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Aug 14

Have you met Greg Kuehn?

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HELLO TO ALL YOU FANS AND FRIENDS!

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My name is Deborah Still and I am so very pleased to now be a new junior editor with Open Heart Publishing, helping with interviews! The people at OHP I have met so far are awesome people and I can’t wait to meet the rest of this year’s authors, and maybe someday, you too! I’ve looked at the list of submissions that Open Heart Publishing has received over the years and was intrigued when I saw that there were so many authors from other countries who were interested in An Honest Lie. Although this year’s authors all come from the United States, they do come from a variety of places, including Texas. I thought that was terrific, because I’m from Texas too!

I also am a writer and understand the nuances of this wonderful world of writing. I hope to expand into editing others’ work, which is more fun than editing my own! Sound familiar? I have some published short stories and have moved from them into the mystery genre novels. These are still unpublished but where’s there a pen, there’s a way!

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Greg Kuehn smiling Color

My first interview is with Greg Kuehn, who as you will see has some great responses.

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During this interview, Greg gives us a peek into the great streak of humor that runs through his veins. In addition to that, his loyalty for his country has not gone un-noticed, and his passion for his fellow Marines shines through.

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You will be able to see Greg had some fun answering my questions, and was open in sharing the complexities of his life. Let’s see what he has to say!

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So, without further delay, it is my pleasure to introduce you to Greg Kuehn!

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Deborah: I understand you are not a newcomer to the world of writing. Can you tell us why you decided to submit your work to An Honest Lie?

Greg: I wanted my story to find a home amongst a respectable print publication. I couldn’t be more pleased with the result.

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Deborah: OH! I think I see the publisher blushing. What a nice compliment, thank you! While we are on that subject, what caused you to be a writer and how did that happen?

Greg: I’ve always liked writing, even the grammar and usage side of it, and yes I understand that that makes me a bit of a nerd, but I’ve learned to live with that. It wasn’t until very recently that I began writing short fiction. I took a couple writing classes in college, one of them a writer’s workshop with Sybil Baker, author of The Life Plan and Talismans. It was then that I realized you can do more with writing than just produce boring academic essays, and I got the itch, the writer’s itch. I’ve been in love with writing fiction ever since.

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Deborah: I’ve got a great back scratcher for that itch! (I’ll give it to you.) Speaking of talismans, would you rather be an eagle soaring the skies of the Rocky Mountains or a country mouse eating blackberries under the bush, and why?

Greg: Flying scares me, even in the safety and comfort of an airplane, so I’d be a mouse by default. Also, blackberries are delicious and loaded with vitamins and antioxidants.

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Deborah: If you’re the mouse, you had better keep under the blackberry bush. Remember the eagle is always watchful for the mouse below! Is there a writer that makes you soar and what do you like about their style?

Greg: That’s a tough one, because I have so many. I’ve always enjoyed the storytelling abilities of Edgar Allan Poe and Stephen King, the stylistic genius in the writings of Hemingway and Faulkner, and the emotion and creativity that flowed through the poetry of Sylvia Plath. But if I had to pick a favorite, I guess I’d have to go with a more contemporary and unfamiliar writer, Kevin Wilson. He is such a talent. Every word is the right word and in just the right place. His stories are unlike anything else I’ve ever read, dark but humorous, sometimes disturbing, and entwined with genuine emotion that will move you. Every time I read one of his works I say to myself, “I wish I had written that.” He’s good.

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Deborah: Having read your story, “The Easy Way Out”, I’d say you are well on your way to achieving your goal! Do you have a writing nemesis?

Greg: I’d say Danielle Steel. She just keeps pumping out crap and people keep buying it. I don’t get it. I’d rather have my face repeatedly mauled by a honey badger while being forced to listen to Nickleback than read one of her books.

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Deborah: You know, behind every good writer is a supporting family. How about you? Would you tell us about your family?

Greg: My parents were married for 27 years before they divorced a few years back. They have both since remarried. I have two brothers, Nick and Chris. The three of us did everything together as kids and tried to kill each other on more than a few occasions. We’re pretty good friends these days. Then, there are my Marine Corps brothers. I will always have a special place in my heart for them. I live with my fiancée, Candy, and her two children Samantha and Alex, and as far as I see it, they are part of my family now. The rest of my relatives are cool, but they’re jealous that I’m so much better than them at board games. I have a pet fish named Mighty Mouse. I’m afraid the kids are going to overfeed it one day and I will have to buy a look-alike while they aren’t home.

