Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

A Wrong Turn Over on Threads That Bind


Some of you may already know I write a periodic post on the Threads That Bind blog. It’s a forum for lovers of the dark in literature, film, and what have you.


The other day my friend Jack Tyler posted a top-drawer short tale about what ifs. Read it here.


I very much like Jack’s writing. The storytelling is straight forward, the dialogue is realistic, the characters are lifelike, and the description is just right.


In this story, you can see how much we learn about the characters from just the dialogue. The sign of a master craftsman.


“Wrong Turn” is the kind of story that draws you in and gets you thinking about the turns in your own life — both good and bad. A trip down What If Lane.


So treat yourself to a shorty about taking the wrong turn. It’s a bit sad, a touch philosophical, packs a hidden punch, and is very simply a whole lot of very good.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!







CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with three bestselling novels. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes


Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Giving Kindle Vella a Try

 After talking with a friend who is having some well-deserved success on Vella, I’ve decided to give the platform a try.

After all, who doesn’t like success when it comes not only in the form of folks saying they love what you’re doing, but also in the form of checks to the bank account?


What is Kindle Vella?


Vella is a way for writers to share stories with readers — one episode at a time. It’s like TV for fiction.


Or if we go way back, serializing a novel was basically how most long popular fiction was first published up until the 1960s.


Back in the 1800s, newspapers and magazines published poetry, short stories, and novels (in the form of serials, one episode at a time).


During the heyday of the pulp magazines, many magazines serialized novels. Most of which were never published in paperback or hardback.


Vella is today’s recreation of a time-honored method of publishing fiction.


Vella exists as an app for your phone and tablet, and also as a website (which is how I use Vella).


How Does Vella Work?


Vella is a platform for you to read serialized fiction. The first 3 episodes are free to read. 


Think of this as Amazon’s “Look Inside” feature. The free episodes help you decide if you like the story enough to spend money reading the rest of it.


If you like what you see, you can unlock the further episodes by buying tokens and then using the required amount of tokens to unlock the additional episodes. 


Episode length determines how many tokens you need to spend to read that portion of the story.


Why Vella?


More and more people are consuming content, both entertainment and informational, on their phones.


Many people find it difficult to engage with and commit to a full-length novel. The size alone of some of these books is daunting.


After all, we’re busy. And when you’re time deprived, looking at a 500 page novel just might be a commitment you don’t want to take on.


I think this is one reason why audiobooks have taken off. One can listen to an audiobook while doing something else.


In fact, my step-daughter has said this very thing: she doesn’t have time to sit down and read a novel. But she loves stories. So instead of reading, she listens to audiobooks while cooking, or driving to work, or riding her bike.


But audiobooks aren’t for everyone. I don’t particularly care for them myself. Often the narrator is not at all good, and that results in a less than optimal experience.


Vella takes a different approach. An old approach and makes it new. 


Vella allows readers to read short bites of text. Instead of staring at the whole pan of lasagna, you are only looking at one short, exciting scene or chapter. One little mouthful.


This makes Vella perfect for reading on coffee break or on the commute, or even when you’re in the bathroom.


Join Me On Vella


I’m giving Vella a try. When I was a working stiff, reading was sometimes a chore. The book never seemed to end.


But with episodes no longer than 5,000 words, it’s easy to get in your reading fix at least once a day. And maybe more.




Tales Macabre and Arabesque is my first foray into the world of Vella.


The first 3 (free) episodes will go up the 28th, 29th, and 30th of October. That’s this weekend. On Monday (Halloween), the first locked episode will be available for you to unlock. And a new episode will appear each Monday thereafter for 13 weeks.



Tales Macabre and Arabesque is a collection of 15 short stories. Some of the stories are bizarre. Some, uncanny. Others, unsettling. A few are weird. And a number qualify as dark humor.


Fifteen tales, divided into 17 episodes, that will take you to worlds you never knew existed and inside the minds of some you perhaps don’t want to see.


Join me. Here is the link: https://www.amazon.com/kindle-vella/story/B0BK7N75BJ


See you there!


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!



CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.




If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Beyond the Sea — Part 3

 



Last week, I took a look at 4 stories in Beyond the Sea: Stories from the Underground. Today, I’m taking a look at the final 4 tales that make up this marvelous collection of short fiction. So let’s begin!


The Perfect Future — Cindy Davis


Every story has a back story. Every person has a back story. Cindy Davis tells us of an episode in the lives of two brothers. The episode is an important contribution to her Zipacna series, a metaphysical journey of adventure and discovery.


