Friday, October 21, 2022

A Tale of Two Stories

 


It never rains, but it pours. At least that’s how it feels when you’re an author waiting for stories to sell, and then waiting for those stories to crawl into print. It’s been six months since “Three Knives” appeared in On Spec, and then suddenly two stories of mine dropped within a week and a half of each other. This happened last fall when “Discontinuity” and “The Librarian of Babyl” came out, and now it's happened again. My new stories this month have a special connection, which I’ll get to in a minute. But first, a taste:

“Bigger Fish” ~ Aurealis #155

“Here’s the scoop,” Hector said with a smile. “The planet Brobdin wants to eat you. That’s what it does. This world has nothing even remotely resembling plant life. Aside from some microbes that feed off thermal vents, everything here eats everything else. It’s a ‘kill or be killed’ world, and you’ll probably get eaten anyway for your trouble.”

Mora steered three cameras at once. She kept one in orbit around Hector’s head while another recorded the view through Gulliver Station’s meter-thick window, just beneath the surface of Brobdin’s world ocean. Hector gestured wildly for his imaginary audience.

“There are a billion hungry leviathans on this nightmare water-world. Stick with me and we’ll ride the back of one.”


Between one moment and the next, a god stood in front of my table. He’d squeezed himself into the form of a man wearing a gray business suit.

“I am Wealth. Don’t pretend not to worship me. Your presence is commanded by the Highest.”

Always knowing when people were lying made life among humans a headache, but being around gods was even worse. Everything they said was true by definition. When a god as powerful as Wealth called, it was more than a half-breed like me could resist.

What's awesome about these two stories coming out together is that, in their original forms, they were both written at pretty much the same time.

Turn the Wayback Machine to 2014, when I was gearing up for my 8th NaNoWriMo. The year before, I’d done a serial novel which became my first draft of The Whisper. This year, my goal was to write a month of short stories, from which I’d later pick the best, polish them off, and send them out for submission. My NaNo project that year was a success. The follow-through... less so. Instead, I let everything I wrote that month languish in authorial limbo and focused on my library career.

Fast forward to 2018. I’d quit the aforementioned library career and was busy circumnavigating South America with my wife (as chronicled in The Escape Hatch). I also decided it was time to dig into that trunk of first drafts I wrote in 2014 and see if any were worth a second look.

The first one I tackled was “Bigger Fish,” a follow-up to “River Ascending” that put the same characters into an even hairier dilemma. “Bigger Fish” had originally been written with the same non-sequential framing device that I employed in “Discontinuity,” which I’d finished in the first month of our South American odyssey. Not wanting to use the same trick twice, I flattened out the older story’s timeline so it flowed in a traditional, linear manner. By October (in Lima, Peru) I had it whipped into a shape that made me happy and started sending it out to editors to see if any would bite.

“The God In the Bottle” was a harder nut to crack. It’s a noir-ish urban fantasy with a tone I really love, but I felt it needed a heavier rewrite to get it into publishable form. I dug into it deep while trudging through Brazil in March, 2019, but I wasn't happy with it until May when we were in Columbia and almost ready to come home. I started sending it out in the summer as I was writing the first draft of yet another novel - one that will hopefully see the light of day soon.

Scroll ahead to the present, and both of these stories are out in the world! If you’re watching the clock, that’s a month shy of eight years between initial conception and publication. Four of those are my own fault for letting them sit in limbo so long, but the other four years just show the glacial pace of submitting short stories and awaiting publication. But now the wait’s over and both stories have a home. Follow the links and check them out today!


Friday, September 23, 2022

Next Chapter Con, October 1


For any and all readers between Chattanooga and Atlanta, get ready for Next Chapter Con in Dalton, Georgia on October 1!

This is specifically a convention for authors and readers. Every genre under the sun will be present, with books galore for everyone. There will also be panels (I may be on one) and no excuse whatsoever not to blow your annual book budget supporting your local authors. Tickets are a steal at only $7.

In other news, I've got two (count 'em) two new stories coming out just around the corner. "The God in the Bottle" is slated to appear in the Autumn 2022 issue of The Colored Lens, while my story "Bigger Fish" will be unleashed upon the world in an upcoming issue of Aurealis. Stay Tuned!

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Magic City Con, June 24 - 26


Greetings, fellow Earthlings, and especially those who live within an easy drive of Birmingham, Alabama. This very weekend, I'll be joining you all at this year's Magic City Con.

Magic City Con is Birmingham's premier convention for science fiction, fantasy, gaming, cosplay, and all things that make us fans feel right at home. It's being held at the Hyatt Regency Birmingham - Wynfrey Hotel, adjacent to the Riverchase Galleria. Doors open and 3:00 pm, Friday June 24, and the show continues through Sunday afternoon. There are special guests, artists, game rooms, discussion panels, and (of course) awesome vendors galore.