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Deborah: Does your muse look anything like Mighty Mouse?

Greg: No, she’s a fat and pale middle-aged Italian woman, somewhat handsome in the face, and she always carries around a stone scroll in her right arm. She is so demanding.

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Deborah: We so understand about your muse. They must all be related! So, you’ve now told us about your muse, what about the characters in your writings. How do they compare to the antagonists you’ve encountered during your tours and/or any you may have had in your platoon?

Greg: The Marines I served with were incomparable. There are no characters that could ever do justice to them, any of them, even the ones I didn’t much care for. As far as my characters, I try not to base them around anyone I know. I prefer them to be unpredictable strangers whose actions will surprise not only the reader, but me as well.

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Deborah: So, you like surprises! Did your decision to join the Marines surprise you and what inspired you to join?

Greg: There was a lot that went into my decision to enlist. I had a couple friends that had joined a year before me and they told me nothing but good things about the Marine Corps. I was at a time in my life where I wanted a change of pace and a challenge. But what really swayed my hand was when I watched the Marines making the initial push into Iraq in March of 2003 and I thought to myself, “I could do that.” I went into a recruiter a few weeks later and said, “How do I join the Marines?” and he handed me some papers with a mischievous, almost evil smile and said, “Here, just sign all these,” and that was that.

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Deborah: Like any good interviewer, I simply must ask that age-old question that starts with “tell us how you felt”. How did you feel, Greg, when you received your certificate of commendation, the meritorious mast, and your combat action ribbon as a field artillery cannoneer?

Greg: As far as the recognition, it was okay, but the best feeling was coming home.

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Deborah: Yes, coming home’s always the best part! But before you came home to stay, you were deployed again to Iraq in 2008. You said on the second tour, you were a team leader for a key traffic control point in the small city of Rutbah . I understand you and you team worked to ensure that illegal weapons, drugs, and highly valued individuals were not permitted to pass into the city. My question to you is what did you learn about people and personalities while you were there?

Greg: The civilians in Iraq , they are just like you and me. Sure, they look different, and speak a different language, and probably pray a lot more, but they are just people trying to live their lives and be happy. It’s just a shame that such a small percentage of them have given a bad reputation to their race, religion, and nation.

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Deborah: Were there any situations during your tour that would be good for a story?

Greg: Yeah, there were a few, but I don’t want to give away any spoilers.

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Deborah: Okay, no spoilers here folks! So we have to sit and wait like everyone else! While overseas your nerves had to be on high alert. Will any of your future writings relate to that time in your life? Or is that part of your life shelved and over?

Greg: It’s definitely there if I ever want to write about it. I still remember everything so vividly and honestly there is a lot that I could use. I just don’t know if I could ever put on paper something that was so much a part of me. I prefer to write about things a little less personal. I’d hate to base a character around me and then have someone say to me, “I think your protagonist is a little flat,” or even worse, “That guy is a douche.” No one wants to be a douche.

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Deborah: Are you kidding me? With your personality and humor, no one would say that about you! At least with your being a Marine, I’d think twice before saying that! Let me ask this. What do you feel about the following quote “Imagination is more important than knowledge?”

Greg: Well whoever said that must have been an Einstein. Before I read J.R.R. Tolkien, I had no prior knowledge of hobbits, or Middle Earth, or Sauron, but thanks to my imagination and the brilliance and creativity of a much smarter man’s imagination, I, like many others, was able to enjoy one of the greatest stories ever told. Your knowledge is limited, but your imagination is endless.

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Deborah: Didn’t they do a song about imagination? Kidding! Besides writing, what other sorts of deviant behavior do you happen to enjoy?

Greg: Well as much as I’d hate to consider myself a conformist, I’m not really sure if I engage in much deviant behavior. I’m almost thirty and still play video games. Does that count? Also, I like to cycle, paint with acrylics, and I grind my own coffee beans, so in yo’ face Starbucks.

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Deborah: Sounds like you’re really serious about your coffee! (Me too!) Where do you believe humanity is headed as a whole?

Greg: Have you ever seen the movie Idiocracy? Yeah, that’s where we’re heading.

