Showing posts with label young adult. Show all posts
Showing posts with label young adult. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

New Release from A.M. Bostwick

New Releases 1/13/16


The Clawed Monet
by A.M. Bostwick
Pages: 190 / Words: 50000
ISBN:978-1-944449-24-7
ISBN:978-1-944449-25-4
$4.99
Blurb:
Feline reporter-turned-detective Ace is on the trail of a new mystery following the scandalous opening of a new art exhibit at the historic Rhys Art Museum. When opening night is lights out after a peculiar power failure and a priceless Monet reproduction is clawed beyond repair, all paws point to the new curator’s prim and proper feline – Miss Kitty. Hired by Miss Kitty, Ace and his feline friends are out to find the real criminal and restore the untarnished reputation of Miss Kitty and her art curator companion before they are fired. Setting aside his duties at The Oakdale Register, Ace finds himself trailing the shadow of a “ghost cat” through the historic district and a cemetery, as well as interrogating museum guests, local residents and even a so-called mysterious psychic cat to try and solve the crime. He’ll have to fend off a pack of Dobermans and contend with a gang of raccoons– all under tight deadline. This mystery is filled with adventure, suspense and humor – all from the first-person point-of-view from a cat.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

New Release from Alyx J. Shaw


A Strange Place in Time - Book 2
By: Alyx J. Shaw
187 pages / 54400 words
ISBN: 978-1-61040-635-2
$3.99
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=1&products_id=83&zenid=5775b3f831bc137a2c5ee81a3e6c3f12
Blurb:
What do a biker, a drunk dwarf, a half-elven thief, a wizard and god of insanity have in common? More than a person would think. John Arrowsmith, a lost biker who managed to fall through a liminal between two worlds to land of Dargoth, has reached the City of the White Palace, but his adventure is far from over. The palace has risen, and a number of delegates from all over the land have come to speak with the Wizard-King. Strange happenings give rise to concern, and old enemies are rising from the grave to darken the land once more. Complications, both big and small, combine in a tangled and threatening plot, and only the gods themselves know what is happening. But the gods are not speaking, and when Arrowsmith finally decides (with a little prodding) to ask them, he encounters something that only adds to the tangle. Recovering now from a violent attack by the god of madness, it becomes clear that he and his friends and half-elven lover Infamous are going to have to fight subterfuge with subterfuge. Which begs the question – where exactly does one find a five foot ten inch albino virgin prince…?
Coming Next Week...

Your Heart was a Legend
by Emily Nakanishi
Frankie is hopelessly in love with his best friend, Tobias. In a small town with even smaller minds, how can he even come out of the closet, let alone confess his feelings?
Genre: Contemporary, Teen, Coming of Age

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Awkward teenage bisexual confessions, and representation for young girls who crush on girls

Last week I remembered something I hadn’t thought about in a really long time. The summer when I was fifteen, and had only been aware of my feelings for other girls for about a year, my mom used to take me to this vegetarian cafĂ© where you told the person behind the counter what kind of ingredients you wanted on your salad and then at the end of the line they weighed it and you probably paid by the ounce. The girl who worked there was about my age and I found her fiendishly attractive. She was on the fatter side of average, bosomy, brown hair, with facial features that reminded me of my own people (I know you’re not really supposed to “look Jewish” so let’s leave it at that.) I won’t post her name here because I feel like that would tip this post into ‘creepy invasion of privacy’ territory.

At that age, crushes consumed me. I had about ten crushes at once, some on men, but most of the most intense ones on other girls around my age. I was also fifteen and, despite being grades-smart and reading-level-smart, I wasn’t smart enough to, you know, start an actual conversation with her about what she was into and did she like Star Wars or play an instrument or did we even have anything in common at all. That’s how you start a relationship, and I knew that. I totally knew that! I’d even written it into the stories I wrote at that age!

But did I do any of that? No. What I did do, was call the store and invite her to my Sweet Sixteen. A total stranger. On the basis of being attractive.

Faceplant.

Naturally, she said no. So why am I talking about this?

