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@burningtale
disturbing as fuck
H E YÂ Â B R O T H E R
Dolen Perkins-Valdez is a faculty member at Stonecoast, in Maine.
The link in the title will bring you right to Amazon.com, where you can purchase her novel, Wench, or check out a preview of it before you buy.
Dolen Perkins-Valdez also has a WEBSITE where you can read her bio, view information about the novel, and find her book on other sites.
OVERVIEW
wench \'wench\ n. from Middle English “wenchel,” 1 a: a girl, maid, young woman; a female child.
Situated in Ohio, a free territory before the Civil War, Tawawa House is an idyllic retreat for Southern white men who vacation there every summer with their enslaved black mistresses. It’s their open secret. Lizzie, Reenie, and Sweet are regulars at the resort, building strong friendships over the years. But when Mawu, as fearless as she is assured, comes along and starts talking of running away, things change. To run is to leave everything behind, and for some it also means escaping from the emotional and psychological bonds that bind them to their masters. When a fire on the resort sets off a string of tragedies, the women of Tawawa House soon learn that triumph and dehumanization are inseparable and that love exists even in the most inhuman, brutal of circumstances— all while they bear witness to the end of an era.
An engaging, page-turning, and wholly original novel, Wench explores, with an unflinching eye, the moral complexities of slavery.
BLURBS
“In her debut, Perkins-Valdez eloquently plunges into a dark period of American history. . . . Heart-wrenching, intriguing, original and suspenseful, this novel showcases Perkins-Valdez’s ability to bring the unfortunate past to life.” -Publishers Weekly
“A striking debut intimately limns a Southern slave’s complicated relationship with her master. . . . Compelling and unsentimental.” -Kirkus Reviews
“Readers entranced by The Help will be equally riveted by Wench. A deeply moving, beautifully written novel told from the heart.” -USA Today
“A heartbreaker, full of understated tragedy and lyrical prose. . . . Perkins-Valdez has woven a devastatingly beautiful account of a cruel past.” -People
James Patrick is an alumni from Stonecoast, in Maine.
The link provided in the title will take you directly to monkeybicycle.net where you can read his short story, New, in its entirety.
You can also check out the rest of the site, via the link. Give it a go.
James Patrick is an alumni from Stonecoast, in Maine.
The link provided in the title will take you directly to the article, This Modern Writer: A Vinyl Revival, where you can read it in its entirety. It's a great article about what music means to him and his daughter, and the intangibility of today's iPod mp3 files vs the tangible identities of full record albums.
Give it a read.
James Patrick is an alumni from Stonecoast in Maine. The link provided at the top will bring you to Spectermagazine.com where you can read the short story, Mickey Tettleton, in its entirety. You can also peruse other areas of their website.
This story should be particularly interesting to those who love baseball.
James Patrick is an alumni from Stonecoast, in Maine. The link provided at the top will bring you to James' writing and music blog where you can read his short story, Tag, in its entirety. You can also peruse his other musings while you're there, at thirtyhertzrumble.com.
This story was originally published in the now-defunct Thematic Literary Magazine.
James Patrick is a Stonecoast alumni and the link at the top will bring you directly to his short story, Teeter, on BartelbySnopes.com...a literary magazine.
Once there, you can read his short story in all its glory, and also check around the site if you'd like.
Michael Kimball is one of the faculty at Stonecoast, in Maine. He has published many other fiction novels as well as non-fiction and has done many plays and screenplays.
The link provided in the title will bring you to Amazon.com, where you can see a preview of the novel Green Girls and even buy it if you wish.
You can also find this and other novels on Michael's website; http://www.michaelkimball.com
OVERVIEW
A writer, a father, a husband, the owner of a strictly ordered life, Jacob Winter is not a man prone to violence -- until the day he walks in unexpectedly on his wife's affair. Awakening in a small-town Maine jail with no memory of his alleged rampage, he is bailed out by Alix Callahan, a mysterious ethnobotanist who claims to own a small piece of his past. Drawn into her obsessive relationship with July, an exotic Indian beauty from the rainforests of South America, Jacob is simultaneously mesmerized and unnerved by the two women's strange erotic dance as his meticulously controlled world slips even farther out of its orbit -- leading him to a clandestine meeting at the top of a bridge, where he helplessly watches Alix plunge 250 feet into the raging waters below. A suicide, a murder, neither, or both pull Jacob Winter into a twisted game of dark deceptions and psychological terror, one that could destroy his sanity and his soul.
