Showing posts with label #CanLit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #CanLit. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

It Came From The Trees And other violent Aberrations, by Canadian author, Joel McKay


It Came From The Trees

And other violent Aberrations 

The newest segment of modern horror by Canadian author, Joel McKay 

The book is published by Birchwood Press and is available worldwide in print and e-book format


 

Tree planters on the run from parasitic insects. A physicist who has become the target of a murderous airline. Teenagers trapped in a museum with an eldritch horror. An escaped pit fighter thrust into a desperate stand at a sagging mountain fortress. And a luckless cowboy sailing across a sea of grass to the bloody resurrection of an elder god. Welcome to Joel McKay's It Came from the Trees and Other Violent Aberrations, a collection of five page-turners as strange, disparate and bloody as their titles suggest.

So, grab a stiff drink, turn the lights down low, settle into your favorite reading nook and enjoy this brief but memorable collection of tales from one of the newest voices in Canadian pulp fiction.  

It Came From the Trees: and Other Violent Aberrations eBook : McKay, Joel: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store 

More from Joel McKay:


All Charlotte Deerborn wanted was a nice Thanksgiving dinner with family and friends. Too bad for her no one else wanted to be there. By the time the turkey is carved, old grievances, bad behavior and crass remarks have transformed her dinner party into a disaster. And then a werewolf shows up to do some carving of its own.

Wolf at the Door is a fast-paced, absurdist take on modern creature horror, levering humor and action to highlight how one family comes to grips with what really matters in life.
 

Wolf at the Door - Kindle edition by McKay, Joel. Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.


About Joel McKay:


Joel McKay is an economic development professional, author and former public relations executive and journalist. He is based in Prince George, B.C. where he is the CEO of Northern Development, and sits on the boards of the University of Northern B.C. and Destination B.C.

Joel is passionate about British Columbia, especially its vast and relatively misunderstood north. His writing focuses on the people, places and issues relevant to northern and rural communities, typically with a healthy dose of the absurd or supernatural. His short story 'Number Hunnerd', a fish tale set in B.C.'s Cariboo, was published in Tyche Books anthology Water: Selkies, Sirens and Sea Monsters in 2021. His novella, Wolf at the Door, was published in the spring of 2022 and focuses on a disastrous family Thanksgiving dinner. His forthcoming fiction, a short western horror story titled 'Hands', will be published by Brigids Gate Press in the summer of 2022.

Joel was previously Director, Communications at Northern Development. During that time he led the creation and publication of the 'Small Town PR Playbook', a first-of-its-kind how-to book for rural public relations in Canada that won the Don Rennie Award from the Canadian Public Relations Society for excellence in government communications. Prior to that, he was Assignment Editor at Business in Vancouver Newspaper where his journalism earned him a Jack Webster Award for Business, Industry and Economics in 2011, and a nomination for a second Jack Webster Award for Multimedia Reporting in 2012.

He has received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Kwantlen Polytechnic University for his professional achievements, and in 2021 was awarded the Chairman's Award from the B.C. Economic Development Association for his contributions to rural development. He has been named a Top 40 Under 40 by the Prince George Chamber of Commerce, and in 2021 and 2022 was named one of the 500 most influential business leaders in British Columbia by Business in Vancouver Media Group.

To request additional review copies or an interview with Joel McKay, please contact Mickey Mikkelson at Creative Edge Publicity: mickey.creativeedge@gmail.com / 403.464.6925.   

We look forward to the coverage!


Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Critically acclaimed Author Scott Overton Draws a Picture of a Troubling Future in Indigent Earth

 


Critically acclaimed Author Draws a Picture of a Troubling Future 

Will the rich and powerful abandon the Earth? 

Sudbury author Scott Overton has conjured up a compelling adventure story that explores today’s social divides taken to the extreme. 

The inequality between Earth’s rich and poor has grown even larger since the Covid-19 pandemic. Studies proclaim that the world’s eight richest men own as much wealth as the poorest half of the Earth’s population, and the planet’s two thousand billionaires account for more than 60% of the world’s total wealth. Where will it end? 

Along with that, we’ve all witnessed 2023 as a year of disastrous heat waves, droughts, wildfires, and devastating floods. Climate change is here with a vengeance. What if it’s too late to turn things around?

