Showing posts with label Fireside Bookshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fireside Bookshop. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Writing News

by Michael Seese

It's been a while since I've had news on the "Author Front." I've been working to get, you know, some writing done. But I now have two newsbits to share.

This Saturday, November 14, I will be at Appletree Books in Cleveland Heights from 6 - 8, writing in the window.



























Why? you might ask. 

November is National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo, for short. To celebrate, Appletree is inviting Cleveland-area writers of all ages, formats, and genres to come write in their front windows.

So I will be there. 

Perhaps I'll work on the sequel to The Extraordinary eTab Of Julian Newcomber. Speaking of which...

On Saturday, December 7, I will be signing The Extraordinary eTab Of Julian Newcomber at the Fireside Book Shop in Chagrin Falls. 





I'll be there from 1:30 to 3:30.

So if you're available either date, please come out and show your support / love!

PS: With regard to the latter, I plan to bring cookies and milk (for the kiddos) and cookies and wine (for the adults). If that helps....
 


Saturday, May 18, 2019

It's Alive!

by Michael Seese

From Twitter last week:




















I don't know much about Bakka-Phoenix books, other than they are "Canada's oldest Speculative Fiction bookstore, founded in 1972."

But they are now my second favorite book store, behind the Fireside

So The Extraordinary eTab Of Julian Newcomber is now officially for sale in Canada. The U.S. release date is early June.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Janet Flash: The Purrfect Plan

by Michael Seese

I got a call the other day from one of my biggest supporters, Jim Lewis, who owns the Fireside Book Shop in Chagrin Falls. He wondered if I as still blogging, since my words had not polluted graced his inbox lately. I agreed I had not been blogging much lately, owing to three factors:

1. The demise of Castle
2. The demise of Flash Friday, which ensured that every week I would have a story to share
3. The fact I've been so busy writing my current WIP I haven't had time to write about writing.

But yesterday I tuned into Janet Reid's blog, and saw that she'd posted a quick flash fiction contest

This time, in 25 words or less, we were to describe this picture.

























Here is "The Purrfect Crime."

“We need a cleaner,” Eunice whispered.

“Nah. They'll assume she fell.”

Indeed, their plan was purrfect, save for one detail.

“Um... Who’ll open the can?”


What would YOU have said about this, in 25 words or less?

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Summer Eiffel Update

By Michael Seese

First, the commercial. 

I will be signing copies of The Secret World Of Gustave Eiffel this weekend. Of course, I'll gladly sign any copy of any of my books. Heck, I'll sign your copy of Harry Potter, if you want. The signing will be Saturday, July 27 from noon - 2:00 at the Fireside Bookshop in Chagrin Falls. If you're in the Cleveland area, and free, please stop by.



 


















On to the contest...

I visited the website of the American Library in Paris. According to a PDF you can download, there are 45 books in the competition. The document also notes that "two have already won a Pulitzer Prize this year."

Hmmm.

Let's just say that, while winning remains the goal, placing or showing won't be bad.

Come see "Eiffel" in Chagrin Falls. Click to tweet.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Here I Go Again!

By Michael Seese

A few posts back, I mulled over launching my own personal "NaNoWriMo," a self-imposed and self-guided effort to just get a book done. I was considering a YA fantasy that I had been kicking around in my head. And then...

Janet Reid, the best agent who is not my agent, offered up this on her blog. In it, she talked about the American Library in Paris Book Award.   

Per their website:

Any book-length prose fiction or nonfiction work, written originally in English, about France or the French-American encounter, will be considered by a committee of Award screeners. Nominated books must have been originally published between July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2013.







































First prize is $5,000, and an all-expense paid trip to the City Of Light. So of course, I have to enter. Unfortunately, I do have to write (and print, as in, "publish") the damn thing. In fact, the way I see it, the contest presents five challenges:

1. Come up with an idea for a novel.
2. Write it.
3. Write it by June 1, or better said, at least six weeks before June 1 to allow for editing and printing.
4. Get it physically published.
5. Win it.

Piece of cake...right? (Or should I say gâteau?)

Since there is no way I could get it published through one of the "big houses," even if I had an agent, I'll probably tap the owner of the best bookstore IN THE WHOLE ENTIRE WORLD and see if he will assume the mantle of publisher, as he did for Haunting Valley

It's off to the races, my friends.

 

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Instant Gratification

By Michael Seese

One of the things I like about writing songs (which I don't do so much these days) and poems (which I do) is that you often can create a piece rather quickly. Certainly, I have some which have been in the works for literally years. But I also have written songs and poems in 30 minutes. And they didn't suck! I have to say, it's really neat to put down the guitar or pen and think, Wow. Yesterday, this didn't exist. An hour ago, it didn't exist. Now it does.

Writing a novel is not an exercise in instant gratification.

So that's why they invented short stories. Case in point...

Last Saturday, Jim Lewis, owner of the best bookstore in the world, sent me an email titled "thought this might be interesting for you." It contained only a link. I followed the link to the NPR website, specifically, a page called "Three Minute Fiction."