BLURBS
Also published in England, Germany, and Spain
“A great masterpiece.” - The Southland Times (New Zealand)
“Twists and turns to a spine tingling climax.” - Booklist
“As good a thriller as you are likely to find.”  - The Daily Telegraph (Sydney)
Give it a read, and also check out his earlier novels.
A Stonecoast alumni, Jay Patrick, has a story published in this seasonal literary journal. The name of the story is Shoot Like You're Awesome, and it is the second one featured.
The link provided in the title will take you to a digital issue of the publication that you can read for free. You can also go to the website for P.Q. Leer and see it there, as well as others.
Jay Patrick also has a blog (Called Thirty Hertz Rumble) in which he detailed the arduous process for getting Shoot Like You're Awesome published. (It was rejected something like forty different times). Click on the link to check out that specific blog, or his other musings.
Give it all a read.
The Crimson Pact: Vol. III is an anthology of collected stories and two Stonecoasters are featured in it; Karen Bovenmyer and Eric M. Bosarge.
The link provided in the title will take you right to Amazon.com, where you can check out a preview of the anthology and where you can also buy it if you like.
OVERVIEW
We set them free, now we have to take them down. The battle against the demonic horde rages on with fifteen blistering new stories from all across the multiverse. Make your mark in blood and join the Crimson Pact! The Crimson Pact Volume 3 features fifteen action packed and frightening short stories, including, “That Which We Fear” by New York Times bestselling author Larry Correia, and Steven Diamond, which features Diego Santos, a bad ass marine who knows the exact time of his death, and Jarvis “Lazarus” Tombs, a federal agent who investigates the paranormal, and has the strange habit of coming come back from the dead. “The Ronin’s Mark” by Donald Darling is a story from an arch demon’s point of view and provides a fascinating study of what happens when a demon becomes too close to the world he is trying to destroy. “Whispers in the Code” by Patrick M. Tracy uncovers the sinister truth about the secrets found inside the internet, and those trying to stop the end of days. “Stumble and Fall” by Isaac Bell tells a tale of his famous character, John Olshoe, who recalls a time when he failed to be the hero. “Singe, Smolder, Torch, Whither” by Eric M. Bosarge is a creepy tale Stephen King could have written if he decided to write a story with a more literary style. “The Jar of Needs” by Patrick M. Tracy is about a depraved customer who will do anything for the sullen barrista he’s fallen in lust with. “Monsters on the Trail” by Patrick S. Tomlinson shows us what happens when investigators find out a demon may be involved with a political campaign. “David in Disguise” by Kelly Swails takes us to a 1960’s Chicago protest march where a young woman, who wants to be a journalist, finds out she may have to join the family business after all . . . and hunt demons. “Fallout from My Former Life” by Valerie Dircks proves that a young woman can never escape her past, especially at her high school prom. “The Recruit” by Craig Nybo profiles the boxing champion, Micky Atlas, in what may be his last fight . . . on Earth. EA Younker gives us a steampunk apocalypse story, “Fight” where the rebels steal an airship and take the battle to the demon-possessed bots who have destroyed their world. “The Third Eye” by Chanté McCoy tells the tragic story of a failed Greek Orthodox priest in the early 1900’s, who is unable to convince his countrymen that the demons are indeed coming. “A Contract Between Thieves” by Stephanie M. Lorée is one of the most entertaining stories in the anthology and is set in a “Italian Renaissance steampunk meets traditional sword & sorcery world” and features a rogue named Feni, and her lover, Raf, and their travails after Feni accepts the absolutely wrong job—that feels so right. “Shen Llamo’s Daughters,” takes us on a trip to Tibet in a time when the old customs of the mountain people, typified by pragmatic Yumi, battle with the new religion of Buddhism, and demonic spirits roam a haunted valley in the Himalayas. “The Scarlet Cloak” by Karen Bovenmyer, which book-ends this collection and will not soon be forgotten, is about a young woman who takes revenge on her enemies by using an artifact of terrible power that may consume her in the end, or perhaps it will set her true self free.
Check it out.