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Deborah: That is an incredible simile there. I’ve got to ask, what other writing endeavors are you currently engaged in?

Greg: Aside from pumping out short stories and keeping up with my blog, I’ve been writing a lot of flash fiction lately. But what I’d really like to do is write a novel. I just haven’t yet discovered an idea that would be worthy of that sort of a commitment. But soon, hopefully.

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Deborah: We all are looking for the one great idea to make it! With that in mind, what is, in your opinion, the more important discovery of humankind … plumbing or the written word?

Greg: Definitely plumbing, I do some of my best reading on the John.

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Deborah: I hear that quite a lot! I’m more of the lying crossways on my chair-and-a-half, with my head on one arm and legs hanging over the other. Okay, here’s another question about someone famous. According to Anatole France , “To die for an idea is to set a rather high price on conjecture,” in your opinion what do you believe is worth dying for? What do you believe is worth living for?

Greg: There’s plenty worth dying for: God, country, love, faith, family, freedom. But there’s really only one thing worth living for; the never-ending quest for the most delicious sandwich on Earth. I will find you – I swear it.

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Deborah: Simper Fi to that! In your blog, you state, “As far as writing goes, I’ve always enjoyed it. The feeling of pencil against paper forming perfectly purposed lines and shapes. Deliberate sentence fragments. Unconventional punctuation.” Most writers nowadays use computers; does this make you feel like a non-conformist?

Greg: I cannot tell a lie. I do most of my writing on a computer. But there is something about breaking out the moleskin writer’s notebook and a nice fountain pen that is so much more personal. It changes things up too, and I find my style is a little different, each word considered more carefully, when I can’t rely on spell-check or the backspace button.

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Deborah: Thank you Mr. Apple-tree Washington …I mean Greg! Yes, the technical age has added an easier way to collaborate our ideas. Now, I know this is going to come out of left-field, but I’ve got to ask this question. If you were your own pet, what would you be? And why?

Greg: I’d be a cat. They pretty much have their own lives and they think they are God. They eat good too. And secretly, I’ve always wanted to kill a bird or a mouse and give it to someone as a gift.

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Deborah: You are either a cat person or have had, at least once in your life, a cat to know this! Speaking of gifts, in your blog you state, “So this blog will become my voice. More importantly, it will be my portfolio for creative writing …” How important is “your voice” to you?

Greg: For a writer, voice is everything. There are plenty of writers out there who understand the mechanics and the elements enough to put together a decent story worthy of publication. And with the way technology is going, you could probably even train a robot to write fiction. But a voice, a truly unique voice, is what makes readers want to keep pushing through to the end, and what helps a writer stand out above his or her peers, and robots.

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Deborah: Well said, very well said. You know, I just looked out my window and noticed that it’s raining today. Rainy days always make me want to pull out a good book and read. Are you a rainy day reader?

Greg: Actually, I’m more of a rainy day sleeper.

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Deborah: You’re right. That pitter patting against the window will do it every time. Before I get too sleepy myself, let me ask you this. There are only so many times you hear “I like it because you wrote it” from family and close friends and those who don’t question your abilities. How do you feel about this?

Greg: That’s funny. I’ve actually got into some pretty heated arguments about this with my fiancé. I’ve been told by more than a few experienced writers that I should take what my loved ones say about my work with a grain of salt since their opinions will most likely be weighted with bias. When I told this to Candy, she kind of took it personally and refused to read my stuff for quite a while. Honestly though, I don’t want people to like my writing just because they like me. They can like it or hate it or be completely indifferent about it. I really don’t care. I just want them to read it.

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Deborah: You’re right. Basically, most writers think the same way until the rejection letters start filling the mailbox. And then suddenly, the “I don’t care,” becomes “Just read and publish it.” It reminds me of something that Mark Twain once said, “You can’t depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.” What do you believe he meant by that?

Greg: There’s really no telling. That dude was crazy.

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Deborah: Yes, he was, and like him, you will also have several stories published! Most people have two stories for doing anything … a plausible excuse and the real reason, why do you really write?

Greg: Would you believe me if I said I did it for the characters? The real reason; I’ve always tried to do as many things as I can to give my name a longer shelf life than my body. Translation: I want to be famous.