Because I realized while facepalming about this earlier today that a major motivation for writing about my character Shulamit’s awkwardness, her crushes on most of the women she encounters in The Second Mango, and her lack of finesse in finding a girlfriend –- a major motivation for me was to show someone feminine fretting that way over other girls. To show that someone like me could fret like that and HAD fretted like that.

You see, in literature and movies, the awkward teenage boy crushing on beautiful female peers is a beloved trope of the coming of age genre—whether it’s set in modern times, historical times, fantasy, or sci-fi. Everywhere from Archie Comics to the demonstration on how all the parts of your body work together at Disney/EPCOT’s short-lived Health pavillion talk about young men struck into silliness by a combination of hormones and lack of experience when they see pretty girls.

And literature also talks about how young women are struck into equal stupefaction by their male peers, or male celebrities. We all grow up knowing what it looks like to be a young woman mooning over a boy, or a young man mooning over a girl.

I didn’t see any girls mooning over other girls. And even if I did, they were very masculine-presenting girls, so it didn’t even feel like representation to me—it felt like the same as Archie crushing on Veronica, only it was an Archielike girl, instead of someone like me.

What would that even look like?

It would look like a little teenaged violinist with braces and big hair, calling up a stranger who worked at a salad shop because she was so goshdarned pretty.

Shulamit totally would have done that. That’s the part of me I put into her.

I remember how alone I felt, and I think a big part of that loneliness was the lack of seeing that happening to anyone else in fiction. If you crushed on a girl, if you weren’t a boy you were at least masculine.

Anyway, it feels good to have my little fictionalized representation of what I was like at that age. And, Salad Lady, wherever you are, I’m sorry I was such a dope – if you were queer, I should have asked you out the right way or at least made friends, and if you were straight, well, you once got asked out extremely badly by a bisexual girl and you are welcome to laugh at me.

Those of you who are in that place right now — make friends. And good luck. My heart goes out to you :)

Shira Glassman blogs and posts character art here.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Shel's Moor by Jessica Ennis


Shel's Moor

$2.49

Cedric and his best friend and schoolmate Brigham can't resist the mysteries of the Moor near Cedric's house, especially after hearing tales of a monster. The monster they seek turns out to be a young werewolf living in isolation -- who cannot risk word of his existence getting to the superstitious townsfolk. In order to assure his continued safety, the werewolf takes Brigham as a hostage. While Brigham faces confinement with a monster, he will soon discover the young man underneath the legend.
by Jessica Ennis
Pages:
 25 / Words: 6400
Genre: Action/Adventure, LGBT, Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Age Rating: Young Adult

Monday, June 24, 2013

The Easter Bunny by Charlie Purcell



The Easter Bunny

$1.99

Jeff has always found comfort in the sense of community he gets from his church. He grew up with these people, and they know everything about him… except that he’s gay. When a cute, new boy shows up as a volunteer Easter Bunny, Jeff decides to finally make a move, but the choices he makes on this Easter Sunday could completely change the life he’s always known.
by Charlie Purcell
Pages:
 13 / Words: 3400
Genre: Prizm Pinch, Contemporary
Age Rating: Young Adult

Saturday, June 22, 2013

The Shroud Eaters by Alyx J. Shaw


The Shroud Eaters

$6.99

In this day of modern health and sanitation, few consider vampires more than a charming myth, a sexy little fantasy for when we are home and safe, and the street lamps and house lights keep away the night.  But what happens when the lights fail, and old horrors rise from the grave to show they are no myth?
Deirdre has been a vampire since the 1600s, has seen a lot of history and knows quite a bit about her own species as well. She knows that there are many more types of vampires than the ones seen in movies and on TV. The modern version of the vampire is not an accurate one, and she also knows that being a vampire herself doesn't keep her safe from her own kind. A whisper in a graveyard, a shuffling footstep outside the door, the low, steady droning moan of the mindless undead are all warnings. For centuries she has managed to stay safe, but when she chances to meet a vampire of her own century, she is unaware that a monster is on his trail.
And now that monster is seeking her as well…
by Alyx J Shaw
Pages:
 240 / Words: 71000
ISBN: 978-1-61040-440-2
Genre: Contemporary, Paranormal/Horror
Age Rating: Young Adult
Ebook zipped file contains: html, Adobe and Sony optimized pdf, prc
Available in print at: Amazon.com

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

New Release Day

New this Week from Prizm Books...

