Happy 2025!

Just checking in. It’s been awhile.

My story, The Stickmen, was picked up by From the Yonder magazine last year. It was supposed to come out in September. They advised me they were having technical difficulties and the edition was delayed. I’m beginning to wonder if it will ever come out. I have a special connection to The Stickmen. It’s adapted from a  childhood “memory” my mother related to me when I was younger. She swore it really happened but it sounded much like a dream.

I got two more acceptances in the past couple of weeks. Sybil Journal has picked up The Pearl Earring to be published in March. Sybil Journal is an online literary magazine which publishes poetry, fiction, essays, and many hybrid forms of art.

 It appeared in the Mystery Tribune in 2022, so I won’t get paid for it. But as my wife says, I do it for the fame.  You can find it here:

I also got an email from Rebellion Lit who are putting out an anthology which I think will be called Three Times the Fun. They said they wanted stories about some form of rebellion. They liked my story Final Escape. It’s about a woman who has been hit by her boyfriend one too many times. She ain’t taking it any more. Much to the said boyfriend’s dismay (and discomfort). It’s a follow-up to Escape to Paradise which appeared in Scarlet Leaf in January 2020 and The Chamber in June 2021. escape to paradise | Search Results | The Chamber Magazine

I recently received a rejection (lots of them) but with a personal note. The vast majority of my rejections are very nicely worded, obviously a form letter, but complimentary in some inexact way. This one was one of the few that also had a personal note from the editor. Those are my favorite because it’s nice to feel that someone actually took the time to think about what I wrote. They’re usually a feel-good moment, and this one was no exception.

Hi Curtis,

Thank you for your submission. Your story is well written and I enjoyed reading it, but it didn’t quite lead where I had hoped.

I would like to read more of your work, so I hope you will consider submitting again in the future (I don’t say that to everyone).

Happy New Year.

With gratitude,

XXX

I kinda felt like the story led to an obvious conclusion. I sent back an email thanking him for his kind words and asked where he thought the story should have gone. I’m not above a re-write. I’ve written several stories with different outcomes, then I send in the ones I like best.

Pen Names

A discussion came up recently over pen names. Several of the writers in my group who have work publicly available do it under a pen name. It never occurred to me to do that. I want credit for what I’ve produced. After plenty of thought I’ve linked it to my past. One of the hallmark symptoms seen in survivors of trauma is the “not good enough” syndrome. We seek recognition but always feel like we’re lacking in some way, just not good enough. I guess putting my name on my work is my way of saying, “See. I CAN do it. I AM good enough.”

Of the various reasons for pen names people gave in the group, the most reasonable to me was the one who is hiding from a vengeful ex. Using his own name was good enough for Stephen King, so it’s good enough for me.

And speaking of groups, I’ve just completed my first year with a local writing group. We meet weekly and it’s a lot of fun. I get plenty of thoughtful critiques which makes my work better, and I enjoy the camaraderie. There is so much laughter and caring in the room. So far I’ve presented stories with vampires, zombies, aliens, and people going mad. I’ve been dubbed the horror king by the group. I guess it’s time to embrace my destiny.

I guess I should sign off  my posts:

Horrifyingly yours,

Curtis

Now I Lay Me Down Again

I recently made another sale. Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep was picked up by the anthology December Tales II. Horror stories for Christmas, I guess. That makes Now I Lay Me my most popular story. It has been selected four times (Noise of a Quiet House, Terror House Press, The Chamber, December Tales II) plus got an enthusiastic thumbs up from a middle school class in Gibraltar (the rock).

So far that makes thirty-two (32) success stories. Not thirty-two separate stories because some have doubled up, e.g. Now I Lay Me with four acceptances, Inna Gadda da Vida with three, Johnny’s Got a Gun, Little Green Men and Welcome to Hell with two each. And Somewhere in Iowa is the gift that keeps on giving. I posted it on Amazon’s Vela and assumed it would be stuck in a corner somewhere and forgotten. Maybe it is, but every quarter I get a little addition to my bank account from Amazon.

But it was never about the money. Good thing, because I’m not making much (although Little Green Men brought in a nice check in the low three figures). I just love writing. The revising and editing…not so much. Kind of tedious. I’m more about the adventure of finding out what happens rather than ironing out the wrinkles. That being said, I still spend much time revising and editing my existing work; sometimes even the ones that have been published (in case of reprints). I was pleasantly surprised recently when my Muse struck and left two stories in my head. One is a speculative tale concerning crossed wires in the multiverse. I’ve been excited about the possibility of the multiverse since some of Hawkings theories have been confirmed by the Webb space telescope. The cosmos is probably weirder than we ever imagined.

The other story is just a reworking of some raw data. A few years ago, some relatives of mine (we all have those kinds of relatives) had an explosive break up, broadcast live on Facebook. It was bizarre, to say the least. It also had lots of melodrama so I made a screen grab of the entire conversation. Now I’ve used that data to create what I call an epistolary short story. It’s much condensed from the original manuscript and the names and some events have been changed. I’ve titled it Romie & Jules 2020. The characters have names similar to Shakespeare’s most famous play. It’s only about 2000 words so it’s a quick read. I’ve sent it to a few places but no bites yet. One editor responded that he found the idea of a Facebook drama “really quite clever”. I always like nice comments like that. It lets me know they’re paying attention.