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Deborah: Okay, I’ll call CNN and talk to Cooper Anderson and ask for his help with getting your name out there for you! Kidding again! And speaking of kidding, here’s a really important question, maybe the most important question ever asked. Which came first, the chicken or the road?

Greg: The egg.

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Deborah: Gold ring! That was the right answer! Let’s see if we can make that two gold rings. Here’s another question about your writing. Would you tell us how would you sway the reader’s sympathies towards an antagonist?

Greg: Give them something they can relate to. Darth Vader comes to mind. Yeah, most people can’t relate to the idea of becoming a Sith Lord, but we understand why he did it. And the truth is, underneath that dark façade of evil and ruthlessness, there was a pretty decent human being who just wanted what we all want, to be loved. Come to think about it, how did he stay single for so long?

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Deborah: Probably because he was just a kid when he first met his future wife? Using this for an example for inspiration, where do you draw your inspiration from?

Greg: I can’t really pinpoint it. I’d say I’m inspired by randomness. One day it could be the perfect pink sunrise pushing across the city skyline and the next it might be a homeless dude relighting a half-smoked cigarette butt that he picked up off the sidewalk. Sometimes I’ll just see things and the creative spark flickers inside me, and, at that point, it’s my responsibility as a writer to let it smolder and breathe until it catches, and then to let it burn hot and bright until that perfect moment presents itself when the fire cries out to be extinguished.

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Deborah: Yep, you’re hooked and have the bug bad! Your answer shines with passion. Here’s another question just loaded with passion. If you were a hat, what would it be?

Greg: I’d be a Trilby hat like JT wears. Those are pretty trendy.

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Deborah: You must have a great fashion sense! Not trying to age you, or anyone else who remembers them, but Trilbys have been trendy since the 1920’s, way, way, before I was a little twinkle. Now, this is my favorite question, how does breathing new life into your characters excite you?

Greg: It’s always such a unique personal experience, like meeting your first love. Except you can make them whatever you want, and if they break your heart, you can always kill them off in the end.

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Deborah: (Laughing) Love your answer! Okay, last question, if you were a baseball, football or hockey puck (you pick one) and someone hit you, where would you go?

Greg: I’d go straight to the cops. That’s assault!!!

Deborah: I’d love to see you explaining that as a baseball, football or puck! The cops would think you’re crazy! That is a great visual though. Too funny!

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Thank you Greg! I could tell you enjoyed yourself by your answers! They were great and I know they will bring a smile or chuckle to all of our readers. Speaking of which, I want to remind all of our readers to catch Greg’s story, “The Easy Way Out”, which will be in An Honest Lie, Volume 3: Justifiable Hypocrisy, scheduled to be on sale this fall. Also, everyone, check back next week for another exciting interview!

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Greg Kuehn writes literary fiction and southern literature. While in high school he received The Most Courteous Superlative Award and the Class Clown Award by his peers and was also named The Most Valuable Player of his soccer team. Greg is currently a senior at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga where he majors in secondary education with an emphasis on English. Upon completion of his degree he plans to pursue a career as a creative writer who will, in his spare time, also pursue positions as a high school English teacher and as a soccer coach. Prior to his current curriculum, Mr. Kuehn served eight years in the United States Marine Corps before receiving an honorable discharge in April 2011. During his time in the military he completed the Marine Corps field artillery cannon crewman course, the Marine Corps machine gunner course, the combat lifesavers course, and finished his enlistment as a Howitzer section chief. He deployed to Fallujah, Iraq in 2004 where he received a certificate of commendation, a meritorious mast, and a combat action ribbon as a field artillery cannoneer. While in Fallujah, his Chattanooga-based unit fired more artillery rounds than any unit since Vietnam during one of the most famous battles of our generation, the Battle of Fallujah. He deployed to Iraq again in 2008 where he was a team leader for a key traffic control point in the small city of Rutbah. There, he and his team worked to ensure that illegal weapons, drugs, and highly valued individuals were not permitted to pass into the city.

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Jul 12

Ahem … Presenting Stephanie M. Loree

Posted on Tuesday, July 12, 2011 in Featured Author, Uncategorized

Stephanie M. Loree Color from blogHey there!

Friends and fans, in case you haven’t guessed by now, this is the time we have conversations with all of our authors from An Honest Lie Volume 3: Justifiable Hypocrisy. If you’d like to congratulate this year’s participants please leave a comment here. They have all crafted exquisite pieces for your enjoyment and we are working hard to bring you the best collection we’ve ever produced.