My Life as a Myth
By: Huston Piner
225 pages / 66000 words
ISBN: 978-1-61040-477-8
$6.99
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=6&products_id=64
Blurb:
1969 freshman Nick Horton has problems. He suffers from bouts of depression, he’s a high school social outcast, and he doesn’t understand why he’s not attracted to girls. So when a series of misunderstandings label him a troublemaker, he’s delighted to have Jesse Gaston and Jesse's gang befriend him. Nick wants to explore his attraction to Bobby Warren, but Jesse promises to give him a new image and soon transforms the shy loser into an anti-establishment student hero.
Thanks to his new reputation, Nick finds himself besieged by would-be girlfriends and expectations that he live up to his public image. As Jesse’s PR campaign becomes more and more outrageous, Nick’s road quickly becomes littered with ridiculous misadventures and unexpected psychedelic explorations. Meanwhile he struggles to understand his emerging romance with Bobby while dealing with the Vietnam War’s continuing impact on his family and the dangerous goings-on at school.
Nick’s freshman year is a remarkable journey of struggle with his unwanted reputation and his deepening passion for Bobby. Is a world still reeling from the sexual revolution, Acid Rock, and the illicit pleasures of underage drinking and pot smoking ready to accept two boys in love? Will Nick and Bobby’s love survive or will the world’s prejudices drive them apart?

Refrigeration Blues
By: Richard Natale
19 pages / 5500 words
$2.49
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=6&products_id=65
Blurb:
When you have the perfect lover and he’s suddenly taken from you, what’s the point of going on?  I mean, really. Might as well go out in a blaze of glory, or in this case, a chill of glory.  Of course, something could go wrong, and in Matthew Robins’ case, it almost always does.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

A conversation between two new Prizm authors

How did you chose the setting for your novel?

Shira Glassman: I grew up in South Florida; my "normal" is the Broward/Palm Beach/Miami-Dade tricountry area where native foliage is liberally mixed with the most outlandish assortment of trees from Australia, Africa, and Southeast Asia that were brought in either as landscape trees, arboretum specimens, or as part of the tropical agricultural community down in Homestead. My family is Jewish on both sides, and I was raised by a single mom. So feminism/the strength of women, Judaism, and the tropical environment are my "normal". So is the queer ethos. None of those things are reflected in any of the great fairy tales with which I was raised--it was all Northern Europe, in many cases men-centered, only Jewish centered in very special cases, and the queerest they ever got was straight women who had to dress as men to get taken seriously--see below. So I decided to create my own.

 

Cathy Hird: My “normal” growing up was way too bland for a good setting, and I now live in farm country so when I started to write fiction I chose a place that had a rich mythology—ancient Greece.

 

Shira: So would you say that your background hasn't influenced your writing, then? Or did it creep in anyway, in other ways besides setting?

 

Cathy: You are so right—we  never escape our past, although  I did try. I found suburbia empty and shallow, so as soon as I could I headed for the inner city, and then when I needed earth and green, growing things, I moved to a farm. I’ve stopped moving now: I’ve been here for 25 years.

 

On the other hand, the idea of leaving is rooted in my childhood: my family spent 3 years in Argentina  and travelled throughout South America seeing a wondrously rich culture and landscape.

 

The other thing childhood gave me was a large extended family and a strong sense of community. So each time the characters in my story end up too alone, friends and helpers crop up. The novel ends up with quite a network of relationships!

 

It was first of all the complex mythology of classical Greece that attracted me. Also, I made a trip to Greece as a teenager with a high school history class. The blue water and the white marble, the history that peeks out from every corner held my imagination. So it was great to go back and do research once I started writing stories set there.

 

Shira: That must have been an amazing and inspiring trip (or trips?) Were there any aspects of your story plan that you wound up changing once you'd actually seen it?