“The Perfect Future” reminds me of the saying by the Stoic philosopher and Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius: Life is what you make it.


Moonlight Swim — Kelly Marshall


Have you ever felt insulted to the point where you wished someone dead? I suppose we’ve all been there at some point in our lives.


But what if you could get your wish? Would you actually make it? Do some people deserve to die?


An interesting question that. And Ms. Marshall provides us with an equally interesting answer.


The Girl in the Turquoise Bikini — Linda Pirtle


Writer’s block. One thing all writers fear. For most of us it’s temporary, if it shows up at all. For a few of us it's permanent.


Each writer has his or her own way of dealing with writer’s block. I write through it. Usually by working on a different story than the one on which I’m blocked.


For Jeb McGrierson, it took a girl showing up on his private beach wearing a turquoise bikini, along with a missing boat.


The lengths some writers will go to to start writing again!


Making Waves — CJ Peterson


Sometimes a family has something of value, usually more sentimental than monetary, that gets passed down through the generations.


Darren and his dad build a boat. Little did either one realize the role that boat would play in their family’s subsequent history. In fact, if it weren’t for the boat perhaps there wouldn’t have been a family history at all.


A touching saga of love, facilitated by a boat.



I’m proud to be a part of the Underground Authors. We value high quality fiction. Because we like reading. It is the best form of entertainment.


Pick up a copy of Beyond the Sea today and give yourself the gift of superb entertainment, and help Team Rubicon help others when disaster hits.


Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Beyond the Sea



This past Friday was the official launch of Beyond the Sea: Stories from the Underground.


The concept was simple: a picture of a boat beached on a spit of sand jutting out into a lake, or a bay, or maybe the sea. Then add the imaginations of a dozen authors. And what do you get? A superbly satisfying collection of short stories.


I’m proud to be one of the 12 Underground Authors contributing to this incredible collection of tales. My story “The Boat”, is my first return trip to the post-apocalyptic world of The Rocheport Saga in 4 years. I took the opportunity to coax out of Bill Arthur a story that took place before The Morning Star, which is Book 1 of the series.




Amazon reviewer J.S. wrote of “The Boat”:

C.W. Hawes wrote a compelling short story that I didn't want to come to an end. His words came alive and I joined in with the characters in a hair-raising survival journey in a post-apocalyptic world. Great world-building and great writing!


I’m pleased and humbled by that comment. And very glad I wasn’t a drag on the group effort! :)


As a reader, I was impressed with the overall quality of the stories. As can’t be helped, some were more appealing to me than others. That’s just how it is in an anthology. Not everything will please everybody. Beauty is always in the eye of the beholder.


Nevertheless, the overall quality is high, and that should please any reader. I’m confident everyone will find a story they’ll fall in love with.


My personal favorites, the ones that especially caught my eye, were “Hemingway’s Boat” by Caleb Pirtle III, “The Encounter” by Ronald E Yates, and “Roses for Grant” by Richard Schwindt.


Pirtle’s story is a superb example of his ability  to capture a time and place, people it with true to life characters, throw in a bit of mystery and romance, and come up with a story that grabs you and doesn’t let go. In the short time that I’ve known him, he’s become one of my favorite authors.


I enjoy a good science fiction yarn, and Ron Yates has uncorked a real goodie in “The Encounter”. And when it’s coupled with a touch of slowburn terror, it’s a keeper. His knowledge of Southeast Asia and history adds a strong sense of place and color to the tale.


Richard Schwindt, as readers of this blog know, is one of my favorite contemporary writers. I think I’d buy his grocery lists. His story, “Roses for Grant”, is a beautiful slice-of-life tale about an older middle-aged couple. Their memories and the mission they are on. In some ways, it reminded me of Hemingway’s “Hills Like White Elephants” in that the dialogue essentially carries the story. No narrator gets in the way of the couple on whom we are listening in.


Having written the above, I want to emphasize that there is something for everyone in Beyond the Sea — and what are my favorites may not be yours. Pick up a copy and see for yourself.


We the authors are donating the proceeds to Team Rubicon. A worthy organization. Check them out on their website.


You can pick up a copy of Beyond the Sea at Amazon. And when you do, you benefit yourself and the disaster relief efforts of Team Rubicon. 


Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Anthologies

 Short story anthologies are a great way for an indie author to get additional titles on his or her author page with a minimum of effort.


I’ve participated in three anthologies, with a fourth in the works, which gives me three additional titles to promote and gives readers more books to check out when they visit my author page.


