Post Nebula Awards Wrap-Up

Feb. 5 Photo Set

Bones of Starlight: Fire On All Sides, launch party
Mother Foucault’s Bookshop, Portland OR
February 5, 2016

Eva L. Elasigue
Vanessa MacLellan
Amos Val
Genesis Grey
Andy Vanoverberghe
et al.

Goodreads

Bones of Starlight: Fire On All Sides is now listed on the lively sharing platform known as Goodreads.

If you’re reading it, or you’re already done, please do rate the book or leave a review.  I would love to hear about it from you!

Screen Shot 2016-02-03 at 7.50.03 PM

The online store links do not yet work, but they will.  The distribution channels may take a various while to filter through (2 months for some), but it’s out of my hands now and that’s up to the process.

But you are now welcome to request the book at your local retailer through Ingram distributors, generally where new books are sold!

Release Date:  Friday, February 5 2016.
ISBN-10:  1-944416-02-1
ISBN-13:  978-1-944416-02-7

Book Inbound, Other Voyages & Sketch Note 19

The first limited bare bones printing of Bones of Starlight: Fire On All Sides is now en route to Friday Harbor, WA!  This is missing a few things I intend for the next printing, chiefly an index; but it does have a nice table of contents, which is currently still missing from the ebook.  With section titles, even. I’ll be there to pick it up sometime.

It’s a very short printing, 30 copies, one reserved for the Library of Congress.  Since they want one.  I’ll make a handful available at Mother Foucault’s Bookshop, I’ll let you know when.

Anyone willing to commit to a review, contact me at primal.spiral@gmail.com and you may get one of a few review copies.  Some will be made available online too, probably before the indexed Portals version comes in.  That, I intend to be the mass market edition with regards to content, though one more may come out with other cover art.  I’m so totally onto the next book, you guys.

And that’s book news.  Look for it by the new year.

But what else am I working on?  That partially depends on you:

Journey Hope Voice Island Sea
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/820546289/journey-hope-voice-island-sea

Journey Hope Voice Island Sea

Check out this kickstarter project and see if that’s appealing, this is a window to a depictive poetry series, space whale philosophy short stories, interdisciplinary travelogue and larger collaborations with educational & anecdotal materials. This retreat is the activation to bringing you these particular specialties, which I would like to if I’m able!

SKETCH NOTE 19

The look.  That look.

SN19

Section 18

88

A disheveled driver walked into a bar and took a seat by her favorite bartender. There were a couple occupied booths in the room, but otherwise it was an empty morning. The music was a cheerful rolling ballad at odds with her bereaved look.

“Hot Silver, please.”

“You got it. Been a long few weeks, has it? You were here just before Pyrean Midsummer, wasn’t it.” A smile played across his face as he began to heat and mix.

“Yeah. Actually I can’t think back that far right now. I just watched hundreds of uniforms ordered to fight something that would kill them. Using means completely unequal to the danger. I had the luxury of my own prerogative, so here I sit.” She looked out the window into a ray of sun for a breath while her drink began to steam behind the counter. She looked over doleful, yet matter of fact. “There are dragons at war.”

“You don’t say.” His tone remained light through a furrowed brow. He sprinkled spice over the top and delivered the cup to her hands.

“I wouldn’t if I didn’t have to.” Her head drooped over the cup as she inhaled the steam. Just as she began to close her eyes, someone yelled out from the kitchen.

“Hey Joe! Epic stack, look at this epic stack!”

Joe looked over at his loyal customer. “That’s our new dishwasher. He’s done it a few times, hasn’t broken one yet.” He patted the bar as he turned to go to the kitchen.

Looking sideways over her cup, Wendel murmured, “There’s a voice…”

Re-emerging, the bartender gestured to her. “You should come see this.” Collecting herself, Wendel took a breath and a sip and followed him in.

For a stack, it could be said to be epic. Largest pans and sheets on the bottom, going to smaller pans, to platters and appropriately-sized dishes with the occasional balancing item, to a rotating tower of mugs and cups that ended in a pyramid. Other words that came to mind were magnificent; unprecarious; commendable.

She looked over to appraise the stacker and was greeted with a smiling face. “It’s you,” said the boy, grinning with his mouth open.

She blinked at Toller, suddenly breathless. “Hey, it’s… it’s you too.” She gravitated toward him to hold him in her arms for a moment. “You got a job, I see?”

The boy poked Joe in the side. “I left the capital after the Aquari concert. That really capped off the whole experience for me. At the docks, I found a ship with room headed for Dalmeera, so.” He pointed to the stack of dishes.

Wendel turned to the bartender. “Joe I hate to tell you this, but your dishwasher is overqualified.”

He laughed. “Yeah, I know. I just figured I could get away with it for a little while.”

“Well, you’re good at doing it.” She smiled at the both of them and looked at the cup in her hand, still steaming. She looked back up at the boy. “Hey have you tried this stuff?”

Toller looked at Joe. “Well I’m not really old enough, no.”

Wendel tilted her head at the bartender. “Is he old enough?”

Joe eyed the stack of dishes, all clean. “He’s older than I was. He can have his own cup. Stay back here. And would you take that apart and put it away?” The last he said to Toller, who saluted.

Toller set a chair on the countertop beside it, showing how unprecarious the stack really was. He climbed on top and began filling his arms with the assorted dishware. “You didn’t take long to come back, either.”

She made a long sniff. “It all really depends.” She just watched him do his job. “So you remembered the place?”

“Actually I met Joe at the seadocks where they were bringing up shellfish. He seemed like someone I could hustle for work, and I was right. Man was carrying too much.” He laughed and laughed with the dishes. “He brought me back here and I knew where I was.”

Halfway down the stack, the bartender returned with one for the boy and one for him. They clinked mugs and held them together for a moment, looking at the pictures in steam and spice and silver.

Upon his first sip, Toller made a face like he just saw a beast. Then he looked into the cup. “Are you kidding me what is this?”

Joe savored his sip and lifted his head. “Just something good we make here.”

Wendel smacked her lips in agreement and ran her tongue over her teeth. “Well young one, I want to tell you. You’ve got options.”

“Oh, really?”

“Yeah, really. With me, for one.”

“I could be mad at you.” Joe wiggled his mug in the air.

Wendel took a long, appreciative sip. “And lose your favorite customer?”