Monthly Archives: May 2012

Book Review of FLUX and interview with author, Mark Faulkner

Author, Mark Faulkner, sent me a copy of his  horror novel, Flux. I love the cover and (you can’t tell from the picture) its small size. It’s diminutive in all the best ways–just the right size to slip in a bag or largish back pocket. I love books I can carry around with me. Here is the description from Goodreads, so you know the type of story we are talking about.

Iain is looking forward to the weekend when a number nineteen bus shatters his body, but broken bones are the least of his worries. In this disturbing, yet darkly funny novel, Iain’s near death experience is not a vision of exquisite godliness with light at the end of a tunnel. Instead he experiences a place of darkness and heat, inhabited by foul creatures, the sounds of suffering and a beast. During a long recovery Iain becomes plagued by nightmares and premonitions, shadowy apparitions, a magpie, and a vile old man. They all have a message, that something wants Iain and it won’t give up easily. Iain’s friends do their best to cheer him up in ways they know how, until the unexpected events of one sunny afternoon mean that he is on his own, caught up in the age old battle of good versus evil.

This is unquestioningly a horror novel. There are some scenes that are, frankly, stomach turning. Most involve Bertie and/or feces in some way, yuck (to both of them). But that’s the type of book this is and it shouldn’t be off-putting. If you pick up a horror novel, you should expect some gore and horror. You get plenty of both in Flux.

The book does drag at times. Iain spends a lot of time sobbing in bed and sitting at bus stops. But it isn’t enough to put you to sleep, and does serve to highlight the action in contrast. Plus, in Iain’s situation I think I would do the same. So maybe it’s just realism.

There are some really interesting characters here. Iain’s two best buds I loved instantly. Beer guzzling, moderately aimless lads in their early twenties who, if I was in my late sixties, I would describe as ‘good boys.’ Though less ostensibly horrific, I felt sorrier for Dave than Iain. You’ll have to read the book to know why.

This is a classic novel of light versus dark, good versus evil, sane versus insane. Possibly more the last than the first, but that’s an ontological question that I think the book forces you to address. It keeps you guessing, you’re never sure what will leap out at you (and poor Iain) next.

There are a few grammar/typo type mistakes, but not enough to be particularly distracting. I think it is well worth picking up, and if you are a particular fan of horror it’s one you won’t want to miss.
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Mark was also kind enough to swing by our digital alcove and answer a few questions.

Mark, thank you for being here. I really liked the premise of Flux. Do you remember where the idea  came from? Was there an initial spark?

I have always had loads of ideas floating around in my head! I think Flux started with me writing a paragraph about someone’s life balancing on the edge of a knife and it evolved from there.  That first paragraph is still sitting on my laptop somewhere but didn’t make the story.

Flux is a battle of biblical proportions for Iain, but is it actually a biblically based text? Would you consider it to be a religious novel?

No, not at all.  I think I’d be strung up if I said it was!  However, religion does offer a lot of interesting concepts to draw inspiration from.  Weirdly, the main character in the next one is a monk.

My favorite characters where Dave and Gary. They’re everything women often want to kick lads for being, but they try so hard to do right by their buddy. How did you develop their characters?

I had fun with these.  They are an amalgamation of parts of several good friends and myself.  I tried to capture the essence of normal chap, including all the smelly bits.

Who is your favourite character and why?

Dirty Bertie.  For me, he represents chaos, anarchy and disorder but also free will…and he’s totally gross.

Good v. Evil, by Curua

There aren’t a lot of grey characters in this book. Good and Evil occupy fairly defined camps. Is there a character you would have trouble placing in one or the other?

Iain, because he’s caught up in the middle of it all.  Also his friends, Dave and Gary because they’re just normal blokes, with a mix of good and not so good in them, like all of us I guess.

Do you consider Flux to have a happy ending?

No.  I did however try to convey a glimmer of hope because I didn’t want to leave the reader feeling depressed.

I would have liked to see a little more of Tim and Dr. Goodman. What do you think their role in the book as?