Anthologies are also a great way for readers to sample your work. And if they like what they read in the anthology, they may very well move on to read the rest of your oeuvre.


I have two short stories and an article published in three outstanding anthologies.





Once Upon A WolfPack: A #WolfPackAuthors Anthology. A collection of 15 stories and 2 poems, all with a wolf somewhere in the tale. And the stories range from science fiction to fantasy to horror to mysteries to fairy tales. Literally something for everybody. And all proceeds go to a very good cause: Lockwood Animal Rescue Center.


If you want to find out about Minneapolis’s ace private detective, Justinia Wright, take a read of my story “Mrs Solberg’s Problem”.


Once Upon A WolfPack is only $2.99 at Amazon.





Overmorrow: Stories of Our Bright Future is a collection of a dozen optimistic science fiction stories. Stories exploring a fundamentally positive vision of the world and human achievement.


I’m honored to have my story, “The Sun is but a Morning Star”, lead off the collection. I don’t write much science fiction, and was pleased to have the editors, Jon Garett and  Richard Walsh, accept my tale of an Earth colony planting mission finding a better world.


Overmorrow: Stories of Our Bright Future is available at Amazon.





The Phantom Games: Dimensions Unknown 2020, edited by John Paul Catton is a collection of 16 science fiction and fantasy stories and 17 accounts of life in a pandemic. I contributed an article, “Be Happy”, for this collection. My musings on COVID-19.


Originally intended to celebrate the Tokyo Olympics, life threw the editor a knuckle ball. But he adapted and made a super anthology even better.


Get The Phantom Games at Amazon.


I encourage you to take a look at these anthologies. You’ll find great stories to entertain you and give you food for thought.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

My Notable Reads of 2016

We are three days into the new year. There are 355 days until Christmas. Just in case anyone was curious. Most of us aren’t quite yet looking in that direction. We’re still making the adjustment from 2016 to 2017, still writing 2016 half the time on whatever we need to date. So I’m going to take one more look back at 2016 before I shove off on my 2017 adventure.

For me, 2016 was a good year. Especially in the reading department. I read some really great books and stories. There are a lot of good writers out there. I mentioned a few in a previous post. Classics, new releases, traditionally published, and self-published. In fact, I was very impressed with most of the self-published books I read.

At the end of this post, I give you my list of 2016 reading material in case you want to check out some of the great reads I came across; links are included where available.

Today, I want to highlight for you what I thought were the best of the lot, the cream on the milk.

Non-Fiction

I read a lot of non-fiction in 2016. Most of it was in the form of online articles as part of my research for my books. I did, however, read two non-fiction books out of general interest in the subject matter.

The more enjoyable of the two was E.M. Maitland’s The Log of HMA R34: Journey to America and Back. This book is a day by day and sometimes hourly by hourly chronicle of the historic 1919 round trip flight of the rigid airship R34. The R34 was the first aircraft to make the difficult east to west flight across the Atlantic from Europe to America and was the first to make a complete round trip. Her flight demonstrated that trans-Atlantic commercial flight was possible.

Commodore Maitland’s style is at once informative, lively, witty, and entertaining. Making it an excellent travelogue.

The book is available for free and every airship enthusiast and armchair traveler should have a copy.

Short Stories

I love short stories. Perhaps more than novels. Even in a good novel, my interest at time lags. Especially when the author hits a dull patch of road, which inevitably happens. Sometimes even with the best of writers. Rarely does that happen, in my experience, with a short story. Even a mediocre one.

All of the short stories I read this past year were good. The ones of exceptional merit (aside from generally recognized classics) were

Wasteland” by R Entwisle
SoulWave” by RR Willica
The Garden and the Market” by Richard B Walsh
The Room that Swallows People” by G Jefferies
Cinder” by Crispian Thurlborn

Of those five excellent tales, I do want to single out “Cinder” by Crispian Thurlborn. It is an exquisitely lyrical story of terror that is replete with haunting atmosphere, incipient dread, and unrelenting suspense. It is by far one of the most well-crafted stories I’ve read in a long time.

But do check out the other 4 on the above list. They are all well-written, imaginative (especially “SoulWave”), and prove that indies can give us a story as good as any publisher or magazine editor can.

Short Story Anthologies

Anthologies are at best uneven. Even if the stories are by a single author. No one is consistently at his or her best. And that goes without saying for the 4 anthologies I read.