 


In Overton’s new science fiction novel Indigent Earth, the wealthy “one-percenters” have abandoned our ravaged planet 500 years earlier to go live in space colonies, leaving the survivors on Earth to live in stagnating communities known as Allocations. Now the colonists plan to come back. Earthman Killian Morningcloud dreams of the colonists’ return, hoping to become one of them. Colonist aristocrat and celebrity Natira Celestia is eager to visit Earth and meet the “noble savages” she’s sure must live there. Killian and Natira’s calamitous meeting will shatter their dreams and hurl them into a struggle for survival as they pursue the darkest secrets of the rich and powerful. 

“It’s an entertaining and gripping adventure story,” says Overton, “but with strong themes of colonialism, and economic inequality. The truth is, being on the wrong side of the ‘privilege gap’ could happen to any of us in the years to come.” 

Are things really so bad that those with the means might actually abandon the Earth? Overton points out that we’ve been polluting our home planet for most of human history, but especially in the past century, when we’ve devastated plant and animal species, acidified vast oceans, and turned the very climate against us. 

“I don’t want to believe there’s no hope of fixing these problems,” Overton insists. “But too many of the world’s most powerful people are still blocking the changes needed because their personal fortunes are threatened. And since billionaires are now dominating space industries, I don’t think my fictional scenario is implausible.” 

Still, he stresses that Indigent Earth is an adventure, not a lecture. “Killian and Natira are about as different as two people can be—both strong-willed with deep convictions, yet forced to work together. So, it was fun to write such a charged relationship.” 

A well-known radio morning host for more than 25 years in Sudbury, Overton has built a second career as an author. His radio-themed debut novel Dead Air was shortlisted for a Northern Lit Award in 2012, and his science fiction/thriller novels The Primus Labyrinth, Naïda, and The Dispossession of Dylan Knox have been well-received too, with readers most often comparing them to the work of Michael Crichton. The writer considered the ‘dean of Canadian science fiction’, Robert J. Sawyer, said of Overton’s thriller Augment Nation: “Scott Overton is a terrific writer and his vision of tomorrow is both realistic and frightening. Read this book!” 

Indigent Earth and all of Overton’s books are also available online in eBook and print (find them at your favorite outlet using these universal book links: https://books2read.com/IndigentEarth or https://books2read.com/ScottOverton ). If they aren’t in stock at your favorite local store, they can be ordered. Or ask for them at your local library. 

MORE INFORMATION  

www.scottoverton.ca

Facebook              https://www.facebook.com/ScottOverton.author  
Twitter                
@SFtruenorth
Goodreads           
www.goodreads.com/ScottOverton 

To request additional review copies or an interview with Scott Overton, please contact Mickey Mikkelson at Creative Edge Publicity: mickey.creativeedge@gmail.com / 403.464.6925.  

We look forward to the coverage!

Monday, December 4, 2023

Fellow Canadian, Rod Raglin, on Life, School, and Writing

 


Welcome to another first timer to the blog! Canadian author & photographer, Rod Raglin!

 


Rod Raglin is a Canadian journalist, photographer and self-published author of 13 novels, two plays and a collection of short stories. His short fiction has been published in several online publications and aired nationally on CBC radio. He’s been a prize winner in Vancouver West End Writers’ Poetry Competition.  He lives in Vancouver, BC, where he is the publisher and editor of an online community newspaper.

 

He loves cats, is lukewarm on people and prefers to spend his time alone in his head creating stories very few people read, or in the woods (alone again) shooting photos very few people see.

 

Buy links for all my books: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003DS6LEU

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Rod-Raglin/100013287676486/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/rodraglin

Blog: https://rodraglin.wordpress.com

Photography (in case you want to take a peek) https://rodraglin.smugmug.com

 

Tell us about your life outside of writing.

I’ve been a journalist for over 50 years and have published community newspapers since 1977. I’ve downsized considerably in the past few years until today I publish only one, a quarterly, online community newspaper focused on southeast Vancouver, called The REVUE.