Bit characters, sorry.  I have their whole life stories in my head, and I edited out a lot of their scenes because I wanted to keep with the main story.  Dr Goodman is the ambitious go getter but completely lacking in any spirituality.  I almost got rid of her completely but thought she was an integral part of the story.  Tim’s been worn down over the years and is starting to question his faith.  I left him in because I like him.  He’s also an interesting character for Iain to turn to.

I understand this is your first novel, what’s next? Any new project you want to tell us about?

I’m part way through drafting a dark fantasy, which is taking some interesting turns but might take quite a while.  I’m hoping to have it finished later in the year. There are also a couple of novella’s I have plotted but they’ll have to wait.

Have you always wanted to be an author?

For many years I wanted to be a musician and still play in a band, however, it wasn’t to be.  I’ve always daydreamed a lot though, and on occasion over the years have begun to write something down and then thrown it away.  Then, when I met my partner she encouraged me to persevere.  I wrote a book for practice, just to see if I could.  I loved it but to be fair it was a bit rubbish, but I took the things I learned and set out to write something better, armed with the knowledge I could actually finish a novel.  I’m hoping the next one will be better again.  I learn well by trial and error so each time I write something new, I ask myself how I can improve.

How do you come up with such horrific scenes? Do you have a method?

tar pit bubbling

No method.  Inside my mind can be a pretty chaotic place and all kinds of stuff bubbles to the surface.  I thought it happened to everyone but after publishing Flux I’m not so sure.

Most of us aren’t lucky enough to start out as a novelist. What were/are you in your other life?

I do work but I don’t like to think about it. Writing for me is a way to break up the monotony of the daily grind, to allow my imagination free reign even if I can’t be doing what I want to do because of the working day.

What does your writing day look like?

I have to cram it in when I can.  I don’t have a schedule but try to do as much as I can whilst juggling work and life in general.  It can be frustrating because I write better early in the morning but start work at 7.  I try to set a very modest word count each day but often miss it.  I tend to have a lot of notes jotted down in a messy notebook though to type up when I get the chance.

Is there an author you take particular inspiration from?

Without wanting to sound pretentious, I get inspiration from almost everything I read with possibly the exception of Bram Stoker.  I’m currently struggling through Dracula.

When I was writing my first book, I read the Painted Man by Peter V Brett.  It blew me away and I told myself, I want to be that good.  That helped to push me. I also recently re-read the Fog by James Herbert and thought, Shite, I write a bit like him.  So, I guess I’ll say him too because I’ve read a lot of his books, but mainly in my youth.  I think something must have rubbed off.

If I could write as well as either of the above, I’d be a very happy man.

Can I just say, thank you for having me.
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Thanks for being here Mark. I really did enjoy the book and look forward to your take on a monk.

Guest post and launch party from Graham Parke of Unspent Time fame

As you probably know, to become an internationally best-selling author, you need to sell three books. This is not an easy task, but once you’ve managed to rack up these three sales, the rest is more or less a done deal.

Now, these sales themselves will not put you on the best-seller lists. They wonít even put you within a million spots of the bottom of the lists, but what they will do, and what they do every time, is spark a slowly growing buying frenzy that will get you there.

These three people will love your book, they will tell another five people, who in turn tell another seven. Within roughly four-and-a-half weeks, you finally make your first million.

That ís how it happens. Every single time.

But, how does an author tackle this monumental task? Where does he find these three readers?

I myself was quite lucky. When my first novel appeared on Amazon I already knew over five people! What ís more, some of these people even liked me, somewhat. So I set out to become an internationally best-selling author by convincing at least three of these five people to buy my novel.

I started with my mother. Of all the five people I knew, I probably knew her the longest. I showed her my Amazon page and she nodded approvingly. She did not, however, make any attempts to buy a copy. So I logged on for her, navigated back to my novel’s page, and left the mouse pointer conveniently positioned over the BUY button.

She read the novel description again, searched-inside-this-book, and nodded some more. When I asked her if she’d like to buy a copy, she scrunched up her nose and said;

But what if I don’t like it?

I told her not to worry. It ís a really good book, I said. I should know. I’ve re-written it like 50 times. It ís really funny and interesting.

