4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse

Iron Faerie Publishing have opened a new submission call! If you love drabbles and are looking for something with a more apocalyptic horror feel then this call might be for you!


THEY ARE LOOKING FOR: Drabbles about the four horseman of the apocalypse.
Conquest : War : Famine : Plague
Horror and Dark Fantasy genres accepted

WORD COUNT: 100 words (max 5 drabbles accepted per author) Send one and wait for a response.
You can send 1 story each for conquest, war, famine and plague at the same time. Separate emails please.

REPRINTS: Yes, rights must have reverted back to you

SIMULTANEOUS SUBMISSIONS: NO

MULTIPLE SUBMISSIONS: YES

PUBLICATION DATE: TBA

AUTHOR COMPENSATION: One eBook copy

If you are submitting a reprint, please include the publisher and date of first publication.

Send your story as an attachment in .doc or .docx format to ironfaeriepublishing@yahoo.com

Your subject line of your email should be Anthology Name – Story Name – Author Name

For example:

CONQUEST – My Story – Author Name

WAR – My Story – Author Name

FAMINE – My Story – Author Name

PLAGUE – My Story – Author Name

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An Interview With… Michelle Crow & A.A Warne

 

Hi, it’s great to have you here! Alright, so in the spirit of getting the mundane questions out of the way first, tell our audience a little about yourself and where you’re from?

michelle1Hello! Thanks for having us. Michelle Crow here. I’m a mom of three little monsters and a writer. When I am not chasing the monsters or writing, I’m teaching English Composition at my local community college in East Tennessee.

Amanda here and I write under the name  A. A. Warne. I live at the bottom of the Blue Mountains in Western Sydney, Australia with my husband and three children.

When did the writing bug first bite?

Michelle: When I was a child. My grandmother recently found some of my old writings and drawings. I thought I was only into doodling as a kid, but it turns out, I used to write little short stories too. When I was a teenager I wrote super emo-poetry. Finally, in 2015, I decided to write for money and found my way into freelance ghostwriting. My first client had me write a 50k novella (trashy romance) with a three-week deadline. It was AWFUL. The editing alone was so bad (and nonexistent apparently). Still, the work had awesome reviews.

Amanda: The writing bug bit after having my first child! Before the kids came into my life I was a painter and potter, but those art practices were messy and took a lot of time out of the day. Enter babies and I didn’t have time for anything creative which caused me to go mad slowly. A close friend recommended me to start reading and by the end of the series, I started writing.

What do you enjoy most about writing?

Michelle: I enjoy the escape the most. Escapism is the reason I still videogame, well that and it’s fun! My husband and I are really big into gaming, but we are also massive bibliophiles. So, for me, writing is another area of escape from reality, only I get to call the shots in the worlds that I have made. Outside of that, creating characters is my next favorite part. I love to develop characters and I would even say (and A. A. Warne would agree), that characterization is my strongest writing skill. Oh, and research. I love to research random topics and ideas. I have this pirate-witch in space series that I have mapped out, but I have 0 working knowledge of ships or their mechanics, add the space element and I have some reading to do.

Amanda: Writing allows the world to enter my imagination – it’s vast and you can easily get lost, but luckily the books are like a map to navigate once inside. Having writing as a art practice, allows me to push my imagination much further than I would normally. I have to question things. Shape characters and most of all think outside the box. Without writing, I don’t think my mind would have let my imagination be so powerful.

Are you a plottter or are you more of a pantser?

Michelle: I’m definitely the pantser in this duo, well, in all of my writing. I have tried plotting, but I always struggle with outlines. I have a few ‘outlines’ for books just sitting collecting dust. They need attention because they are as basic as they can get, but I really struggle in that department. Usually, I will start with a character and build out from there, but I do want to become a better planner in the writing realm.

Amanda: And I’m the plotter! I can go off track and find new avenues but it can only be a detour and not a full reworked ending. Michelle and I can compliment each other like that. Michelle will throw random ideas at me and I’ll put them into coherent order and justify the ordering into a plotline. I don’t know how I do it. It’s an ability that comes naturally.

What drew you to Speculative Fiction and/or Paranormal Romance?

