Category Archives: Books

We’ve Got Loki All Wrong

We’re going to take a short break from dinosaurs today to help celebrate a different book. The Songweaver’s Vow is by Laura VanArendonk Baugh. You should recognise her name by now (and not just because it stands out LoL) because I’m a pretty big fan of hers and have been lucky enough to work with her on several occasions. On this occasion she wants to talk about Loki. I’ve been reading a lot about Loki (in particular because I just finished putting together Equus and Loki has that whole ‘turned into a horse’ thing goin’ on), but also because c’mon! It’s Loki!

 

We’ve Got Loki All Wrong

by Laura VanArendonk Baugh

Photo by Gage Skidmore
Photo by Gage Skidmore

Loki is kind of a big deal.

From Diana Wynne Jones’ Eight Days of Luke to Neil Gaiman’s American Gods to Marvel’s Avengers films and comic Agent of Asgard, Loki has captured the modern imagination like no other Norse figure. And yes, Thor, sorry, but I’m including you in that. You may be Marvel’s nominal hero, but do you have your own imagine-pr0n Tumblrs? (Okay, you know what, you probably do, because Tumblr. Let’s just move on.)

Because Loki has been so popularly reimagined, however, it can be hard to get an authentic take on him. Even when he is the villain, he usually ends up something of an anti-hero, or at least a sympathetic and attractive villain. (See the Marvel cinematic universe for Exhibit A.)

A playwright friend who adapted Treasure Island for the stage commented to me on how difficult it was to “translate,” because the original audience viewed the pirates as villains while today’s audience (influenced by Pirates of the Caribbean, etc.) views the pirates as the heroes. That’s much the same thing here. Don’t get me wrong, I’m a big fan of Tom Hiddleston too! but this is not that Loki.

In the source material, Loki is not an anti-hero. He is a – what’s this blog rated? – he’s a turdblossom.

A Force of Destruction

1280px-Loki_taunts_BragiThough Loki is often canonically found in Asgard, he’s not a god. The word Jötunn is often translated “giant,” but that’s not terribly accurate; Loki and his kind are actually “devourers.” They are destroyers. They are the chaos to counter the order of Asgard.

And so all the crazy antics for which we know Loki best are not merely amusing tales – turning into a female horse and getting pregnant by a stallion, tethering a goat to his testicles, insulting all the gods and their guests in order – but a deliberate overturning of everything the original audience would have held as honorable and just and comprehensible. And Loki isn’t doing it to make a point, not seeking social justice or questioning social norms, he’s doing it because it’s his nature to tear down and it is fun – even when it has dire personal consequences.

I never planned for this book to give Loki a major role, because so many Norse-based stories are Loki-centric. But in the end, he had more to do with it all than I’d intended, because the one thing you can count on from Loki is that he will do whatever is least intended and most inconvenient.

When Euthalia’s father trades her to Viking raiders, her best hope is to be made a wife instead of a slave. She gets her wish – sort of – when she is sacrificed as a bride to a god.

Her inhuman husband seems kind, but he visits only in the dark of night and will not allow her to look upon him. By day Euthalia becomes known as a storyteller, spinning ancient Greek tales to entertain Asgard’s gods and monsters.

When one of her stories precipitates a god’s murder and horrific retribution, Euthalia discovers there is a monster in her bed as well. Alone in a hostile Asgard, Euthalia must ally with a spiteful goddess to sway Odin himself before bloody tragedy opens Ragnarok, the prophesied end of the world.

The Songweaver’s Vow released Tuesday, February 21, and is available at Amazon and wherever books are sold.

 

Elemental-5252-webLaura VanArendonk Baugh overcame the dubious challenge of having been born without teeth or developed motor skills to become an award-winning writer of speculative fiction, mystery, and non-fiction. Her works have earned numerous accolades, including 3-star ratings (the highest possible) on Tangent’s “Recommended Reading” list. Laura speaks professionally on a variety of topics throughout the year, including writing, fan costuming, and her day job as a professional animal trainer and behavior consultant. Find her at www.LauraVanArendonkBaugh.com .

 

(Partial) 2017 Reading List

To be perfectly honest, I’m primarily making this blog post for myself LoL

A couple of weeks ago I asked my Facebook friends to recommend books for me to read in 2017 and said I’d add some of them to my reading list. Now that I’m pulled together a list out of their suggestions I wanted to have it one nice central location with links to those books on Goodreads. I could totally do the list in meatspace, but the links require something online and so this blog post has been born.

Besides, maybe you want to join me in reading some of these?