I'll be sharing a booth with my good friend, Birmingham's very own space opera queen, author Teresa Howard, whom I've known since my years with the Hoover Library Write Club (and whose story, "Dead In Me," was featured in my Summer Gothic anthology). Come stop by our table and see what's on offer!

(I'll give you a hint: Books. Lots of books. And possibly discounts.)

On a personal note, this will be my first SF convention since I started writing full-time as my career. Stay masked, stay safe, and I hope to see you there!

Thursday, April 21, 2022

"Three Knives" in On Spec Magazine


If it please the court, I'd like to offer the following into evidence. "Three Knives" is my first foray in to pure, straight-up, skin-crawling horror, and it's available now in On Spec Magazine. Here's a taste for free:

A padded envelope addressed to my five-year-old daughter Stacy sat outside our door when I brought her home from afterschool. There was no return address and worse, no postage. I waited to open it until after she’d gone to watch cartoons in her room.

The only thing in the package was an old straight razor. I dropped it on the kitchen table and my heart skipped a beat. The grip was soft and pitted from use. The blade was tarnished, and there were specks along its edge that may or may not have been rust. 

I knew that razor as well as I knew each scar it had traced on my body. But it couldn’t be the one I remembered. When I was ten years old, I’d thrown that razor in the fire of my burning house. The blade might have survived, but not the wooden handle. I fell into a chair and watched it, as if it might somehow come to life. It took me longer than it should to call the cops.

On Spec is Canada's premier science fiction and fantasy magazine, and I'm thrilled to be included in the latest issue. And while I'm not Canadian myself, I've got enough Cajun in me that I would have been Canadian if my ancestors hadn't been kicked out three hundred years ago. But then again, if they hadn't, we'd never have learned to boil crawfish.

But I digress. Unlike my other recent stories that I've posted, this one isn't available for free. However, you're welcome to buy an ebook copy of the magazine from Weightless Books, or subscribe and get it in print. It's well worth it!

UPDATE: Here's a review from Amazing Stories ~
"[Three Knives is] a story in the finest tradition of who-done-it mysteries, or rather, who’s-about-to-do-what mysteries. I enjoyed it. Kept me guessing." - R. Graeme Cameron

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Apex Magazine Kickstarter


All right, readers. Today I'm here to shill for Apex Magazine, the wonderful people who published my story “Discontinuity” online back in September. Their new goal is to publish a shiny new anthology, in print no less, including all forty-eight original stories that appeared in Apex in 2021. For anyone counting, that was six regular bi-monthly issues and two special issues: one highlighting indigenous authors and another focusing on international SF.

What do you get for supporting their Kickstarter? Lots of options are available, including ebook and print copies of the anthology, a subscription to the magazine, a chance to have your own name immortalized in an upcoming story, an editorial critique of a story of your own, and... if you shell out the really big bucks... you can get every copy of Apex ever printed. (Not to mention the gratitude of the editors and all of the authors.)

So get thee to Kickstarter and support the Apex 2021 Anthology.

Meanwhile, in the not-too-distant future, another new story of mine is shuffling toward publication. More details soon!

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Book Signing at the North Myrtle Beach Library

 


On April 7, I'll be reading and signing copies of my books at the North Myrtle Beach Library. Here's the press release:

Atlanta Author Jared Millet To Speak at North Myrtle Beach Library

Friends of the Library North Myrtle Beach is pleased to present its April “Coffee with Friends” literary event Thursday, April 7, at 10 a.m. All are invited to attend this free program. Coffee and refreshments will be served. 

This series meets on the first Thursday of the month and features local and regional authors who talk about their books and answer questions. The authors sell autographed books to interested guests and donate a signed copy to the library.  

Friends of the Library is a non-profit organization that supports North Myrtle Beach Library with funding for programs, equipment, and supplies. 

The specific book I'll be promoting is The Whisper, but I'll have copies of all my titles available. The library's address is 910 1st Ave S, North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. If you're in the area, I hope to see you there!

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

The Battle for Majadan Ends

With today's publication of The Ghost Cauldron, my long-gestating trilogy comes to a close! Here's the blurb for the set:

The Wight Lords of the Madlands are on the road to war. Their first target is the city of Majadan. Next: the rest of civilization itself. Caught up in the chaos is a ragtag band of survivors. They aren't heroes or generals, immortals or gods, but in the right place, and at the right time, the actions of an insignificant few may tip the balance of the world.

This concludes a project I’ve been working on for a very long time, and still the ending surprised me. It’s funny what happens when the characters take over the story. You can get the whole set on ebook for a whopping-low $10.97, or absolutely free if you're a Kindle Unlimited subscriber.

Click Here and Browse the Whole Series.

The cover artist, Olivia Pro Design, is Ukrainian, and I sincerely hope that she, her family, and all her friends are safe. From what I can tell, she’s still busy and working, so if any of my readers are also indie authors, I highly recommend her. She also does logo design and digital marketing, so if you’re in need of those services, by all means check out her page!