 

Cathy: The Parthenon in Athens is the image pasted on postcards and ads, but there is so much more in Greece. The small towns cradled by mountain slopes, the worn rocks and hollowed-out plane trees fairly shout about the stories they have seen. And this last trip, I was still trying to figure out why the princess had been kidnapped. I heard about a place called the Gates of Hades, and we went there. The place is enchanted: a river comes out of a mountain into a narrow canyon, with weirdly twisted oak trees growing along it. On a hill between the river and the ocean, there is an underground shrine where people still today place coins to seek the blessing of Mary or an ancient goddess.  This shrine and the valley around it became the central place of conflict and restoration in my novel.

 

Shira: Will you ever write about where you live? that!

 

Cathy: Actually, I am working on a modern day story set in the farm country where I live, with an enslaved elf and an alchemist and his daughter. Enchantment is never very far away from us.

    

How did you chose your main character?

Shira: My secondary protagonist follows in the footsteps of Mulan, Eowyn, and even Yentl, a straight woman dressing in men's clothing so she'll be accepted in a "man's job." In many of the stories in which these women appear, their career-based crossdressing is the queerest aspect of the story. As a real live queer woman, I always wondered what it would be like to see one of these women come face to face and interact with a genuine lesbian. That's one thing that inspired me to create the primary protagonist, my little Queen. She also shares my grief; like me, she lost her father much younger than she ever expected.

 

Cathy: Did you find it helpful to write about her grief?

Shira: Very much so. And new issues came up during the revising, because his things were being sold off, so I was able to work through those feelings, too.

When my father died, I was suddenly unable to write for a full year. I felt cut off from all the genre characters I loved, because even though they had all experienced loss in some way, it wasn't the same. It wasn't cancer. It would have been very hard for me to deform my feelings so that they could fit into an Eowyn shell, for example, mourning the uncle who had basically been her father--too many things were different; she'd lived with loss all her life whereas for the most part I had not; they had a few seconds to say goodbye and we had, well, if you know how cancer works, there's that "last week". I felt alone in there, all by myself with my cancer-grief, with all my favorite characters on the other side of a wall.




"So, write about your pain!" said everyone.




But I didn't want to rehash it all, reliving it with each rewrite and revision. The solution, then, came when I realized that if I created a character who was mourning already, I could describe her grief and how she works through it without having the actual death be part of the action of the story. We only see what happened to the king in her mind, and in her dialogue to her new friend. It's never out-and-out narrated, and that was important to me. We first meet her two months into her reign. What happened to her father wasn't cancer and definitely reeks of fairy-tale outlandishness, but the parallels I so sorely needed are there.

 

I also really wanted to write about a benevolent dragon, because that was important to me, too.

 

Cathy: What interests you about dragons?

Shira: If Harry Potter were real, my patronus would be a dragon. Because I truly believe JKR created a genius metaphor for despair and clawing yourself out of it in the dementor-patronus mythos, and the image that comforts me when I'm at my lowest, or that springs into mind to describe my mood when I'm at my most joyful, is that of the dragon. Ever since I was tiny, without any prompting I decided that the "dragons are bad, always" meme made no sense to me. It's almost as much a part of me that I didn't choose as being bisexual is; it just came naturally. I guess I'm inspired by their power, and I love the idea of the benevolent ones having power that they choose to use for good. I also really dig lizards; I think they're adorable. So that's related.

 

Cathy: Dealing with darkness is so much a part of life’s struggles! At two points in my novel, different characters are trapped in the dark. How they deal with their fear, how they hold on until there is light is important to their development. In our lives, showing others the light that shines in the darkest night is an important gift.

 

To get back to the question of how I chose the characters in the story, most of them just appeared on stage for me. The main character, a kidnapped princess, came with the “Helen of Troy” story-line. Then I needed a rescuer, and I had a prince I kind of liked, a side character in my first novel (the novel that is buried in a drawer till I have time to completely rework it). When a character needed a companion or when the darkness got too heavy, someone came along to help.  I am a rather “organic” writer: I have a vague sense of direction which comes to life as the pen scratches the paper or my fingers work the keyboard.