On the whole, they were good and are worth getting. The one I enjoyed the most was The Spike Collection by Martin Skate. Mr Skate’s hilarious slice of life vignettes are highly entertaining. A collection not to be missed.

Novels

The two dozen novels I read were a mix of speculative fiction, mysteries, humor, horror, and historical fiction.

There were two clunkers in the lot: Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea by Jules Verne, and The Time Machine by HG Wells.

The Verne novel was my third reading. The first time, when a kid, I love it. The other two reads were as an adult. The old translation was ponderous and boring. The modern translation was better, conveying some of Verne’s humor, but the story remained dull and boring.

The Wells story was my second time through. Dry as two day old toast. Endless description, little action, and the only character I cared about, Weena, the author did not. Thoroughly and hopelessly dated. The movie was better.

On the Beach by Nevil Shute was at times slow and almost dull. And then Shute uncorks the most emotionally moving conclusion I think I’ve ever read. It literally had me sobbing. Powerful is wholly inadequate to describe it.

John Wyndham’s cozy catastrophe, The Day of the Triffids, was at once a testament to the dangers inherent in our monkeying around with Mother Nature and to our penchant for creating weapons of self-destruction — as well as to our unrelenting will to survive and better our lot. A classic and deservedly so.

There were, however, a few books that were on the top of the pile. Books that were thoroughly entertaining or thought-provoking. Well crafted tales that prove the Big 5 publishers do not have a corner on giving us good books.

These indie authored gems were

Banana Sandwich by Steve Bargdill
Wasteland by Steve Bargdill
Daddy’s Girl by Ben Willoughby
Death of an Idiot Boss by Janice Croom

Bargdill’s two books are dark and gritty mainstream novels that give us plenty of food for thought. At the same time there is humor and hope. Well crafted. The Big 5 are missing out here.

Willoughby’s ghost tale is suspenseful and has a happier ending than many such tales. For those who like their terror not so dark, Daddy’s Girl fits the bill perfectly. Willoughby’s style is lean. Not excessive. He gives us just the right amount to produce the desired effects. I’m looking forward to reading more from this guy.

Death of an Idiot Boss by Janice Croom has one of the best titles I’ve come across in a long time. But the goodness doesn’t stop there. We get a hilarious, at times thought-provoking, good old-fashioned whodunit and a memorable protagonist in Kadence MacBride. Croom is a very good writer and I’m looking forward to reading more of Kadence’s adventures.

Don’t miss any of these novels. Really. Don’t miss out.

Hopefully I’ve sown a few seeds for your 2017 reading. Let me know what you’ve read. I’m always looking for a good book.

The Bibliography

Non-Fiction


Short Stories

Curse Upon a Star” by Sylvia Heike
Goodbye, Sunshine” by Sylvia Heike
The Red Lady’s Wedding” by Deina Furth
The Otherlife” by Dot Dannenberg
The Adventure of the Fatal Glance” by August Derleth
Wasteland” by R Entwisle
The TNT Punch” by Robert E Howard
The Highway” by Ray Bradbury
Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway
The Garden and the Market” by Richard B Walsh
“Test Piece” by Eric Frank Russell
Bone White” by Sarah Zama
SoulWave” by RR Willica
Confession” by Micah Castle
The Room That Swallows People” by G Jefferies
Ghost Carp” by G Jefferies
Cinder” by Crispian Thurlborn

Short Story Anthologies

The Spike Collection by Martin Skate
Den of Antiquity by Jack Taylor, et al

Novels

Catherine, Called Birdy by Karen Cushman
Banana Sandwich by Steve Bargdill
Wasteland by Steve Bargdill
After London, or Wild England by Richard Jefferies
Daddy’s Girl by Ben Willoughby
The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
The Time Machine by HG Wells
On the Beach by Nevil Shute
Deluge by S. Fowler Wright
Death of an Idiot Boss by Janice Croom
Beyond the Rails by Jack Tyler
Perilous Ping by William J Jackson
Killing Floor by Lee Child
Die Trying by Lee Child
China Trade by SJ Rozan
Start Right Here by Martin Skate
Concourse by SJ Rozan
Reel Estate Rip-Off by Renee Pawlish
Mandarin Plaid by SJ Rozan
Dawn by S. Fowler Wright
Dust and Kisses by Dean Wesley Smith



I made my mincemeat pie using Crosse and Blackwell mincemeat. I have to say None Such brand is better. The saving grace was the brandy butter. :) Brandy butter is easy to make: cream together butter, sugar, and brandy. Voila!



Until next time, happy reading!!