Okay … let’s dive right in. This week we are featuring Stephanie M. Loree. She’s blessed us with a fascinating story called Skin Script. There is little I can say to illuminate this tale for you. It’s a “what if” moment turned to a work of art. Not surprising considering Stephanie’s creativity seems to know no bounds. But, well let’s find out what she has to say about it.

Open Heart Publishing: On top of writing you are a vocalist and pianist. Do all these projects fuel your creative side, or do you do so many things because your creative side won’t be still?

Stephanie Loree: For me, music and writing are intertwined. It’s all a part of my creative side and my creative process. Making music is about taking a beat, a melody, and adding words. Writing is taking words and making them sing. They’re both concerned with telling a story. More than anything I think my creative side wants to be a storyteller, and these are the mediums it chooses. There have been other mediums, but sadly my drawing skills never advanced beyond “abstract” finger-painting.

OHP: Man do I understand that. It’s great when you can explore that creative side. Like your blog, I’ve really enjoyed reading it. What is your motivation for keeping it going when you have so much going on already?

SL:It’s hard sometimes, but blogging can be a lot of fun. When you make connections with other bloggers and writers; when people leave comments and participate in your events, that’s when it’s worthwhile. I’ve met a number of fantastic people through blogging, including my critique group. It’s really an invaluable tool for writers, both in learning from others and marketing your own work. It also helps to know there are others out there just as crazy (and weird) as you.

OHP: Your Twitter Fiction idea is brilliant. I loved the one from 4-21. Is it about the essence of love?

SL: Do you mind if I include it?

OHP: Allow me.

“The Sun burned up today, inhaled the world like a fiery maw. Four billion years to plan and all I could do was hold you.”

SL:Essence of love sounds good! I like to leave interpretations up to the reader, and I love it when people take away different things from my work. I can tell you that I wrote it because I was thinking about the Zombie Apocalypse and asking myself, “Are you prepared for zombies?” (And no, no I’m not.) Then I thought about the actual way Earth will end someday when the sun dies, and how no one really is planning for it (granted it is four billion years away). My plan is to basically snuggle with the nearest person. Maybe that would work for zombies, too?

OHP: Somehow I doubt it. The zombie horde is an unending relentless force. You write speculative fiction. As a genre it’s … open ended. What does speculative fiction mean to you?

SL: Anything weird; Science Fiction, Fantasy, Paranormal, Magic Realism, Horror, anything that can’t happen in real life … I live real life every day. Why would I want to write about it? Talking swords and psychic tattoos are way cooler.

OHP: Way cooler. I noticed you are working on an Urban Fantasy. Would share a little of that story for us?

SL: It’s about a blind woman who sees dead people. More specifically, she sees the ghost of her fiancé–a cop who was killed in the line of duty. Together they attempt to solve his murder and learn that a woman who can’t see and a man who can’t touch can still find each other.

It’s a darker tale with a dash of romance. Readers who like my short story in An Honest Lie should find it similar in style.

OHP: Yeah that sounds like a good read. You do a ton of book reviews. Is all that hard work for fun or profit?

SL: Fun, though every once in awhile I get free books. I’ve also met a number of wonderful authors through book reviews and came across some fantastic stories I never would have known existed. I love reading, so reviewing became an extension of that and a way for me to expose my blog. I like it, though I expect that with my own work being published I will be doing less reviewing and more articles on writing, publishing, and the like.

OHP: Free books. I love fee books. Especially when it’s stuff I like to read. What are you reading now?

SL: HAMMERED by Kevin Hearne, #2 in his Iron Druid Chronicles. It’s a seriously awesome and funny urban fantasy.

THE HUM AND THE SHIVER by Alex Bledsoe; an ARC provided to me by the author. So far it’s, a really unique alternate history with a strong heroine.

REALMS #2, a compilation of short stories published in Clarkesworld magazine, which any SF/F fan should check out immediately.

OHP: Skin Script was one of the more fascinating stories I’ve read this year. What was your inspiration for such an amazing tale?

SL: I was talking to my critique partner and said, “Wouldn’t it be cool if someone could see your future on your skin? Like the pattern of your soul, in Technicolor lights.” And chaos ensued. Another critique partner had been discussing her tattoos with me, and she even went out and did some firsthand research. I have a dedicated critique group.