In no particular order the books I’ve added to my reading list based on the suggestions of my Facebook friends are:

Phew! I’d only intended to add twenty of the books people suggested to this list to leave lots of room for random books I come across and want to read, friend’s novels, that sort of thing… but I couldn’t quite whittle this one down to less than twenty four. For example, someone suggested I read ‘Something by Daniel José Older’ and then when I started looking at all his books I couldn’t choose just one, so he’s actually on this reading list four times O_o Similarly, I couldn’t decide between the two books by Anne-Marie McLemore that I’ve included on here.

I added something from every person who took the time to suggest something to me. As a result, a few of these books don’t really look like they are “my thing” but I’ve been surprised many times before. I will give all of these a fair shot. I don’t finish books I’m not enjoying and I’ve been known to step away within just a few pages but I promise to give each of these at least 20 pages. We’ll see how that goes 🙂

*funny story. I bought the sequel to this when it came out without realising it was a sequel. I’ve meant to pick up this book for forever but my TBR pile is high and my memory imperfect. This reading list will help with at least one of those things 😉

**one of my friends (I forget who) described this as the most disturbing book they’ve ever read. I’ve wanted to read it ever since but never got around to it. Now I will.

***The books suggested were actually #2 and #3 in this series and though Goodreads assures me they work well as standalone novels I just can’t bring myself to start a series in the middle.

AB = Audiobook. These are stories I hope to listen to rather than read.

2016 Eligibility Post

If you are nominating for industry awards this year please consider the following works of mine which I published in 2016:

WomenInPracticalArmorShort Story:

Sharper Than a Griffin’s Claw, Women in Practical Armor, March 2016

Where I come from they say there are a finite number of souls and after death each goes to a great repository to await another vessel to fill. By that reasoning, if one were to live forever, they would encounter the same souls over and over again…

Anthology / Related Works:

SIRENS -- cover by Jonathan C. ParrishSirens, World Weaver Press, April 2016

Sirens are beautiful, dangerous, and musical, whether they come from the sea or the sky. Greek sirens were described as part-bird, part-woman, and Roman sirens more like mermaids, but both had a voice that could captivate and destroy the strongest man. The pages of this book contain the stories of the Sirens of old, but also allow for modern re-imaginings, plucking the sirens out of their natural elements and placing them at a high school football game, or in wartime London, or even into outer space.

Featuring stories by Kelly Sandoval, Amanda Kespohl, L.S. Johnson, Pat Flewwelling, Gabriel F. Cuellar, Randall G. Arnold, Micheal Leonberger, V. F. LeSann, Tamsin Showbrook, Simon Kewin, Cat McDonald, Sandra Wickham, K.T. Ivanrest, Adam L. Bealby, Eliza Chan, and Tabitha Lord, these siren songs will both exemplify and defy your expectations.

Cover art and design by Jonathan C. ParrishC is for Chimera, Poise and Pen Publishing, April 2016

This installment of Rhonda Parrish’s alphabet anthology series asks skilled storytellers to write around the theme of chimera. The resulting tales are part fable, part poem, part dream. But like any chimera, the parts make up a greater whole.

Blend reality with fantasy. Mesh science fiction with mystery. Mix history with what should have been. They are all chimera.

A shadow tells a tale of schoolyard bullies. A long-vanished monster returns from the cold dark. Make-up makes up a life. Alchemy, Atlantis, and apocalypse. These 26 tales bring both chaos and closure to dark and elusively fantastic geographies.

 

If you are qualified to nominate for awards (of any flavour) and you’d like a copy of any of these works in order to read and consider them, please email me. I will be more than happy to provide what I can.

Servants of Fate

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Wendy Sparrow has a sweet holiday treat for you. Her Servants of Fate series — three paranormal romance titles — is available today! These are three PG-rated romance stories which each feature a different one of Father Time’s hunky (but kinda clueless) sons.

As servants of Fate, Father Time’s sons must sacrifice a mortal’s lifetime on behalf of humanity before each year ends. It’s simpler if they don’t get involved, as their immortality is a barrier to relationships and to understanding the emotions of those whose lives end in a blink, especially if these time holders have a hand in it. Servants of Fate pass in and out of the lives of those around them, never interacting, until a different type of fate steps in. They can stop time, but love will leave them powerless.

The series is available for one low price from Amazon or, if you’ve got Kindle Unlimited you can read them for free!

Get them now!

Ghosts — by SG Wong

My friend, and fellow Edmonton author, SG Wong released the third book in her Lola Stark series this week so I invited her to share a guest post on my blog to help celebrate (because writing is a team sport, yo!).