This election season, Three-Minute Fiction is getting political. Weekends on All Things Considered has a new judge, a new challenge and a new prize for Round 9. For this contest, submit original, short fiction that can be read in about three minutes, which means no more than 600 words.

If I'm on a roll, I can knock out 600 words in less than an hour. The challenge is coming up with the idea. So I thought and thought and thought. I kept coming back to a vague idea about time travel, and it stuck. Wednesday night, while walking on the treadmill, I fleshed it out. The next day, after less than an hour, I had 700 words on the page. 

For what it's worth, if you've never had to do it, cutting 100 words is murder! But I did. And the result is "Past / President / Future."




POP POP POP POP POP POP.
      Six rapid retorts rose above the city sounds as President Reagan walked 30 paces from the Washington Hilton to his limousine. Press Secretary James Brady dropped to the pavement, a bullet in his brain. DC police officer Thomas Delahanty took a shot to the neck. The fourth bullet struck Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy in the abdomen. The fifth hit the limousine’s shatterproof glass. The sixth ricocheted off the vehicle and into the President’s chest.
      One, two, four, five, six. But what about the third bullet? Apparently, it hit a nearby building. I say “apparently,” because the bullet was never found. Actually, that statement is not 100% true. The bullet was found...elsewhere. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
      On March 30, 1981, I watched the news stream in. Initial reports said the President escaped injury. Later, we learned he had been shot. After 105 minutes of surgery, Reagan was in recovery.
      Addressing the press, chief of thoracic surgery Benjamin Aaron acknowledged that Reagan was, in fact, lucky to be alive. Had John Hinckley used a larger caliber gun, rather than a .22, the damage would have been extensive. Further, Hinckley fired “Devastator” bullets containing a small explosive charge. The slug which hit Reagan failed to detonate.
      Small bullet? Explosive! I nearly tripped over the ottoman as I raced to the bookshelf, grabbing the red leather-bound journal and flipping to the page I’d read the day before.
      On April 11, 1865—exactly 116 years to the day after Reagan left GWUH—President Abraham Lincoln delivered a speech favoring voting rights for blacks. So offended was John Wilkes Booth that he saw assassination as the only solution.
      The plot was well planned. Booth knew the play, and timed his attack to coincide with a humorous moment, so that the audience’s laughter would muffle the sound. Witnesses reported hearing no shot, so Booth’s ploy would appear to have worked.
      Or was there something else...
      Robert Stone, Lincoln’s personal physician, later performed a secret autopsy. What he found surprised and confused him. He wrote in his diary, a red leather-bound journal, which I happened to find behind several old texts in the George Washington University medical library:

Though nothing was to be gained by the enterprise, I nonetheless decided to extract the bullet. Employing the largest pair of forceps in my possession, I reached into the wound behind the President’s left ear.
I immediately took note of the bullet's size. A Deringer shell is large, and lead. The object I removed from President Lincoln’s brain was small, and composed of a different metal.
I examined the bullet for a moment before tossing it into the basin. I was startled by a slight “pop.” Peering in, I saw it had disintegrated into tiny metal shards, and that only because of the bowl’s depth did I escape injury.
Several days later, I casually inquired of Secretary Stanton as to whether the Army employed any type of miniature explosive ordnance. He affirmed they do not.
Stanton then commented, “It is strange you mention ordnance.”
“Why?” I asked.
“I personally examined Booth’s pistol. The bullet was lodged in the barrel. It never exited the gun. So I cannot say with certainty who, or what, killed the President.”
I told him of my findings, then said, “You and I must take this to our graves.”

      How a bullet traveled 2.4 miles southeast and 42,352 days back in time, I’ll never know. But I am absolutely convinced that is what happened.
      By the way...Reagan was shot at 2:27; Lincoln died at 7:22.

It has been signed, sealed, and delivered NPR. 

Feel free to share your thoughts. And wish me luck.

PS: Sorry for the late hint, but if you're feeling inspired, the contest is open until 11:59 p.m., Sunday September 23.




Thursday, April 26, 2012

The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly

Well, perhaps just the good and the UGLY. Take a look at the image below, and decide for yourself which is which.


(Of course, I mean "ugly" in the nicest, sincerest, creepiest way.)  

As I have mentioned in several previous blog posts, my short story "Worm Herding" was selected for the Pill Hill Press compilation BUGS! And here it is. The book is available right now on Amazon. According to the publisher, it will downloadable as an e-book "late next week." 

So please buy two or three copies. Just kidding. Well, sort of.
 
And I'm certain that the owner of my favorite bookstore, the best bookstore in the entire world, an icon among icons in iconic Chagrin Falls (did I suck up enough yet?) -- who follows my blogs as closely as I follow the stock market ticker -- will order at least five for the shop.

I could even sign them.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Udopia Sample

In previous posts, I've offered snippets of my novella, Udopia. I had wanted to share more. But what was I going to do...paste 30 pages into a blog entry? I don't think so.

Then my friend Jim, owner of the Fireside Bookshop in beautiful Chagrin Falls, graciously offered to host a sample on their server. It's not a web page you can navigate to from their website. But here is a link to the first 30 pages.

Read, and enjoy. Comment if you wish.