OHP: Yes it seems you do. And the research paid off. I may be mistaken here but in your blog it seems as if we are the first house to publish your work? Is that true? How does it feel finally being a published author?

SL: An Honest Lie will be my first professional publication, it’s true. It feels surreal, but completely fantastic! Most times I can’t believe it’s actually happening. It’s the acknowledgement, I think, from professionals in the industry that makes me believe maybe I don’t suck at this writing gig. It gives me the warm and fuzzies.

OHP: We all take up this crazy gig for one reason or another. What does writing mean to you?

SL: Like music, I write to entertain. It’s a means to convey the cool stuff in my head to others, and hope they think it’s cool too. It means I don’t have to contain the voices inside my head; I can let them out to play! It also means a boatload of work. Writing is hard. Those who say otherwise are dirty liars.

OHP: Horrible charlatans. If you were asked to give a class of aspiring writers a few words of advice what would you say?

SL: Finish it. Don’t stop until you type, “The End.” Don’t go back. Don’t restart. Don’t skip. Don’t give up. Don’t be me! Writers write. Aspiring writers… aspire.

OHP: Final question and I’ll get off you back. Do you play “Words with Friends”? If so are you willing to share your screen name with us?

SL: First I’ve heard of it. I play a lot of games, most of them involving
dice and/or pixels. Word games are great, but pwning your friends is
priceless.

Indeed it is, My Lady, indeed it is.

:)

Born and stuck in Ohio , Stephanie received her BS in Criminal Justice and works in a cubicle for “the man.” She writes speculative fiction and is a professional vocalist/pianist. Though she prefers money, Stephanie will also work for dark chocolate. She enjoys experimenting with everything from epic fantasy to twitter-sized sci-fi. A “SuperNerd” who loves gaming, technology, good sushi, and bad Kung Fu flicks. Stephanie’s story “The Skin Script” is her first published stoey for An Honest Lie .Learn more about Stephanie at blog.stephaniemloree.com and tweets @smloree.

Mar 1
Comments Off

It’s all about a man named Percy Freebottom

Posted on Tuesday, March 1, 2011 in Featured Author

Hey there readers, friends and fans. I know, it’s been a while since I’ve been with you. I must offer you myPercy most humble apologies. I won’t make excuses (I never do) instead I will offer you a fine story. I know you love a great story as much as I do or you wouldn’t be here. I, as your humble servant, am here to deliver.

You guys remember our friend and contributor, Eric Trant? I know you do. Not only did he win our An Honest Lie Volume One contest, he more importantly contributed not one but two amazing stories for our collections. In An Honest Lie Volume One: Encouraging the Delinquency of your Inner Child he sent us a fan favorite, “Apple Tree” about the times when our inner children get us into trouble. In An Honest Lie Volume Two: Delusions of Insignificance Eric blessed us again with a tale about a man named Percy Freebottom. Percy was the unconventional astronaut in the short “One Small Step” who managed to transport us onto the moon with nothing but the power of our minds.

Percy Freebottom, it seems, is gaining no little notoriety out there in the great wide world. He is not only the subject of one published short but also the subject of an upcoming novel and a model to boot. Yes you heard me right. Percy Freebottom has been realized in a full three dimensions by an amazing artist and fan of Mr. Freebottom. I don’t know about ya’ll but I want one.

There is a fantastic story about the origins of this amazing character piece at Eric’s blog “Digging with the Worms” which is amazing on its own.

Shit, there is a story here and I am ranting on and on (that should tell you how good this story is). Let me give space to Eric to tell it in his own words. One PSA:

We are still selling copies of An Honest Lie Volumes 1 &2. You can pick them up HERE. And we are also still accepting submissions for An Honest Lie Volume 3: Justifiable Hypocrisy. Read our submission guidelines HERE. Okay now Eric Trant:

“Percy started out not as a short story but as a novel. I got stuck, but I needed to get him onto paper, and so I wrote the short story and moved on to other projects. I told my wife about the short story and she said, Print it out. I printed it and she took it up to her work (she’s a daycare teacher) and let the other teachers read it. They loved Percy and I generated a few fans up there.