Sandra’s Lola Stark novels are an interesting mix of hard-boiled detective-y noir-y goodness and paranormal fiction (because ghosts!). The series began with Die on Your Feet, continued with In For a Pound and the newest installment is Devil Take the Hindmost. Read about what Sandra has to say about the inspiration for the ghost in her story, and then check out her books by clicking the links below!

 

The Idea of Ghosts…

A Guest Blog by SG Wong

 

I set the Lola Starke series in a 1930s alternate-history Los Angeles, which I named Crescent City for the shape of its bay. The idea of Lola and the City grew from my love of hard-boiled fiction by the likes of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. I made the femme fatale the PI and re-imagined the city of Chandler’s iconic shamus, Philip Marlowe, as a Chinese metropolis. And I purposefully left Lola a non-Chinese character in order to explore her place as the Other in her own hometown.

I could’ve stopped there, of course. I had plenty of angles to ponder and explore, not to mention plan and execute. But then the idea of ghosts came up…

And from an unexpected source, no less.

One day, many years ago, my mum called to tell me she’d been to a medium, a spiritualist who specialized in connecting the living with the dearly departed. She’d gone to visit this medium with her former landlord, Mrs. Wong, who’d also referred my mum.

Now, Mum is a devout follower of Chinese ancestor veneration, so in her heart, she believes that my father resides in the afterlife. (He died in 2000.) She regularly makes offerings in the name of his spirit and she’s even burned a copy of my first book for him—with my blessing—as offerings from the land of the living travel to our dead ancestors via flames and faith.

I’m a believer in reincarnation, though, so she and I disagree on where Dad is at the moment. And in my case, that there even is a “Dad” anymore. As far as I’m concerned, my father’s spirit has moved on to another life.

However, I am also—more often than not, I hope—a dutiful daughter. So when she said, “I visited a medium today and I spoke with Dad,” I replied, “Oh?” in what I’m proud to say was a very mild tone indeed.

“Yes and he’s very happy, honey. He says he’s very content.” My mother cried when she told me that. I started to cry too.

Then she said, “He’s with Mr. Wong.” And my tears dried up.

She wasn’t, of course, talking weirdly about my father. No, as I mentioned, the Mrs. Wong with whom my mum had visited the medium was a former landlord. Her husband, Mr. Wong, had died a few years before my father had. I hadn’t known Mr. Wong well at all. I’d been living abroad when my parents had moved to that apartment. But I did know that my father had—and pardon my bluntness here—detested his former landlord. Just couldn’t stand the man. I’d heard Dad complain many times about Mr. Wong in clear and vociferous terms. I knew Mum had heard it even more than I had.

So why the hell would my father be hanging out with his hated landlord in the afterlife?

My suspicious little brain really got whirring then. This so-called medium was nothing but a sham. Some crooked grifter looking to profit off the misery of the grieving. And I got angry. I remember my face flushing really, really hot with it. Just what had Mrs. Wong got my mum into? And how much had it cost her? I can still feel the scowl on my face as I opened my mouth to grill Mum on the particulars.

Then it hit me.

Mum had cried when she said Dad was happy. She’d cried because she was happy.

In a rush, I remembered why I never argued with her whenever she talked about Dad in the afterlife. Because she was comforted by the idea that Dad had found joy and contentment after his death, things that he’d had such trouble finding while he lived. Her relief was a profound and precious thing. Who the hell was I to trample on it?

So I clamped my mouth shut, took a deep breath, and I said, “That’s great, Mum. I’m glad Dad’s happy.”

(And just so you know I’m no candidate for sainthood, I admit I also added, “What a funny coincidence that he’d be with Mr. Wong, though, eh? Just when you were at the medium with Mrs. Wong. That’s handy.” I know, I know: BAD Sandra.)

At any rate, that whole conversation got me thinking about death and grief, and about the nature of sorrow and comfort. Religion and spirituality offer solace to many of us when we grieve. Yet, we all know people who are haunted by deaths, unable to let go of beloved relatives or lovers or friends. We all know people burdened by deaths that are hard to accept and impossible to understand. Sometimes, we are those people.

I wondered, what if ghosts could haunt people for the best of reasons? To offer comfort and guidance and love. To continue a story that would otherwise be over. Wouldn’t that be something?

With Crescent City, I created a society in which ghosts are a normal part of…life. And death. A dying person can choose to be tethered magically to a living host in a ceremony. It’s usually done out of love, although there are exceptions…

Oh, right. Magic. In Crescent City, magic is performed only by those with the talent to see and use ghosts. There are different categories of talents, but hosts aren’t automatically magic users and those who are not magically-talented can only hear their own ghost, not see them.