I’ve been interested in community development as an activist in the 1960’s, a politico in the 1980’s (including a candidate in civic and provincial politics – never elected, which is probably a good thing) and with my community newspaper(s) from their inception. Throughout this time, I’ve been on the Board of Directors of the South Vancouver Neighbourhood House holding all the executive positions at one time or another. I’d like to think I’ve made a little bit of a difference in my community, but I’d be kidding myself.

An ardent environmentalist, I was an avid hiker and alpine climber and still actively advocate for environmental causes.

I’m also a photographer, a logical spin-off of being a journalist and as well as news photography I shoot landscapes, sunsets and all the other clichéd stuff.

 

Do you have a work in progress?

I do. The Murder of a BIPOC Queen is, like all my stories, a by-product of my research to understand contemporary issues. This one came from my frustration with seeing BIPOCs and other marginalized communities being given preferential treatment on submission pages of publications I was submitting my work. I wondered if, in reality, their work was being dismissed because of the colour of their skin or their gender. And, were they really underrepresented compared to their percentage of the population (in Canada)? It has been and continues to be an interesting and complicated journey and at one point I realized my findings (and feelings) would be better expressed through fiction than in an essay.

 

What was the most difficult section/piece you ever wrote? What made it difficult?

I love to write and find it effortless (though that doesn’t mean I write well). There was, however, one exception when I was in grade three. My teacher, Mrs. Denholm, really hated me. Can you imagine a grown woman, a professional, taking a distinct personal dislike to one of her eight-year-old students? Once I got to be an adult it was easy to imagine, and today, though I’ve mellowed considerably, I can still be really offensive.

Anyhow… Mrs. Denholm, smug and self-assured that she would be lavished with praise, had the entire class write an “honest” essay about what they thought about her. I mean, who didn’t love their grade three teacher, right? (Come to think of it, this woman must have had some serious issues).


Well, she didn’t count on one student who felt the same about her as much as she did him. The difficult part was telling the truth. I could have lied and laid our feud to rest. But she emphasized honest and so I let her have it.


She went berserk! Not only did she completely lose it in the classroom the next day after she read my hundred-and-fifty-word character assassination, but she also called in my parents! Mom was mortified, she always was intimidated by authority – even an unhinged grade three teacher. Dad was just the opposite, had no respect for authority, the bastards who kept the workers under their heel (he was a card-carrying Wobblie (Industrial Workers of the World) back in the 1930s), but he never showed for the meeting – which was about the only thing you could count on him doing, not showing up. As well as a severe scolding and my mother gnashing her teeth and wringing her hands for days wondering what she had done to have such a perverse son, I was also ordered to attend weekly sessions with the School Board-appointed child psychologist. In a way making the hard choice paid off – one hour less a week of Mrs. Denholm.


What sort of research do you do for your work?

I do exhaustive research – and I love it. It’s one of the reasons I write. I do this by taking an issue I’m interested in and developing a character who has a different perspective than mine. I mean, I know what I think and feel about, say, the white supremacy, but what kind of person embraces that ideology and how did they come to it? Now develop that character and make him believable. It’s mind-boggling, but what I think we have to do if we want to understand what’s going on and, more importantly, why.


I’m also obsessive about getting the facts right. In the Mattie Saunders Series, I became an expert in the evils of the exotic pet trade, the species involved, the threat to their existence, and those committed few who rescue, rehabilitate and, in some cases, rewild them.


Which books and authors do you read for pleasure? Is there an author who inspires you?

I was a big fan of Anna Quindlen probably because she too is a journalist, and her fiction addresses contemporary issues. Lately, she seems to have lost her edge. Success tends to do that (not a problem I have) – all those paid speaking engagements, people hanging on your every word, critics too intimidated to give you a bad review. That, and of, course, getting older – complacent, reluctant to take risks, and not having the energy to carry them out if you took them.


I have this thing. I go to the library and pick out three books of commercial/literary fiction by authors I’ve never heard of without reading the blurb or back cover. I rarely finish one. Some I quit after the first few paragraphs. What I enjoy reading most, is the work of other unpublished authors and making suggestions on how to improve their story. It’s far easier to see the shortcomings in someone else’s work than your own. And I have no expectations.


Was there a person who encouraged you to write?