I printed another copy and took it to work and showed it to a NASA enthusiast. By enthusiast, I mean this guy has pictures of astronauts in his office, on his computer, has been to astronaut conventions and such. He dug on Percy, let his wife and kids read it, said it inspired him to dig out his old Arthur C. Clarke books. He said his wife thought of Percy when she saw a full moon. He’s the one who got me the sculpture. Don’t quit writing, he said. You have a talent. Use it.

As for the novel, I did an opening and sent it to a beta reader who has read just about everything I’ve written, and she said this was my breakout novel, by far one of the best things she’s read. She loved it! I haven’t finished the novel, but it’s still rattling around in my head wanting to get out.

The original concept was simply a name: Percy Freebottom. That’s how I start my stories — with a title. And I thought and thought about why Percy was special, what made him ~different~ from the rest of us. It was that pondering that brought about “One Small Step” and the rendering we see of Percy in that story. He’s inspiring. He’s a dreamer. He is a freaking genius who everyone thinks is crazy, insane, off his rocker, ignorable and ordinary, some hillbilly nut with a space suit.

Far from ordinary, though, Percy is one step closer to figuring out this universe. That’s his One Small Step, you know. We all think he lags behind the rest of us sometimes, but he’s up on us by one little stride.”

Percy managed to not only catch our fancy but also our hearts. We here at Open Heart Publishing are excited to see if Percy has anything else in store for us and apparently we are not the only ones.

Nov 30

Let’s Take a Ride

Posted on Tuesday, November 30, 2010 in Featured Author

All Along the Pacific with C.B. Calsing
all along the pac cover
Hello dear reader, dear friends and fans. I know it has been a week since we last got together but I have had some, shall we say, difficult days in the last week or so. However I have been working diligently on your behalf, never the less. This week I want to take a short break from An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance to bring you something else we’ve been working on. You can still vote for your favorite author from An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance here and you can pick up your copy here.

In An Honest Lie Volume 1: Encouraging the Delinquency of your Inner Child we were treated to a haunting tale called “Gran’s Prophecy“ about horticultural prophecy and the birth of kings. In An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance we were treated to a darker story called “Martina Gets the Last Word “ about true love and it’s eternal depths. Both of these great stories were brought to us by one of my new favorite writers C.B. Calsing. Now she returns to us with an anthology of her own called All Along the Pacific. This is a collection of 10 stories set in and around San Louis Obispo. Spanning the years from 1835 until 2005 each story not only carries us into these time periods, but also does a wonderful job of ting the lives, families and cultures of the age together giving us a picture of our American history. But more about that later, first let’s meet Corina B. Calsing.

Hailing originally from San Louis Obispo, California C.B. Calsing now lives in and writes from New Orleans, Louisiana. Her passion for The Big O is only surpassed by her love for writing, cocktails N.O. sports teams’ architecture and really good food, all of which are in grand abundance in her adopted home city. louisiana-new-orleans-boubon-st-sign-lrHer creative drive was encouraged by parents who were themselves “hard-working free spirits”. “My mother would draw children’s books just for me, and as I got older, the three of us would collaborate on projects: writing, drawing, binding. By second grade I had started writing with a goal for publication,” she told us. By the second grade she’d already established the goal of writing for publication. Her first effort was a musical play about two rival break dancing gangs which she cast with her class mates, none of which auditioned. Maybe that’s what drove her to her current profession, teaching middle school kids the dastardly craft.

Like the rest of us writers she often thinks of her chosen passion as entertaining though others often see it differently.

“Writing was entertainment for me. I did short stories, movie scripts, and novellas. A compulsion, some might say. An addiction others would call it. After all, it does interfere with my relationships and work, sometimes.”

But even so writing is a passion that cannot be ignored. She got lucky following Richard Fords advice in his “Ten Rules for Writing Fiction” when he said, “Marry somebody you love and who thinks you being a writer’s a good idea.” She has a very give and take relationship with her loving husband who supports her efforts, even bringing her dinner to the writing table and accepting responsibility for overlooking editorial mistakes prior to submission. But she gives him credit saying, “I don’t think I’d have accomplished as much as I have in the last decade if he wasn’t with me. A lot of my ideas develop with his input too. We spend a lot of time discussing “what if,” and if I get stuck on an ending, he always has the best solution.”