My mother wasnít convinced. I’m not really into comedy writing, though, she said.

It’s not just a comedy, I pointed out. It has a real story; it’s a mystery. And it has twists and turns and believable characters.

My mother hesitated. Maybe I should just play it safe and buy another Stephen King novel.

I ended up having to offer a personal money-back guarantee, and purchase a copy using my own credit card for the time being, but she finally cracked. I’d made my first sale!

Next, I prodded my wife. Although she did like words in general, she wasn’t sure she was up for reading and entire book full of them. Is this like your usual stuff? she wanted to know.

What usual stuff?

She shrugged. I don’t know. Is it like listening to you talk?

What ís wrong with they way I talk?

Nothing. It’s just, well, sometimes you talk a lot of nonsense.

I waved it away. Don’t worry, I said. I am much more interesting and intelligible on paper.

Long story short; my second sale is almost in the bag. Now I just need to find one more person to buy my novel, and I’ll be set for life!

Bio:

Graham Parke is responsible for a number of technical publications and has recently patented a self-folding map. He has been described as both a humanitarian and a pathological liar. Convincing evidence to support either allegation has yet to be produced.

www.grahamparke.com

You can win a Kindle Fire by buying any of his novels during May 2012:

Unspent Time (Kindle)

Unspent Time (eBook other formats)

No Hope for Gomez (paperback)

Unspent Time (paperback)

Just e-mail your receipt to NoHopeForGomez@gmail.com

Unspent Time Launch Party

Get free books and win a Kindle Fire or a Kindle Touch


Warning: reading this novel may make you more attractive and elevate your random luck by about 9.332%*
(* These statements have not been evaluated by any person of consequence!)

From the award winning author of ëNo Hope for Gomez!í comes a collection of impossible tales. Permeating the cracks between the past and the present is the realm of Unspent Time; time that was allotted but never spent. This is where we find the stories that could have been true.
Read how to enter below. Excerpt The tentacles hovered in the air for only an instant, then came crashing down again, straight at her. She could only stare at them in fear; there was no time to react. And yet, they missed again. Only by millimeters, but they missed. However, she felt pain all over her body. Her back and head throbbed as if she’d been beaten.Then the tentacles withdrew. They disappeared behind the precipice silently. That’s when Kiala realized she was lying on her back, several meters inland from the jetty.”That was close,” said a breathy voice.Kiala whirled round to find a boy standing behind her. He was tall and slender, handsome in a mysteriously odd kind of way, with pale skin that was close to translucent and eyes that were bright and piercing. As she struggled to get up, she felt the boy’s gaze move right through her. The boy’s eyes were also red-rimmed with deep, dark rings around them.Truth be told, he looked a bit sickly.”Are you alright?” Kiala blurted out.

“Me?” The boy caught his breath. He brushed some imaginary dust and some very real tentacle slime from his cape and said, “I just saved your life. I should be asking you that question.”

“I know,” Kiala said. “And I can’t thank you enough for what you just did, but, well.” She gave him a sympathetic smile. “You look awfully pale, as if you might collapse at any moment. ”

The boy snorted. He made his cape catch an invisible breeze so it wrapped around him dramatically. “Are you kidding me?” He lowered his voice to a menacing whisper. “I’m Waywick III of the flying cannibal clan of the lost city of Vark. I’m a creature of dusk and twilight. I’m an unholy spirit of death!”

“No, you’re not,” Kiala said. She rubbed at her back, where he’d apparently dragged her over some pretty pointy rocks.

“Excuse me?” Waywick gave her a baffled look. “Of course I am!”

Kiala rolled her eyes at him. “Well, you don’t look all that dead and unholy to me. You just look a bit pale, that’s all.”

“I never said I was dead,” Waywick bristled. “I just said I was a flying cannibal and an unholy spirit of death. That doesn’t mean that I am dead.” He shook his head at her. “It just means that I’m very, very dangerous.”

“Sure,” Kiala said. “Again, though, you don’t look all that dangerous.”