 

Shira asks: what motivated you to write queer YA in the first place?

Cathy: My short stories have adult women dealing with relationship issues, but my novel characters have all been 16-18. I like exploring that “coming of age” challenge, what happens when we are able to deal with the challenges of our situation, our personality. This novel is an adventure rather than a romance, but relationships develop along the way, mostly heterosexual though queer relationships are taken as given.

 

Cathy: What motivated you to write  fiction?

Shira: I don't think I ever had a choice--stories grow in my head until they become too big for me and must come out. I get pictures in my head, like a female warrior riding a galloping horse toward a woman waiting to be rescued, which was how The Second Mango started. Often, I daydream while listening to music in the car, and that's where the most vivid ideas come from. In many cases, my motivation comes from a burning need to see stories with certain elements that appeal to me or soothe me, but were too difficult to find in the genres I like. One of these is a desire to see the queer experience represented in old-fashioned and elegant genres where we were previously invisible. Another one is that when I do fancy men, they tend to not be young, buff Ken dolls, but it's hard to find stories where the older, larger men are romantic heroes, especially in my preferred genres. Feminism has also been a big force in my writing, and sometimes I write to make a point. But mostly I write because ever since I was five years old I get "into" stories, but there was always something about the fictional universe I felt like I had to change--wouldn't be great if those two were married or if someone hadn't died or if there were more female characters or if two bitter enemies eventually made friends? With my own universe I finally have the power to tweak all the details right out of the gate to do all the things I like.

Cathy: You seem to have more influence on your characters than I do. Mine keep doing what they think they should do, sometimes landing in more trouble, sometimes finding solutions I had not imagined ahead of time.

Shira: My characters do what will make the story satisfy me, if that makes sense. Writing is my only chance to get to have "stories" that do everything I like best.

 

Cathy:  I share your need to tell stories. Mostly in the past, I’ve been in oral story teller. It is exciting now to publish something which will have people “hearing” the story even though I cannot see them!

You do seem to love story telling, Shira!

Shira: In a sense it's almost like cooking for my spouse or my friends with all their numerous food allergies and intolerances (which are a big part of the book, incidentally)--I've made myself a delicious meal with all the foods we like best, but with no gluten or dairy or poultry or apples or shellfish or whatever other thing. And now I'm stuffing my face and couldn't be happier with it!

 

Look for Shira Glassman’s novel The Second Mango in August, and Cathy Hird’s Moon of the Goddess later this year. Meanwhile you can follow Shira at http://shiraglassman.wordpress.com and Cathy at http://openonemore.com.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

New Release Day

New This Week from Prizm Books...

Monster Town
By: Dakota Chase
67 pages / 18500 words
ISBN: 978-1-61040-448-8
$3.99
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2_27&products_id=55&zenid=9327026364f5c10cef792518e4c2d814
Blurb:
James Dire has a problem. He doesn't breathe fire, suck blood, or sprout fur and a tail during full moons. He doesn't eat babies, or trample cities, or carry screaming women off to his underwater lair. In short, he's about as dangerous and exotic as a boxful of sand.
While this may not be an issue elsewhere, it is in Eden, James' hometown. Here, everyone, from his parents and siblings, to his classmates, to the mayor, are fire-breathing, bloodsucking, fur-sprouting monsters, and James doesn't fit in anywhere.
James always feels excluded and knows he's always suspect because of his difference. He's very shy, has few friends, and his only sense of purpose comes from his job as reporter for the school paper.
When a girl is kidnapped, James's secret crush, gorgeous werewolf, Theo, pulls him into a hunt for clues to find her before it's too late. What they discover is a plot that's much more involved than a simple kidnapping, and may get them both killed.
In Monster Town, there's nothing more dangerous than being ordinary.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

