Midnight Echo Issue #8: Table of Contents

The table of contents has just gone live for issue #8 of Midnight Echo, which includes my postapocalyptic offering “Pigroot Flat”. Just…just look at that list of authors! MY GOD. I’m so excited. Joe R Lansdale! Jack Ketchum! Various Aussies! 🙂 Plus of swag of non-fiction goodies and interviews. Nicely done Midnight Echo.

The Table of Contents:

Literature

A Visit With Friends by Joe R Lansdale
The Girl from the Borderlands by Felicity Dowker
Blissful Ignorance by Matthew Wedge
Hello Kitty by Jason Nahrung
Jar Baby by Michelle Jager (with artwork by Glenn Chadbourne)
The Boy With the Hole in his Heart by Caysey Sloan
They Don’t Know That We Know What They Know by Andrew J McKeirnan
Squirrely Shirley by Jack Ketchum and Lucky McKee (with artwork by David Schembri)
Always A Price by Joanne Anderton (AHWA Short Story winner 2012)
Blood Lillies by Shauna O’Meara (AHWA Flash Fiction winner 2012)
Tooth by Kathryn Hore
Pigroot Flat by Jason Fischer

Poetry

Gallows & Blooms by Andrew Alford
Insatiable by Stuart Olver
Coming Home by Marge Simon and Sandy DeLuca

Comic

Allure of the Ancients; The Key to His Kingdom – story by Mark Farrugia, illustrations by Greg Chapman

Special Features

In the Art, The Dark: Glen Chadbourne
Facts, fiction and fevers by Gary Kemble (non-fiction)
An Interview with Jack Ketchum
An Interview with Lee Battersby

Regular Features

A Word from the AHWA President – Geoff Brown
Tartarus – Danny Lovecraft (poetry column)
Pix and Panels – Mark Farrugia (comic column)
Black Roads, Dark Highways #3 – Andrew McKiernan (column)*
Sinister Reads (all the latest releases from AHWA members)

More info here, including pre-orders: http://midnightechomagazine.com/

Pimpy McPimperson presents: The Years Best Fantasy and Horror 2011

Pimpy McPimperson presents: The Years Best Fantasy and Horror 2011

Shipments of the Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2011 have just gone out to pre-order customers, and soon another gorgeous tome shall grace my bragshelf. My killer kangaroo story “Hunting Rufus” can be found therein, but why stop there? If it’s anything like last year’s volume, you will get:

  • more stories than you can poke a stick at. This year, it’s 32 stories from the brains of top-notch Aussie genre writers.
  • a great introductory essay giving an overview of Australian writing for the year – in my opinion this was worth the price of entry for the last volume.
  • A wider recommended reading list than just the stories in the book…this will help the completists amongst you to track down new quality reading material.
  • And a gorgeous cover apparently haunted by the still alive and kicking Kirstyn McDermott. Yeah, it’s just a passing resemblance. Still, the poor lady is going to hear about this for aaaages 🙂

So, what are you waiting for? Go and order you some delightful fiction via the links below. And as the title suggest, it’s only the best stuff, so there’s no filler here.

http://www.indiebooksonline.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=133
(both volumes of the YB and a 10% discount)

http://www.indiebooksonline.com/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=21&products_id=114
Year’s Best in paperback

http://www.indiebooksonline.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=115
Hardcover

Frame this, look at it daily: Diagram of the Writing Process

Frame this, look at it daily: Diagram of the Writing Process

The scarily brilliant Angela Slatter has whittled up this simple chart of her writing process. I’ve sat in on all sorts of weird and wonderful writing classes, groups, all of that schtick –  but I’ve never seen a writing workflow summed up so well.

Ponder this well, my padawans, because Angela Slatter? She’ll write your FACE off. The lady knows her biz.

The rest of the advice lies here: http://www.angelaslatter.com/reminder-to-self/

It’s all good :-)

For the first time in ages, I feel on top of this writing gig! I’m meeting my goals, I’m not overwhelmed by things, and the business side of things is set up and working smoothly. I’m approaching writing in a balanced and conservative way – allowing plenty of fallow down-time in between projects, but still coming up with the goods and meeting deadlines. Rather than the manic mad-puppy style that characterised my first few years behind the keyboard, I’m running on a quiet sort of excitement. For the first time, it’s not about the slapping out of fifty first drafts a year…it’s about writing work I’m proud of. Polishing, editing, loving the words. I feel like I’ve been missing that for a while, so it’s a welcome return.

A while back, I read through Jeff Vandermeer’s excellent Booklife, and while I probably don’t adhere to the lessons as much as I should, it all seems to be working well. I set some goals around about the time I read it, will have to dig them up and see if I stuck to them. From memory I wanted to diversify my writing income, and try out some different mediums. So far I’ll call that a success, with some comics, game writing and podcast stuff under my belt. There’s a novel coming out soon (more when it’s all official-like), and a collection on the horizon.

Probably best of all, I seem to have beaten writer envy for good – to be honest, I had a real problem with it for a while there. Now, I’m chipper whenever a buddy does well, and that energy has been redirected into positive ways. You can only be you, after all, and you can only control your own output. Sales, awards and accolades, you have power over none of these things. So why fret and grind your teeth? 🙂 Again, Booklife is a great resource.

Sometimes I think about legacies and what I hope to achieve by writing. And I still don’t know. I’m still stoked whenever I sell my words, doubly so whenever someone else chooses to spend their valuable time reading them. The only problem with toiling in the word mines is that it’s hard to see what’s going on around you, or which direction you’re digging in. A list of publications isn’t much of a gauge – for all I know I could be eventually known for love-yarns or children’s books. As a creator you’re only in charge of so much, and opportunities seem to shape a career as much as productivity.

I guess what I’m trying to say is this – things seem to go easier in life when you surrender control. Rather than building cement drains, I’m tipping water into valleys. Sure, water seems to follow the path of least resistance, but damn, rivers are interesting 🙂 Whatever plans I make, I’m pleasantly surprised when they turn out differently.

Hope your rivers run wild!

Your pal, the Fisch.