Chart / February

Two months since I’ve done one of my iconic Chart entries. What has happened in that time? A few things. Reality Testing was released in paperback by the kind fellows at Black Rose Writing, and to date I must have sold at least 7 copies or so. Continuing to cement my name in the sci fi pantheon. In short story news, I’ve finally started submitting again after a couple of years, and my minimal effort was rewarded almost instantly with publication in issue one of a new magazine, Grim & Gilded. The story, called Pawn’s Promotion, takes place in the Sundown universe (that’s the same one as Reality Testing), and it’s 4,500 words of Lem-esque science fiction.

Elsewhere in bottom-of-the-barrel news: I reluctantly wrote a guest post for the blog Books + Coffee = Happiness about how to how to avoid the rejection blues. An excerpt of my wisdom:

“That short story you spent six months honing until it’s as sharp as a razor blade might be fantastic, but if an editor didn’t have their coffee that morning, there’s a chance they’ll punch the form rejection button just to get back at the world. Not your fault. Not the editor’s. Literature is like astrology: the stars and planets have to align. Moon conjunct Pluto, that kind of thing.”

Elsewhere, in The Avid Reader (whose ‘buy now’ button hilariously happens to be a screenshot rather than, you know, an actual button), I offer perfunctory answers to a perfunctory interview. I’m not entirely sure why I do these things. Maybe I’m a sucker for punishment.

Book of the month: Don Quixote. Yeah, that’s right, I’m reading it. And it’s just as funny as people say it is. Not in a ‘oh I just laugh and laugh at Bob Dylan songs’-pretention kind of way. More in a “this part of the story is about a man charging at a windmill with his lance” vein. I bet it’ll still take me forever to read, though.

Album (or actually a mixtape) of the month: Caprisongs by FKA twigs. I lost interest in twigs for a while after she brought out Magdalena, because I couldn’t get into it like the rest of the world effortlessly did. But this mixtape banished those January blues quicksmart. Good job, girl in the video.

Movie of the month: Rope. I haven’t seen many Hitchcock movies, and this is one that he dismissed as a failed experiment. James Stewart didn’t think much of his own performance in it, either. But I loved it. From the homoerotic subtext to the choice of cuts to the city changing in sort-of-real-time through the apartment window, I would say it is anything but a failure.

And now for tunes.

1 Nilüfer Yanya - midnight sun

2 Boys Noize, ABRA - Affection

3 Tirzah - Inside Out

4 SAULT - Red Lights

5 Kelly Lee Owens - More Than A Woman

6 Kosha - No Kink in the Wire

Reality Testing Paperback Out Now

Ecopunk manifesto and all-round action-packed thrill ride, Reality Testing, is out and about and available in paperback now. Published by Black Rose (Texas), Reality Testing is book #1 in the Sundown series, where cyberpunk antiheroes navigate the mean streets of near-future, climate-obsessed Berlin in search of purpose and cool implants.

Here’s what acclaimed sci fi writer Neil Sharpson, author of When the Sparrow Falls, has to say about it:

“A tough-as-nails shot of adrenaline-laced, Gibson-esque cyberpunk, set in a decaying future where the corporatocracy has sacrificed humanity to reverse the ecological hell they themselves created. Highly recommended for fans of the genre.”

Available via Amazon, Waterstones, Walmart, Barnes & Noble and a bunch of other places I’m probably not aware of. The place where I get the most money (ha) is from the publisher’s website.

meet mara. or mia warsaw. or maybe it’s jema. you choose.

Kirkus Best Indie Books 2021

This December, Kirkus published its annual list of ‘Best Indie Books 2021’, and Reality Testing was listed as one of them (replete with its old cover). So far this has opened zero new doors for me, but it’s a nice nod of recognition from one of the most prestigious book review magazines in the world.

From the review:

“Readers will find an instant echo of the invigorating cyberpunk territory famously birthed by visionary SF author William Gibson—and, not long after, written off by the novelist himself as a genre past its expiration date. But Price reboots the familiar noir scenarios of greedy multinationals, hero hackers, and freakishly augmented adventurers, upgrading the software with piquant bytes of green politics run amok and the unholy intersections of capitalism, recession, and transhumanism.”

The full list is here.