku journals.

I was really touched because even though we rarely have time to visit each otherโ€™s blogs these days, sheโ€™s here to lend me a hand when I need it. Awww. I really did meet a lot of wonderful people through this blog. โค

Visit her at http://call2read.com/

Thank you, Hala!

Thank you, Hala, for volunteering to join the Blog Blast for 100 Nightmares. ๐Ÿ™‚

Read her post here (join blog blast here)

Hala J Subaiti is a recent follower of my blogโ€ฆ a lady with a snarky sense of humor and a penchant for impressive libraries (we definitely have that in common) ๐Ÿ™‚

I met Hala through Friday Fictioneers. Her blog http://thecrookedtrident.wordpress.com/ is where she writes flash fiction, drabbles and six word stories.

Hala also has another blog dedicated to sharing and discussing identity as well as travel stories. She shares random tidbits of Lebanese life and wisdom gained from life experiences in growing up outside her own culture. Visit her at http://tricultured.wordpress.com/ Thanks again! ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚

***
a brief message:
Guys, thank you, for all the support that I’m getting for my Blog Blast. Don’t forget to like my FB page https://www.facebook.com/100Nightmares
And to answer a question, your blog doesn’t have to be on WordPress to join. other places are fine ๐Ÿ™‚ tumblr is ok too. Thanks again! ๐Ÿ™‚ xoxo K.Z.

Thank you, Dawn!

Thank you, Dawn for sharing 100 Nightmares on your blog. ๐Ÿ™‚

Read her post here (join the blog blast here)

Dawn Miller is a wonderful writer. I like the honesty in her storytelling. Her writing really speaks to the reader and youโ€™ll find that there are just some of her stories that you can oddly relate with. Sheโ€™s very good at that.

But more than that, Dawn is also a brilliant photographer. Look around her blog http://lingeringvisions.wordpress.com/ and feast your eyes on gorgeous photographs of nature, architecture and so much more.

Dawn has a wonderful way of combining images with words. But there are some of her photographs that manage to tell a story by themselves. Sheโ€™s a very prolific blogger and joins a lot of photo challenges. She even hosts her own monthly photo challenge A Lingering Look at Architecture and a weekly photo challenge A Lingering Look at Windows.

Thank you, Patricia!

Thank you, Patricia, for generously sharing 100 Nightmares on your blog.

Read her post here

Patricia writes for the simple pleasure of doing itโ€ฆ truly the best reason to write. ๐Ÿ™‚

I really like Patricia. Sheโ€™s one of the first bloggers here at WordPress who had left an impression on me. I think sheโ€™s a truly beautiful and brave woman.

Check out her blog http://highfiveandraspberries.wordpress.com/ where she posts haiku, haibun and short fiction.

Her haiku has always been one of my favorites back in my Carpe Diem days and I hope to be writing haiku again one of these days. ๐Ÿ™‚ but oh, you ABSOLUTELY have to check out her weekly 100-word stories for Friday Fictioneers. Her contributions to FF are consistently amazing, no matter what genre. For me, she’s certainly one of the best in the group.

Thank you, Ron!

Thank you, Ron, for featuring me on your blog and for the very generous post about my upcoming story collection, 100 Nightmares.

I really appreciate the kind and lovely words. ๐Ÿ™‚

Read his post here (join blog blast here)

Ron Pruitt is a former newspaper journalist and college teacher. He is the author of As The Crow Flies and Down By The River. He also wrote a collection of short stories, Meth Lab and Other Stories.

Check out one of Ronโ€™s books

Down By The River

When a farmer kills his half-brother in a dispute over a marijuana patch, it sets off ripples in the daily pattern of the residents of a small Ozark river town. The farmer’s wife, a mute young man, a meth cook,a car lot owner, the local lawman, and others find their world rocked by change as the truth works its way to the surface, transforming lives as it does.

downbytheriver

I met Ron though Friday Fictioneers. Heโ€™s a truly versatile writer. Every week, I enjoy his micro-fiction pieces that vary from imaginative speculative fiction to humorous tales.

Ron is a super nice guy, even offering me advice and essential publishing tips. Iโ€™m really grateful to have writer friends like him. ๐Ÿ™‚

Visit his blog http://bridgesareforburning.wordpress.com/ to read his fiction and articles

Thank you, Isadora!

Isadora has generously offered to share my upcoming book, 100 Nightmares, in her blog sites.

Read her posts here and here

Thank you, Isadora, for supporting the blog blast. ๐Ÿ™‚

Isadora De La Vega is an artist and an award winning jeweler exhibited in over 200 galleries all over the United States including Puerto Rico. She is also a writer and a photographerโ€”a truly inspiring, multi-talented woman.

Every week, Isadora wows me with her contributions to various weekly photo challenges.

Visit Isadoraโ€™s art and photography blog at http://isadoraartandphotography.com/ and her other blog at http://insidethemindofisadora.com/ where she posts her musings and other beautiful and motivating things.

Blog Tour Interview: My Writing Process

My friend, Adam Ickes, invited me to join the Blog Tour Interview!! (read his post here)

Adamโ€™s twitter & Adamโ€™s FB Page

Of course I said yes. ๐Ÿ™‚

Actually, Iโ€™m supposed to be doing this next Monday but thereโ€™s been some sort of misunderstanding I chose to misunderstand the whole thing because today, my blog stats are like way up. I do believe someoneโ€™s been stalking me. (Hi, mom! Please tell me it’s not you.) ๐Ÿ™‚

Also, I wanted to take this opportunity to tell you guys that Adamโ€™s book, 100 tiny tales of terror is currently free on Amazon. Get it while itโ€™s free! But please write a review when you can. Reviews are very important to writers. ๐Ÿ™‚

Anyway, thank you again, Adam, for giving me this opportunity to create a random post and to talk about myself. I miss connecting with my readers and I know for the past several months Iโ€™ve been posting only twice a week (for Friday Fictioneers and for the Photo Challenge) and that Iโ€™ve fallen into this patternโ€ฆ Still, Iโ€™m really thankful for everyoneโ€™s support.Thank you to those who visit my blog regularly to read my fiction and view my photos. I appreciate your presence. ๐Ÿ™‚

Question #1: What am I working on?