Pop Fic Review is a collection of stories, essays and poetry by many people who went or are going through the Stonecoast MFA program in Maine, which is also through USM.
The link provided in the title will bring you right to Amazon.com where you can check out a preview of the collection, and maybe even buy it if you like it.
Give it a shot.
The New Guard Literary Review is a publication that features many writers from Stonecoast.
The link provided in the title will take you directly to newguardreview.com where you can check out the website. It has many features on it, including a place to buy volumes of the publication, a place to subscribe, many links to the authors and their bios, contact info and even a schedule for the public readings that are held in Portland, Maine at Longfellow Books.
Please check it out, and subscribe if you enjoy it.
Joseph Carro is currently attending Stonecoast in Maine, and is the operator of this blog.
He also writes for the website badsequels.com in his spare time. The link in the title takes you straight to his author page on the site where you can browse through his movie reviews.
Currently, he has two reviews posted. The Neverending Story II: The Next Chapter and The Neverending Story III: Escape From Fantasia... and soon there will be Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo added to the list.
Take a trip to the site to check out the reviews. Perhaps you'll be inspired to watch one of them anew, with fresh eyes...or perhaps you'll just be warned away from a terrible movie. We watch them, so you don't have to.
Joseph Carro (he prefers Joe...Joseph is waaaaaay too...biblical) is currently attending Stonecoast through USM in Maine. He is the creator of Burning Tale and is for some reason typing in third person.
The Fiction Farm is a new blog which showcases things he's writing and new projects he's working on. Currently, you can find the first two (un-edited) chapters of his new (in progress) Steampunk novel, set in an alternate America during the 1860's.
Check it out. The link in the title will take you directly to The Fiction Farm.
Jen Blood is a Stonecoast alumni who graduated in the summer of 2005. She is responsible for creating a series of mystery novels featuring a female protagonist named Erin Solomon.
This is her website, jenniferblood.net
You can check out her blog there as well as see her upcoming works, contact her directly or browse through interviews and articles she's done in the past.
Jen Blood is a Stonecoast alumni who graduated in the summer of 2005. She is responsible for the creation of a series of mystery novels featuring a female protagonist named Erin Solomon, and this is the second novel in the series.
The link provided in the title will bring you right to Amazon.com where you can read a sample of the novel or buy it on kindle or in paperback, or do all of the above.
OVERVIEW
Sins of the Father finds Erin Solomon continuing her quest to find her father by investigating a convicted murderer's claim of innocence. Her investigation leads her down a path of dark secrets, painful truths, and deadly obsessions, as she struggles to reconcile her memories of her father with the cold, ruthless portrait others paint. When she and fellow reporter "Diggs" Diggins are forced into the northern Maine woods by someone intent on making them pawns in a diabolical game of cat and mouse, it will take everything they have to get out alive, and finally learn the truth about Erin’s father’s past—and the trail of bodies in his wake.
Check it out if you've read the first book in her series, All The Blue-Eyed Angels (An Erin Solomon Mystery), and if not, make sure to read that one first! Mystery fans, especially.
Jen Blood is a Stonecoast alumni, who graduated in the summer of 2005. She is responsible for the creation of a series of mystery novels featuring a character named Erin Solomon.
The link provided will take you right to Amazon.com where you can read a sample of this first book by Jen Blood, or buy it...or both.
OVERVIEW
"On my tenth birthday, I am baptized by fire." So begins Erin Solomon’s story, on a remote island in Maine where the Payson Church and thirty-four of its members have just burned. When the smoke clears, only Erin and her father remain. The police rule the tragedy mass suicide, but Erin knows the truth: no one in the Church wanted to die. She just isn’t sure how much her father had to do with their deaths. More than twenty years later, Erin is an investigative journalist still burdened with her father’s secrets. When she receives incontrovertible evidence that the Payson congregation was murdered, she can no longer hide from the truth. She returns to her hometown only to find an intricate conspiracy involving her parents, a haunted woman who sought refuge with the Paysons before the fire, and a disturbed boy who believed himself destined to lead the Payson Church to glory. Now, isolated on the Maine coast with an old flame and a mysterious newcomer with a surprising link to the tragedy, Erin will risk everything to uncover the secrets of Payson Isle – secrets someone will kill to keep buried.
Check it out, if you like mysteries or if you just want something new to read.