No. Well, sort of, but not in a good way. My father fancied himself as an intellectual, and he liked to get drunk and read his awful poetry and bemoan the unfairness of life – he could have been this, or that, blah, blah, blah, and when he dies will I make sure his masterpieces find a publisher (kind of sounds like some of the members on Canada Writes, come to think of it).  Of course, pity parties need company, so I was encouraged to write, read, drink and commiserate with him. It was fun – when you’re sixteen. Then I grew up (he didn’t). Took me years to overcome his bad influence. I still have his sarcastic mouth and shitty attitude.

 


FOREST: Love, Loss, Legend


Matthew and Raminder are young, idealistic and in love. As soon as they can they plan to leave behind the small town and small minds of Pitt Landing. They will embrace life and experience the world, maybe even change it. Man plans, God laughs. Raminder’s father has a stroke and her commitment to her family means she must postpone her plans and stay in Pitt Lake. It’s just the opposite for Matt. A family tragedy leaves irreconcilable differences between him and his father and forces him to leave. They promise to reunite, but life happens.


Twelve years later, Matt is an acclaimed war correspondent. He’s seen it all and it’s left him with post-traumatic stress, a gastric ulcer, and an enlarged liver. He’s never been back to Pitt Landing though the memory of Raminder and their love has more than once kept him sane. He’s at his desk in the newsroom, recuperating from his last assignment and current hangover and reading a letter from his father, the first contact they’ve had in over a decade. It talks about a legendary lost gold mine, a map leading to it, and proof in a safety deposit box back in Pitt Lake. He’s sent it to Matt in case something happens to him and cautions his son to keep it a secret. Matt is about to dismiss the letter when the telephone rings. It’s Raminder telling him his father has disappeared somewhere in the wilderness that surrounds Pitt Lake. Lost gold, lost love and lost hope compels Matt to return home to a dying town on the edge of the wilderness. The forest is waiting.

https://www.amazon.com/FOREST-Love-Legend-Rod-Raglin-ebook/dp/B00SO4L080/



Quick-tempered, intolerant, and defensive, Mattie Saunders loves birds, but has little time for people. A childhood spent in one foster home after another has made her wary of commitment as evidenced by an absence of close friends and difficulty with intimate relationships. Instead, she's filled her life rescuing and rehabilitating exotic birds people buy as pets and then abandoned.

Mattie’s uncompromising attitude and high integrity frequently put her in conflict with friends, work associates, people in authority – just about anyone who doesn’t have her impossibly high standards. It also puts her at the forefront of environmental and social justice issues. Her passion for birds has her fighting to save endangered species, protect habitat and mitigate the effects of climate change. Her sense of morality demands she speak out against racial discrimination, advocate for gender parity and equal rights for the LGBTQ community.

Romance and action, tragedy and triumph, heartache and happiness – experience all this through Mattie’s eyes in this entertaining and thoughtful five book series that explores contemporary culture and issues.

HERE'S SOME OF THE ISSUES AND CHALLENGES MATTIE FACES IN INDIVIDUAL BOOKS...

Book 1 - The ROCKER and the BIRD GIRL - Fame and finances, rockers and parrots, success and salvation, hope and happiness.

Book 2 - COLD-BLOODED - Drugs and betrayal, lizards and snakes, friendship and family, condemnation and forgiveness.

Book 3 - The BIRD WHISPERER - Love and death, eagles and hummingbirds, #MeToo and gender equality, truth and reconciliation, oil spills and pipelines.

Book 4 - The BIRD WITCH - Relationships and culture clash, dead birds and climate change, migrants and cartels, politics and power.

Book 5 - The FLOCK - Indigenous rights and racial prejudice, alt-right and hate crimes, kids and care giving, LGBTQ and justice, purpose and commitment.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B088NH8S6K?

Sunday, December 3, 2023

Today's feature is Mandy Eve-Barnett, author of The Commodore's Gift and The Rython Kingdom

 


Welcome to a local Alberta Author! 
I'm excited to feature Mandy again and share her newest works!