I should be working on a beach ready body. Itโ€™s almost summertime here and the sea is calling me. I should be packing my bags and booking a flight… My family wants me to go with them to Japan this April. But for a while, Iโ€™m going to have to put all that aside for the love of writing. Iโ€™m not complaining. ๐Ÿ™‚

You all know Iโ€™ve been promoting my new book, 100 Nightmares, like crazy. And though I suck at selling myself, I have to at least tryโ€ฆ

Because the book doesnโ€™t suck. I believe in it. I worked hard. The artists worked hard.

I want it to be out there BADLYโ€ฆ bad enough to even pass on the chance to be a part of some really awesome anthologies…

My own book. This is my DREAM. Iโ€™ve dreamt of this since I was a kid. The only difference is that I thought Iโ€™d be writing romance novels instead of horror stories. I actually thought Iโ€™d start writing fiction when I retireโ€ฆ when Iโ€™m old enough to have people take me seriously.

But Iโ€™m doing this right now. In my 20โ€™s. On my own. Self-published. ๐Ÿ™‚ I want this.

Thatโ€™s why Iโ€™m really grateful to everyone who joined my Blog Blast for 100 Nightmares, to those who liked my FB Page, and to you, because youโ€™re reading this right now. ๐Ÿ™‚

About the book

100 nightmares x900

100 Nightmares is a book that consists of 100 stories, each written in exactly 100 words. Less than 20% of the stories have been posted on this blog. And 16% have been previously published in anthologies, magazines and online venues. The rest are all new.

Iโ€™d like to describe it as a wicked concoction of classic horror, bizarre stories, fractured fairy tales, murderers and monsters– both imagined and real. Itโ€™s an illustrated ebook with drawings from four different artists, including a couple of my brotherโ€™s artworks.

Initially, I wanted it to be โ€œ100 stories, 100 words, 100 illustrationsโ€ but as Iโ€™m being pretty selective with the illustrations (and some stories simply work better without visuals) Iโ€™ll probably end up with just a few. (Iโ€™ll update you on the number of illustrations). The release will be this April.

The brilliant cover art, by the way, was created by Dan Verkys.

Question #2: How does my work differ from others of its genre?

All writers have a unique voice. But unlike others, I didnโ€™t grow up loving all things horror. In fact, when I was a kid, I AVOIDED all things horror.
Horror is something that Iโ€™ve started exploring just recently and falling in love with it was the last thing that I expected. What makes me different is the fact that Iโ€™m not heavily influenced by mainstream horror. Whatever nightmares I write on page was conceived in my own mind, from my deepest darkest imaginings.

Neil Gaiman, H.P. Lovecraft, Clive Barker and Edgar Allan Poe are some of the writers that I admire the most. They have huge influences on my writing, for sure. But I think, in order for horror to be effective, being honest is enough. Horror is after all, merely a reflection of real life. Everyone can relate to it. And no matter how you say that you dislike the genre or that itโ€™s not your thing, it still keeps pulling you in, piquing your curiosity, turning into your guilty pleasure.

Question #3: Why do I write what I do?

Writing helps keep me sane. Simple as that. ๐Ÿ™‚

But why do I write horror? Because itโ€™s easy for me to write horror. I like that I donโ€™t have to force it. Ideas just keep hemorrhaging inside my head. Thatโ€™s why I came up with the idea for 100 Nightmares. Itโ€™s my way of relieving the increased intracranial pressure. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Question #4: How does your writing process work?

Tough question.

I really donโ€™t force myself to write. I write when I feel like it. And when I find the timeโ€ฆ Like everything, it all starts with a silly idea. Wouldnโ€™t it be cool/ sad/ horrible ifโ€ฆ And then I start writing and then the story just reveals itself. When I reach a certain amount of words, thatโ€™s when I know Iโ€™ve come too far to turn back. Like if I don’t finish it, the half-formed monstrosities are gonna murder me in my sleep. ^^ So I finish the story even if it sucks. And then it sucks until it doesn’t.

Iโ€™ve also found writing prompts to be extremely helpful. I’m lazy, that’s why. I need the push. Thatโ€™s why I love Friday Fictioneers so much. The word limit also helps in honing the participants’ editing skills.

I started writing fiction on this blog. Like, a year ago, if Iโ€™m not mistakenโ€ฆ and I have my friend, the Pirate, to thank for that. He saw something in me and kept encouraging me to write. Iโ€™ll always remember him for that.

I mentioned before that this was supposed to be fashion blog! haha ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ I was going to post photos of myself in various designer outfits. LOL ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚
But I like this. I like that I have you as an audience. I like that you’re here. And I like how this blog has helped me grow. ๐Ÿ™‚

Okay, now itโ€™s time to pass the blog baton to this lovely lady…

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Armed with a useless liberal arts degree, Riya Anne Polcastro is a student of human behavior and a conduit for raw words. A long-time resident of the Pacific Northwest, Polcastro aims to join the ranks of great Oregon writers. http://www.riyaannepolcastro.com

Riya’s Facebook
& Riya’s Twitter

Be sure to check out her post next Monday. Better yet, visit her blog today ๐Ÿ™‚

xoxo

K.Z. โค