Of course, I’m a crime fiction writer, remember? A fan of hard-boiled and noir stories where bad things happen to good people. So I handicapped Lola with no talent for magic and a ghost she can’t abide.

…Did I forget to mention one of my favourite sayings? “Life is hard and then you die.”

 


 

Die On Your Feet

In For A Pound

Devil Take the Hindmost

Women in Practical Armor

WomenInPracticalArmorIf women in fantasy are capable and intelligent enough to lead in battle, wouldn’t they also be intelligent enough to protect their abdomens, tie their hair back, and cover their faces in battle?

Edited by Ed Greenwood and Gabrielle Harbowy, this anthology of eighteen short stories showcases an already empowered female warrior who knows how to handle herself in battle. Take charge of your fantasy reading with Women In Practical Armor!

Steve Bornstein – “Serendipity”
Cassandra Rose Clarke – “A Night in New Verashtin”
Erik Scott de Bie – “King’s Shield”
Kristy Griffin Green – “The Family Business”
Amy Griswold – “The Raven and the Swans”
Sarah Hendrix – “Hero of Ithar”
Crystal Lynn Hilbert – “Stone Woken”
Chris A. Jackson – “First Command”
Mary Robinette Kowal – “The Bound Man”
Eric Landreneau – “Pride and Joy”
Wunji Lau – “No Better Armor, No Heavier Burden”
Todd McCaffrey – “Golden”
Rhonda Parrish – “Sharp as a Griffin’s Claw”
Anya Penfold – “The Lioness”
Mary Pletsch – “The Blood Axe”
Alex C. Renwick – “Ravenblack”
David Szarzynski – “Armor the Color of War”
Judith Tarr – “Attrition”

It’s out! It’s out! See that bolded name up there? That’s mine! I am so stoked about this.

My contribution is an Aphanasian story that includes some new and some familiar (*cough* Bayne *cough*) characters.

And readers are enjoying it. Check out this review:

“An unusual love story unfolds between an imp and a half-elf in “Sharp as a Griffin’s Claw” by Rhonda Parrish. I liked the unusual protagonists in the story, and how they came to love each other. I really liked how each of them gave their all to the relationship, and each became much more than they would have been had they been alone. Very smartly told, and an awesome addition to Women in Practical Armor.”

Check out the full review of this anthology I’m SO proud to be a part of — http://www.my-sf.com/2016/08/29/women-in-practical-armor-edited-by-ed-greenwood-and-gabrielle-harbowy-anthology-review/

Buy It Now 🙂

Books About Writing

Jo was putting in an Amazon order the other day and asked if I needed anything. Which, I mean… I think we all know the answer to that right? But I thought about the huge pile of books sitting up on my ‘To Be Read’ shelf and the multitude of electronic titles I have waiting to be read and I decided to be responsible and say no. Then I had a flash of inspiration. “You know what I could use?” I said. “I could really use to replace my copy of On Writing.”

This is my copy of On Writing:

On Writing

It doesn’t look too bad, does it? Well, not until you look at it like this:

On Writing Pages

It’s water-stained and pretty beaten up.

For the record, I bought it second hand and it was like that when I bought it. It really was. But I wanted the book pretty badly so I paid actual, real money for it despite the condition it was in. And I’ve read it cover to cover at least three times since then, so, ya know, apparently the damage didn’t bother me all THAT much.

But now, thanks to Jo, I have this:

New On Writing

Which, as you’ll notice from my sexy paint chip bookmark, I’ve already started reading again.

And that got me thinking about ‘how to write’ books and how many I own. The answer to that question, in case you’re curious, is three:

IMG_0650

And I recommend every one.

On Writing by Stephen King is an amazing combination of autobiography and master class on writing. Like I said, I’ve read it at least three times cover to cover and I’m on my way through it again. I find this book super inspiring. It never fails to get me fired up about writing again on days when I’m just not feeling it.

Steering the Craft by Ursula K. LeGuin is fantastic. I’m not done reading it — I’m working my way through it with my ‘Mutinous Crew’ and life has been getting in our ways a lot lately, but what I have read has been great, and the writing exercises are interesting (which is more than can be said for most writing exercises, amirite?). This book has also added several titles to my TBR list and the ones I’ve read have been whole lessons in themselves.

Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass is phenomenal. I don’t know if you can see in this picture but I’ve got tons and tons of Post-it notes marking sections of this book. I feel like I’ve internalized a lot of the lessons but then every time I go back to skim through something or another I learn (or re-learn) new things.

