Planning is Not My Forte & Other Obvious Facts

By Dave Wilson

Categories: Fiction

I’m a little overwhelmed, as usual, with things clutching and dragging at me, but I wanted to take a little bit of time to talk about how schedules and best-laid plans can go to Hell in a handbasket, as my step-dad was fond of saying. I’ve spent a very chaotic few years bouncing form [...]

I'm a little overwhelmed, as usual, with things clutching and dragging at me, but I wanted to take a little bit of time to talk about how schedules and best-laid plans can go to Hell in a handbasket, as my step-dad was fond of saying. I've spent a very chaotic few years bouncing form personal disaster to personal disaster, writing in mad sporadic bursts and not writing in molasses-thick periods of lethargy. I have written novels that are better than ... Read More

Phase

By Dave Wilson

Categories: Uncategorized

I have been making the same drive back and forth from Hertford, NC to Chesapeake, VA for over five years now. It’s a long, solitary stretch - and over time, things have added up in my mind until it’s like navigating some other dimension. On the drive home last Sunday, a final pin [...]

I have been making the same drive back and forth from Hertford, NC to Chesapeake, VA for over five years now. It's a long, solitary stretch - and over time, things have added up in my mind until it's like navigating some other dimension. On the drive home last Sunday, a final pin dropped in the silence, and I heard the echo. I wrote this specially for my extra Halloween Storytellers gift to you all... Since we have no poster ... Read More

Layers, Cells, & Constellations

By Richard Steinberg

Categories: Writing

By Richard Steinberg
“The creative artist seems to be almost the only kind of man that you could never meet on neutral ground. You can only meet him as an artist. He sees nothing objectively because his own ego is always in the foreground of every picture,” Raymond Chandler
It’s an interesting moment.
Dark and light seem completely [...]

By Richard Steinberg “The creative artist seems to be almost the only kind of man that you could never meet on neutral ground. You can only meet him as an artist. He sees nothing objectively because his own ego is always in the foreground of every picture,” Raymond Chandler It’s an interesting moment. Dark and light seem completely balanced in my life right now. Not as if I have finally got a handle on life – far from it – but rather, as if ... Read More

This Is Not The Essay: further thoughts on matters of perspective

By Justine Musk

Categories: Writing

by Justine Musk
This is not the essay I intended to write.
I write this in a lodge somewhere in Iceland where
I’ve been staying the past two days with my spouse,
assorted extremely-bright accomplished people, and a
famous actress. This gathering is meant to be a kind
of think tank retreat/salon concerning one issue in
particular. I won’t say what [...]

by Justine Musk This is not the essay I intended to write. I write this in a lodge somewhere in Iceland where I've been staying the past two days with my spouse, assorted extremely-bright accomplished people, and a famous actress. This gathering is meant to be a kind of think tank retreat/salon concerning one issue in particular. I won't say what that issue is, because I want to talk a bit about the famous actress without giving away her identity, and, like any movie star, which is why they become a ... Read More

Resurrecting the Dead

By Brian Knight

Categories: Writing

(Quick note from the wings…Elizabeth Massie sends greetings from the land of overwhelming deadlines, down there by that Myth Pool. She’ll be back next month, entertaining as ever. In the meantime, here is a special extra bite out of Brian Knight’s Mind - DNW)
By Brian Knight
Be silent in that solitude
Which is not loneliness, [...]

(Quick note from the wings...Elizabeth Massie sends greetings from the land of overwhelming deadlines, down there by that Myth Pool. She'll be back next month, entertaining as ever. In the meantime, here is a special extra bite out of Brian Knight's Mind - DNW) By Brian Knight Be silent in that solitude Which is not loneliness, for then The Spirits of the dead who stood In life before thee are again In death around thee, and their will Shall overshadow thee: be still. - Edgar Allan Poe, Spirits ... Read More

The Myth Pool and a Draught of Perspective

By Dave Wilson

Categories: Fiction

By David Niall Wilson
I’m currently reading one of the most recent novels by Stephen King, Lisey’s Story, which is a twist on the old writer writing a story about a writer plot. The story is about the widow of a writer, and is full of insights from an odd perspective. The perspective, in this [...]

By David Niall Wilson I'm currently reading one of the most recent novels by Stephen King, Lisey's Story, which is a twist on the old writer writing a story about a writer plot. The story is about the widow of a writer, and is full of insights from an odd perspective. The perspective, in this case, is that of an author, Stephen King, writing through the mind and eyes of a woman who was married to a horror writer. In other ... Read More

Details

By Robert Jones

Categories: forensics

R C Jones
In case some of you unpluggers might someday wish to write about a situation involving a shooting, some information about firearm identification might come in handy. First, a bit of basic background. For the sake of brevity, I will limit the discussion to handguns, that is, to revolvers and semi-automatic pistols. [...]

R C Jones In case some of you unpluggers might someday wish to write about a situation involving a shooting, some information about firearm identification might come in handy. First, a bit of basic background. For the sake of brevity, I will limit the discussion to handguns, that is, to revolvers and semi-automatic pistols. Both fire cartridges each of which comprises a casing, within which is held an explosive powder, a bullet held in the forward end of the casing, ... Read More

HE’S A (BLANK) WRITER

By Bill Lindblad

Categories: books

(Since we have not yet replaced the inestimable Dick Hill in the SU lineup, I have this extra essay penned by our own “Alienmotives” Bill Lindblad on hand for just such an occasion. Thanks Bill)
by William Lindblad
Pigeonholing happens. It’s easy for people to make categories and slip individuals into one of the slots [...]

(Since we have not yet replaced the inestimable Dick Hill in the SU lineup, I have this extra essay penned by our own "Alienmotives" Bill Lindblad on hand for just such an occasion. Thanks Bill) by William Lindblad Pigeonholing happens. It’s easy for people to make categories and slip individuals into one of the slots or another. Whether it is a good thing or a bad thing is arguable, and the answer you’ll get changes depending on the person to whom ... Read More

TAKE THIS JOB AND…

By Wayne Allen Sallee

Categories: Writers

Wayne Allen Sallee
Brian Knight’s comment about his coworker in his entry of a few days back got me to thinking. No one at my job really brought up the process of how, say, WITH WOUNDS STILL WET, was published when I had paraded copies around. Certainly, I had back-up to my writing credentials, [...]

Wayne Allen Sallee Brian Knight’s comment about his coworker in his entry of a few days back got me to thinking. No one at my job really brought up the process of how, say, WITH WOUNDS STILL WET, was published when I had paraded copies around. Certainly, I had back-up to my writing credentials, having been interviewed by CHICAGO magazine, the Daily Southtown, and the Chicago Sun-Times–the latter as I stood naked outside my basement shower on Memorial Day, it must’ve ... Read More

Explain Yourself - or Bikini Waxing Your Way to Fame and Fortune

By Brian Knight

Categories: Writing

by Brian Knight
This happens to me all the time, so I should be well prepared for it by now, but it still catches me off guard every time. It’s the question everyone seems to pose to me after finding out I’m a writer (that is if they don’t head for the hills when they [...]

by Brian Knight This happens to me all the time, so I should be well prepared for it by now, but it still catches me off guard every time. It’s the question everyone seems to pose to me after finding out I’m a writer (that is if they don’t head for the hills when they find out what I write). This last time it came from an unexpected source, an extremely religious co-worker who couldn’t make it past page 1 of Hacks (I ... Read More