A Hero's Tale by Stephen A. Spellman


Mr. Ireman is on his way from New York City to visit his in-laws across the country when he discovers that his plane has been hijacked by knife- and bomb-wielding terrorists. Now, John is no hero. He’s nothing more than a simple man with a simple life. But once his very existence is plunged into imminent danger, he finds that there can be a hero in the most unlikely of packages. As the life or death drama plays on, he, as well as his fellow passengers find that in each of them there lies a well of untapped and insurmountable strength. The terrorists began with the upper hand, but by the end of the flight, it is the passengers who are in control of their destiny.
by Stephen A. Spellman
Pages:
 19 / Words: 5800
Genre: Prizm Pinch, Contemporary, Action
Age Rating: Edgy Young Adult
Ebook zipped file contains: html, Adobe and Sony optimized pdf, prc, epub

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

New Release Day

New From Prizm Books...

Undying Love
By: Charlie Purcell
11 pages / 3700 words
$1.99
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=6&products_id=52
Blurb:
JT breaks up with his boyfriend David on the day that David dies. Unfortunately for both of them, David was too busy getting hit by a car to realize that they split up. When he comes back from the dead to be with his boyfriend, JT doesn’t know how to tell him that they should probably see other people.

Coming Next Week from Prizm Books...
Echo by Amanda Clay



Saturday, February 9, 2013

Vampirism and You! from Missouri Dalton


Louis’ whole life was planned right to a bite on the neck at his seventeenth birthday. The British native has a whole lot of changes coming his way. There’s the cravings, the urges, the relocation to rural USA…it’s a lot for a teenager to handle. Throw in the possibility that he might not be as straight as he always thought and it’s a tangled mess as Louis tries to navigate his new life as a vampire.
Things aren’t going to be easy though, and his foster-vampire Duncan is determined to make Louis a fine upstanding example of vampirism—or else. Louis has his handbook though to explain well, some things. But not everything.
When a new vampire shows up in town, Louis thinks he’s finally found someone to confide in, except Eli has his own agenda and Louis is about to find out that being a vampire means more than drinking blood and causing mayhem—there are also dirty politics, dark secrets, and a whole lot of reading assignments.
by Missouri Dalton
Pages:
 199 / Words: 46000
ISBN: 978-1-61040-429-7
Genre: GLBT, Sci-fi/Fantasy, Paranormal/Horror
Age Rating: Edgy Young Adult
Ebook zipped file contains: html, Adobe and Sony optimized pdf, prc
Available in print at: Amazon.com

Monday, January 28, 2013

Tartaros by Voss Foster


A demon hunter, Daniel Tartaros is sworn to slay the denizens of Hell and, for over a decade, he has. He’s kept the world, and his girlfriend, safe. But, one night, the demons cross the threshold to his home. His girlfriend is taken, possessed by a powerful demon. Too powerful for him.
But the horror increases when he finds out the truth: it’s not just a demon. Lilith, the Queen of Hell, has bound herself into a human body to be with him. But broken free and without the restraint of a human life, she still needs him, and plans to use all of her power to keep him. She’ll do what it takes to keep him, even if it means the end of life. With Earth hanging by spider’s silk, the tiniest ripple from either Daniel or Lilith could send it swinging into the fires of destruction.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Dromos by G. Arden O'feden


Thousands of people go missing each year, and Everett Lacrowe discovers where they go when he falls into a world where the only purpose seems to be collecting others like himself. While most people in Dromos accept their surroundings and use a pointless routine to distract themselves, Everett will attempt to find out a way out.
by G. Arden O'feden
Pages: 11 / Words: 3500
Genre: Prizm Pinch, Sci-fi/Fantasy, Paranormal/Horror
Age Rating: Young Adult

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

New Release Day


New this week from Prizm Books...