For myself it’s important that I spend more time writing rather than learning about writing (because reading about writing is just another form of procrastination for me, and I am already the freaking queen of procrastination) so the ‘Books about Writing’ section in my library must remain small, but these three titles come with the highest of recommendations from me and I can’t imagine that I’ll ever part with them.

What about you? What does your ‘Books about Writing’ section look like?

ETA: Oh! I also have a copy of Story: Substance, Structure, Style and the Principles of Screenwriting by Robert McKee on my e-reader, but I haven’t read it yet.

The Sound of Sirens

Sirens Blog Tour

For this, the final entry into the Sirens blog tour, I’d like to leave you with something amazing — The Sound of Sirens. This podcast was created by Cat McDonald and edited by Nick Acheff to celebrate the launch of Sirens so we affectionately refer to it as our launchcast 🙂

When Cat and I first started discussing the possibility of creating this launchcast I said, “I like this podcast-style idea you have. Do you have any experience dealing with audio editing or anything of the like? Because I don’t LOL So while I’m happy to solicit recordings from people and such, I don’t have the skills to turn it into something cohesive & I’d need someone else to take the lead on that. Could that person be you?”

Cat’s response after a couple more emails was “I baaaaasically can’t be stopped.”

She meant it.

Cat put together an amazing line-up of Siren-y interviews and readings. I’m biased. Of course I’m biased. But it’s true. Check it out:

One of my favourite things about this launchcast was hearing the variety of accents of my contributors. It made it so real to me, like nothing else ever has, now very multi-national this (and every one of my anthologies) book is. Please listen and enjoy The Sound of Sirens.

And thank you Cat. This is a gift. To me, to everyone, and I really can’t say thank you enough.


SIRENS -- cover by Jonathan C. Parrish

Buy It Now!

World Weaver Press

Amazon

Kobo

B & N

Sirens!

Sixteen siren songs that will both exemplify and defy your expectations.

 

SIRENS -- cover by Jonathan C. Parrish

I have been talking about this anthology for months and months but it’s finally here so for today I’m going to shut up and just let it speak for itself 🙂

Sirens are beautiful, dangerous, and musical, whether they come from the sea or the sky. Greek sirens were described as part-bird, part-woman, and Roman sirens more like mermaids, but both had a voice that could captivate and destroy the strongest man. The pages of this book contain the stories of the Sirens of old, but also allow for modern re-imaginings, plucking the sirens out of their natural elements and placing them at a high school football game, or in wartime London, or even into outer space.

Featuring stories by Kelly Sandoval, Amanda Kespohl, L.S. Johnson, Pat Flewwelling, Gabriel F. Cuellar, Randall G. Arnold, Michael Leonberger, V. F. LeSann, Tamsin Showbrook, Simon Kewin, Cat McDonald, Sandra Wickham, K.T. Ivanrest, Adam L. Bealby, Eliza Chan, and Tabitha Lord.

 

Get It Now!

Direct from World Weaver Press

Amazon

Kobo

B & N

 

AmberEScott-Blurb

 

Also, check this out! One of the Sirens contributors, Cat McDonald has put together an amazing thing we’re calling the launchcast. It’s an amazing recording that features several Sirens authors reading excerpts of their stories alongside a couple author interviews. Cat is the amazing host and I the fairly competent co-host, and we hope you’ll enjoy listening as much as we enjoyed recording it.

 

or

The Sound of Sirens on Dropbox

 

Haunted Hospitals Cover

I wasn’t going to share this just yet because my bio on the Amazon page is wrong (I haven’t lived in Calgary for 36 years) but I can’t resist 🙂

Check. This. Out.

Haunted Hospitals

The cover for Mark and my book, Haunted Hospitals has been decided upon. What’s more, it’s all online and has a release date and everything! Exciting!

Making this move into non-fiction was definitely not easy but, thus far, it’s been a very positive and rewarding experience 🙂

 

p.s. I’m glad this is the cover which got used in the end. I liked the hospital beds option, thought it did a fantastic job of capturing the lonely, institutional feeling of a great many of these stories and the hospitals they are set in, but “Mary” captured my heart from the beginning. I love the colours, the imagery of an empty hallway (who knows where it leads?) and I think when it’s sized down to a thumbnail it will be much more legible than the beds.

p.p.s. I named this apparition Mary (and Mark was lovely enough to go along with it) because, as I frequently bemoaned on social media while I was researching this book, a disproportionately high number of female ghosts are named Mary. It makes me happy to see us continuing with that tradition 😉