Michelle: I have always been a fantasy fan; whether sci-fi, fantasy, paranormal, metaphysical, you name it. I love them all! I’m going to be perfectly honest here and say I didn’t really know what ‘speculative’ meant in the way of genres until I met A. A. Warne. I used to work for Borders Books when they were in business and even though I am an avid reader, I guess I stuck with either fantasy or sci-fi, without really dipping into any of the other genres or subgenres. (Okay, and some romance.) I think the draw to speculative fiction is being able to flip what’s accepted as normal or in existence and give otherwise mundane places and situations a fantastical slant. I mean, my city would be a lot cooler if an underground alien race were plotting beneath the surface…just saying.

Amanda: I stumbled across speculative fiction accidently. I was growing frustrated with the genre restrictions trad publishers were placing on authors. If stories didn’t fit neatly into the genre than it wouldn’t be considered a viable story for publication. But I’m not an in-the-box thinker. In fact, I hate the box. The box has been done way too many times before where we’re left to reinvent the box. Stuff that! I’m throwing the box out. The box doesn’t exist anymore and from here on out, my stories will push limits, be exactly what they need to be within themselves and be defined as speculative fiction.

Which authors have influenced your writing along the way?

Michelle: We are a family of ‘Sandersonites’. I just Googled that term and now I have some forums to jump into. Brandon Sanderson is amazingly talented. We LOVE him in our household. My husband turned me onto Sanderson one day and I have never looked back. And of course, J.K. Rowling. I love that woman. Not just her writing, but her background, especially since I can relate to her backstory. Some other authors that I really admire, my husband, A. A. Warne, all of the #Rogues from our little Facebook #RogueCastle, and I also love another indie author; Jenna Moreci. Jenna has a hilarious YouTube channel for writers and I am reading her work The Savior’s Champion, it’s pretty amazing already. All of them have influenced me in some way or another, not to mention all of the other authors (trad and indie alike) that I have enjoyed over the years. With Sanderson, it’s his incredible worldbuilding (which I can say the same about my husband and also about A.A. Warne), with J. K. Rowling it’s her unbelievably magical imagination, and with all of those rogues, their support and words of wisdom…and their critiques…

Amanda: I’m a huge fan of Karen Miller. Her Godspeaker series was amazing. I can’t tell you how many times I read it but that series inspires me to write. George R. R. Martin is also another amazing writer. Every time I pick up his books, I can only get through three chapters at a time and then I have to find a pen and a piece of paper and start writing myself. It’s like the magic jumps off the page and forces me to create.

Have you ever used a word or said a word aloud so many times it’s lost all meaning?

Michelle: I feel like I say ‘he said’, ‘she said’ a lot, but I don’t. I just feel like that is something a lot of us writers really struggle with is the dialogue tags and all of the in-between action sequences. As a mom of three, I say ‘no’ so much it doesn’t even serve a purpose anymore. They never listen anyway. Other than that, I can’t really think of a word. I am sure if I ran through any of my docs I would find something overused. It isn’t until I am reading through the third or fiftieth time that I catch the overused words that are losing all meaning. 🙂

michelle and amanda 1Amanda: I totally agree with Michelle. We think we’re aware of what we’re doing until someone pulls us up on something. Then we’re hyperaware of our own biases, plus the person that pulled us up. In actual fact, we’ve over thinking the process and most likely no one else would be noticing what we’re focused on. Since this self-revelation, I now turn off my brain and just write. I write badly, boring, ecstatic, hungry, bloated, sick and in my prime health. Words on the page first, think about everything second. It helps with finishing the book.

Has there ever been a book you couldn’t finish? Why or why not?

Michelle: There have been several books, but that might also be because of my reading style. I am always reading, at a minimum, three books at any given time. So, I will go to the library and pick up five or six titles, mostly based on their cover design, the back synopsis, and the first sentence of the first page. Then, I get home and start reading on each one until one sticks out over the rest. If that happens, I will read that book cover to cover and then move onto a new book (usually returning the other four or five titles and probably never reading them again). So, there have been hundreds of books that I haven’t finished, excluding textbooks.

Amanda: I have a limit to content. If a topic hits my nerve, I put the book away. As a fantasy writer, I want to be constantly intrigued by the characters and the world they’re in. I’m not interested in erotica or even romance. I’d rather have characters jump to other planets, fight wars, and free people.