Waywick opened his cape wide and puffed out his chest. “Then perhaps you should take a closer look.”

Kiala decided not to, instead she searched for her rod. She’d dropped it during the attacks. It lay wedged between two boulders a few meters away.

“I don’t know,” she told Waywick. “Anyone can look pale, thin, and sickly, that doesn’t automatically mean that they’re dangerous.” She checked the rod for surface damage and was relieved to find it in good condition. “In fact,” she continued, “it usually means exactly the opposite.”

… continued in Unspent Time, nominated for GoodReads Laugh out Loud book of 2012

How to enter:
For the launch of the new novel I decided to discount it to $0.99 for today (PC and eBook), give away some exclusive content, and raffle off two Kindles. All entrants will get:

  • An exclusive spin-off novelette (not available for purchase anywhere!)
  • Making of Gomez: behind the scenes eBook
  • Signature for their paperback or kindle edition
  • Chance to win a Kindle Fire or a Kindle Touch

(Prizes can be traded for Amazon gift certificates if you already own them.)
Just email your receipt to nohopeforgomez@gmail.com to enter.
Each purchase counts, so stock up on birthday presents (for people you don’t like that much, for instance) The discount ends today, but be sure to send the receipts no later than June 1st.


(Or order the books from any bookstore.)
Coupon code for today: ZB77D

And then get by ing about your purchase and another by mentioning it on facebook

Sound bites from Unspent Time:

ìI’m looking into my past lives. I’m convinced some of them still owe me money.î

ìI’m very polite by nature, even the voices in my head let each other finish their sentences.î

ìI didnít actually want to do it,î Kiala told the boy. ìThe universe just kind of conspired to force me to make a fool of myself. It does that quite a lot, actually.î

ìSadly, my socks are like snowflakes, no two are exactly alike.î

Here’s what reviewers had to say:

“A veritable page turner of nonstop laughs!” — Reader Views
“An unputdownable read. a Coens Brothers’ film in book form.” — BookReview.com
ìExtremely witty and clever writing.î — California Chronicle
“A Party for your Brain!” — Warren Baxter

Bio:

Graham Parke is responsible for a number of technical publications and has recently patented a self-folding map. He has been described as both a humanitarian and a pathological liar. Convincing evidence to support either allegation has yet to be produced.
No Hope for Gomez! was voted GoodReads Funniest Read of 2010

www.grahamparke.com
www.grahamparke.blogspot.com
GoodReads
Facebook

Need a new book to read? Check out these giveaways.

Though it may not feel like it here in the NW of England, Summer is quickly approaching. If your stack of Summer reads is looking a little drawn, why not check out some of these lovely blogs who are all hoping to help you solve the problem. Each has a fabulous giveaway running as we speak…or type…or read. 

RaeBeth McGee over at The Writing World  is giving away 8 ebooks. The event will run from May 6th to May 13th. On the 14th, The Writing World’s birthday… the winner will be chosen. This giveaway is open to everyone with the ability to read an eBook.

 

Well, every day in May Aside from Writing will be featuring a book of the day of May, with synopsis a mini author interview, and  a giveaway. One lucky person will get the chance to win a whole load of YA books by the authors featured in the event.

 

The Spring Fling blog hop over at Lauries paranormal Thoughts and reviews has 4 separate giveaways for you. Enter any or all.   Three are open internationally. All the digital books will be delivered via email or via a Smashwords coupon code for a free download, unless specifically indicated differently.

 

Laurie also has a copy of The Weeping Empress up for grabs on her Non-paranormal  Thoughts and Review page. There is also a character interview, and excerpt from the book. It is open until May 30th.

 

Thebookplex is having their second mega giveaway, and it is MEGA. Their giving away multiple copies of close to 20 different ebooks!

 

For the next three weeks The Reading Diva is having a giveaway to celebrate her 100 blog post. She is giving away 17 awesome books.  

 

 

And of course, how could I not include this one:

 

Goodreads Book Giveaway

The Weeping Empress by Sadie S. Forsythe

The Weeping Empress

by Sadie S. Forsythe

Giveaway ends May 08, 2012.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win