Mandy Eve-Barnett is a multi-genre author writing children’s, YA and adult books. Every story has a basis of love, nature, magic and mystery. Her passion for writing emerged later in life and she is making up for lost time. With ten books published since 2011 and another eight awaiting the editing process, she indulges her Muse in creative as well as freelance writing.  Mandy regularly blogs at http://www.mandyevebarnett.com, where she encourages, and supports the networking of writers and readers alike.  She is also prolific on social media. Mandy is currently the Secretary of her local writers group, the Writers Foundation of Strathcona County, she hosts the monthly Writers Circle meetings and creates weekly writing prompts for the website. She is past Secretary of the Alberta Authors Cooperative and past President of the Arts & Culture Council of Strathcona County Council. Mandy Eve-Barnett lives her creative life to the fullest.

 

Social media links:

Twitter https://twitter.com/mandyevebarnett 

Facebook  https://www.facebook.com/Mandyevebarnettcom/

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mandyevebarnett/

Freelance  https://tailoredthemedtosuit.wordpress.com/

LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/mandy-eve-barnett-58235250/

Pinterest https://www.pinterest.ca/mandywordsmith/

Website https://mandyevebarnett.com/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/…/6477059.Mandy_Eve_Barnett…

Amazon author page:   https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B01MDUAS0V 

Smashwordshttps://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=Mandy+Eve-Barnett

Publisher:  Dream Write Publishing. www.dreamwritepublishing.ca

 

How many hours a day do you write?

Until recently my writing was restricted by full time work, so evenings, weekends and regular writing focused road trips were my writing opportunities. With a change in my circumstances, i.e. retirement, I thought my writing time would increase. However, I seem to be even busier, go figure, so writing time is mainly when I can fit it in as usual. When a story does take hold though, then I am hyper focused and can spend two hours or more writing without a break.

 

How do you choose which stories you will write?

Once a story idea takes hold, I will usually go with it and let the characters lead me on their journey. At times, a conflict occurs when another idea/character ‘pushes’ in demanding attention. This is the point where I will change direction with whichever character is ‘screaming’ the loudest. Yes, it is a real thing in my head. This happened quite recently when I was three quarters the way through the third book of a crime trilogy manuscript and a main character of a fantasy duology demanded my attention, she won by the way.

 

What is the most difficult part of your artistic process?

Most probably ‘bum on seat’ as they say. There are always distractions and obligations, whether external or internal. Also, as a free flow writer, once the narrative has come to what I feel is a conclusion, there comes the editing and revisions. Not as much fun but vital to ensuring the narrative captivates my readers.

 

Five years from now, where do you see yourself as a writer?

Hopefully, all my back burner manuscripts that clog my files have found respective publishers, and I have connected with more readers, whether in person or online and have increased my literary legacy.

 

How many unpublished and half-finished books do you have?

This is a huge question as new ones ‘pop’ into my head fairly regularly. So, as of today, I have a crime trilogy, a western romance, a contemporary romance, a suspense novel, two short story collections and...the ideas continue to formulate.

 

Was there a person who encouraged you to write?

Actually, not one person but the members of my writers group, the Writers Foundation of Strathcona County. I am honoured to have among these wonderful people mentors, and supporters. Without this group I would not be writing at all. I am proud to have been the secretary since 2009 and do not envisage ever leaving.




The Commodre’s Gift - Steampunk

Under the Buldrick Empire’s rule, Owena finds herself fighting alongside a rebel force. Her aptitude for strategy and swordsmanship come to the fore. When she meets Galen, not only does she fall in love but becomes even more determined to join the fight to restore the rightful King to the throne.

https://www.amazon.ca/Commodores-Gift-Mandy-Eve-Barnett/dp/1988723760

 


The Rython Kingdom

Unaware he is a pawn in a vengeful plan, Guillem’s actions may release an evil witch from her entrapment. The famed troubadour attends the king’s court to recite a marvelous tale but his suspicions are raised by a strange servant. With the help of a wizened old woman, and her beautiful granddaughter, Guillem attempts to outwit the witch to save the kingdom from murder and mayhem. He then finds himself part of a ritual for life everlasting with the entrancing and mysterious Juliana.

https://www.amazon.ca/Rython-Kingdom-Mandy-Eve-Barnett-ebook/dp/B06ZYP7HWB

 

Escape With a Writer Has MOVED!

  You can find all of the latest and greatest releases, interviews, and books at: https://escapewithawriter.wordpress.com/