Tartaros
By: Voss Foster
211 pages / 58400 words
ISBN: 978-1-61040-413-6
$6.99
Buy Link: http://www.prizmbooks.com/zencart/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=6&products_id=48
Blurb:
A demon hunter, Daniel Tartaros is sworn to slay the denizens of Hell and, for over a decade, he has. He’s kept the world, and his girlfriend, safe. But, one night, the demons cross the threshold to his home. His girlfriend is taken, possessed by a powerful demon. Too powerful for him.
But the horror increases when he finds out the truth: it’s not just a demon. Lilith, the Queen of Hell, has bound herself into a human body to be with him. But broken free and without the restraint of a human life, she still needs him, and plans to use all of her power to keep him. She’ll do what it takes to keep him, even if it means the end of life. With Earth hanging by spider’s silk, the tiniest ripple from either Daniel or Lilith could send it swinging into the fires of destruction.



Wednesday, October 31, 2012

New Release: Dromos by G. Arden O'feden


Thousands of people go missing each year, and Everett Lacrowe discovers where they go when he falls into a world where the only purpose seems to be collecting others like himself. While most people in Dromos accept their surroundings and use a pointless routine to distract themselves, Everett will attempt to find out a way out.
by G. Arden O'feden
Pages: 11 / Words: 3500
Genre: Prizm Pinch, Sci-fi/Fantasy, Paranormal/Horror
Age Rating: Young Adult
Excerpt:
The last shop had a back entrance to the alley where the dumpster sat. With the last of the trash in my hands, I stepped through the door into a wall of rain, slipped on the pavement under my feet, and fell into an ocean. Before I had the chance to ponder why I was about to drown in a puddle, a current sent me into downward darkness. The force of the pull launched me into the light and onto a metal floor.
Where I awoke exists somewhere between the physical and the real, in the depths of a city nowhere near Earth --a factory is the easiest way I can describe it. The ceiling arched upward like a ribcage of iron girders, to a grey dome pulsating with waves of luminous water sealed off by a glass casing at the top. If this place had an exterior, I never saw it. For all I knew, I was looking at the exterior.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

New Release: Prizm Pinch


Dromos
By: G. Arden O'Feden
11 pages / 3500 words
$1.99

Blurb:
Thousands of people go missing each year, and Everett Lacrowe discovers where they go when he falls into a world where the only purpose seems to be collecting others like himself. While most people in Dromos accept their surroundings and use a pointless routine to distract themselves, Everett will attempt to find out a way out.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Introduction: Voss Foster


If you want to get to know someone, look at their bookshelf.

I've been saying that almost as long as I've been ogling bookshelves (Do you think I’m kidding? Invite me over for coffee some time. I’m looking at your bookshelf. Even if I have to wait for you to disappear to the bathroom.). So, since I’m new here, this is a sampling of what’s on my bookshelf:

The Cyberiad by Stanislaw Lem
The Harry Potter Series by J. K. Rowling
The Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer
Misadventures in a Thumbnail Universe by Vincent W. Sakowski
The Changeling Race Trilogy by Frances Pauli
The Thrawn Trilogy by Timothy Zahn
The Millennium Trilogy (I’m seeing a trend here) by Stieg Larsson

So that’s me in a nutshell. Oh. That’s not enough? Are you sure? Drat. All right, I’ll try it the traditional way. Under protest.

I’m Voss Foster, speculative fiction author, editor, grammarian, and amateur belly dancer. A lot of times, people try and get me to tell them why I write speculative fiction. Well, I've never had an answer. My brain is just hardwired to turn every little thing into nicotine-addicted fairies, giant space tarantulas, and demons.

In my upcoming release, Tartaros, through Prizm Books, those demons run a little wild. Well, more than a little. Apocalyptically wild. I thought it sounded like a pretty good romp, so I ran with them. And, early next year (I don’t want to say when exactly. I might jinx it.), I hope you’ll run with them. Just make sure you bring your holy water, in case they get a little bit too wild for your liking. It tends to scare most of them off.

As we get closer to the release date, there’s going to be more about it, mostly over at my blog, Demon Hunting and Tenth Dimensional Physics. Heck, I don’t even know what could be in store. Those demons can get a little bit restless, sometimes.

For now, if you’re dying for a taste of my writing (Don’t lie. I know you are.), I have a page of published works over at my blog. If I were you, I’d check it out. I heard it on the street that I’m pretty awesome. Can’t remember who said it. It might have been me.

For now, toodles and blessed be,
Voss