Her major turning point came in 2004 when she had a bad experience working with an alternative middle school for students that had been expelled from their neighborhood schools. Without the gory details, she quit and found herself with an opportunity to write full time. In that time productivity was an understatement. Corina finished two novellas, both of which are still “in the box” so to speak, and several shorts. Realizing she needed to move forward with her Masters of Fine Arts she applied with the Creative Writing Workshop at the University of New Orleans who accepted her by 2006. This was when she got serious about her writing, more serious than ever before anyway.

“During those workshop classes, I first conceived of the short stories that would eventually make up All Along the Pacific. Part of this came from a general dislike of contemporary, realistic fiction.”

“My writing heroes — Marquez, Steinbeck, Lovecraft, Dick, Gaiman, Mieville (you’ll notice no women there, and probably fault me for it) — didn’t settle for the ordinary, and I couldn’t let myself either,” she said. Corina started with Science Fiction and her advice is: “don’t turn in science fiction if you are not in a science fiction workshop.” Stuff she wrote that got panned in workshop sold to Sci-Fi magazines without any revisions. From there she tried historic fiction which went over better in class but her creative spirit wouldn’t allow her to play I straight. “I kept coming up with strange concepts for historical fiction — pickled heads in jars, midgets on trains, delusional car salesmen — and then I had this pile of stories.”

“After a little thought, I realized, “Why not a collection?” A little tweaking here and there, a few rewrites and some additions… After two years of workshop and revision I had All Along the Pacific,” Calsing told us.

The path we walk from where we begin a project to where they end can sometimes be a dark one. We may not know what comes next we can only light our way one story at a time. C.B. Calsing has illuminated our path with a tale about an outlaw, who is supposed to be dead, viewing his own head at a state fair, and a tale about a Chinese rail worker with much higher ambitions than anyone around him could imagine, and a tale about a common whore who really lives to protect herself and her “adopted” son. Though each of these stories are based in different time periods Corina Calsing has done a fantastic job of submerging us in these individual lives and leading us through time, showing us every step of the way the connections we all have to one another regardless of time and space.

All Along the Pacific is an anthology that is not to be missed and Corina Calsing is a writer that should not be over looked. Stick with us Friends and fans and we, I can promise you, will be bringing you the best of the best. In the end C.B. Calsing remains true to her creative roots and continues to experiment with her work.

“Since I’ve finished workshop, I’ve headed back into the realms of science fiction, and a little horror, but when I plan a big project, it still tends to be historical with a touch of magical realism. The work I’m finally returning to after about a year and a half off is just that — set in the bayou, during the Depression. An English botanist searching for a rare orchid falls into the trap of a backwoods giantess who distills sassafras moonshine and raises Cane Corsos. There are definitely elements of horror in it, but the story is more about mood and setting and detail than anything else.”

Most of the best stories are Corina, most of the best ones are.
Davin Kimble-Jr. Editor
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C.B. Calsing was born and grew up in the small Central Coast town of San Luis Obispo, California. As a child, she spent long hours composing stories and plays. Half-way through her junior year in high school, she left to attend Cuesta Community College, where, after a few years of study, she received her associate of arts degree with honors. Following that, she transferred to Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. There, she completed her bachelor of arts in English. She took a year off, traveled to Indonesia and Ireland, and then decided to return to school to become a certified English teacher.

In 2002, fresh out of her studies, Mrs. Calsing and her future husband moved to New Orleans. Mrs. Calsing has worked in the field of education throughout the Greater New Orleans Area for the last eight years. In 2004, she married. Following her evacuation from Hurricane Katrina, Mrs. Calsing returned to New Orleans and began her master of fine arts degree in creative writing, fiction, at the University of New Orleans. She completed that in 2009. Now, she teaches middle school English, edits for a prominent e-book publisher, and writes when there is time.

“To Wade Alone,” a story from her upcoming collection All Along the Pacific, took second place in the On the Premises “First” contest in June 2009. Her work has appeared in college literary journals, guerrilla zines, and on Web sites, such as Crossedgenres.com. Her work also appeared in the anthologies An Honest Lie Volume One: Encouraging the Delinquency of your Inner Child and An Honest Lie Volume Two: Delusions of Insignificance, and Things We Are Not, a collection of queer science fiction.

Her two favorite genres to write are historic and science fiction, probably because both allow her to visit worlds different from her own. Up-to-the-minute information can be found at her blog, cbcalsing.blogspot.com.

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