If you could go back in time who would you go back in time to see?

Michelle: First, I would want to see my grandfather. He passed away in 2015 and I would really love to see him again. If I could go back in time though, I would want to go all the way back to the very beginning, just so I can actually know the truth about it all (how we all began). Other than that, I think I would rather keep my working knowledge of any historical figures I might admire to the history books. I would hate to learn that they were actually horrid people.

Amanda: I would go back to the very beginning of humanity so I can have a first-hand account of how us humans came to be. Was it evolution? Were we planted here like a seed? Or did we planet or even solar system hop?

What’s the best piece of advice you could give someone who is just getting started on their author journey?

Michelle: My first piece of advice is to not get discouraged by criticism. If you let criticism bring you down then you will want to give up and pack it all in, which you should never do! Just keep writing. Find yourself a support group of writers, especially those who write in a similar genre or to a similar audience, and make friends with them. I know that the vast majority of us are very anti-social in nature and that is okay, HELLO INTERNET. 🙂 Just keep writing. Submit, submit, submit. Make sure you study up on the different publishing avenues to figure out which one is right for you and don’t be afraid to dabble in short stories, microfiction even. There are oodles of competitions, magazines, and paying markets out there, so get out and do some research.

Amanda: Listen to your gut – it’s the only on that tells you the truth. Turn the world off and buckle down, without words on the page, you’re not a writer. Make a plan, no matter how ambitious and everyday take a step towards it or to support it. Don’t give up when people discourage you from your plan – it’s not their plan. They have their own. So therefore, don’t show your plan to others unless they’re going to help you in making your plan a reality.

Do you have anything you’d like to share?

michelle and amanda

For centuries, Earth has served as the battleground for a secret war between a reptilian alien species and the clandestine human organization dedicated to eradicating this extraterrestrial threat. But when a single woman becomes the focal point of this brutal conflict, the fate of the planet alters forever…

Life hasn’t been easy for Riley Anbar since her grandmother’s death. Between struggling to run the family business, dealing with troubling psychic visions, and puzzling over unanswered questions about the parents she never knew, Riley is doing her best just to get by. After a pair of chance encounters with two mysterious men, Riley finds herself thrust into danger as both human and alien forces converge on her once-ordinary life.

But in this war, there is no clear boundary between good and evil. Both factions are determined to use Riley for their own ends, and they’re willing to endanger everyone around her to achieve their goals. Caught between the two men who have captured her heart and the secrets of her own past, what choice will Riley make when she discovers neither side is in the right?

LINKS:

Twitter: @BM_Crow

Blog: https://michellecrowscornercafe.wordpress.com/

Website: www.aawarne.com

Facebook: @AAWarne

Twitter: @AAWarne

Instagram: @AAWarne

 

 

An Interview With… Kellie Wallace

 

Hi, it’s great to have you here! Alright, so in the spirit of getting the mundane questions out of the way first, tell our audience a little about yourself and where you’re from? I’m Kellie and I live in sunny Australia! I’ve been writing since i was a kid. I’ve published ten novels of different genres and I’m currently writing my next book. This one has taken the longest as its the first book I’ve written since I had my son 20 months ago. Writing is my life and it was very hard to take a hiatus, but the break has improved my writing and perseverance.

kellie1When did the writing bug first bite? I took writing seriously in my teens. Being a writer wasn’t always something I wanted to do early on. I became passionate about it during my teens where I wanted a creative outlet for the all the ideas and stories in my head. Looking back, I was surrounded by books/notion of writing, with TVs I loved at the time or my family (who read a lot). I’m glad I went down this route. I would never change it for anything.

What do you enjoy most about writing? The one thing I love most is creating worlds and personalities that are 100% your creation. No one else will write a character like yours.

Are you a plottter or are you more of a pantser? Generally, I start with an outline and flesh the story out from there. Sometimes, I make things up as I go along or I incorporate text from older WIPS into the current one. I try not to worry about not having enough “ammo” when I start creating the world because things always come to me when I begin. It does take time and I take each day as it comes.

What drew you to Speculative Fiction and/or Paranormal Romance? Creatively, I love the freedom. There is some structure to follow but I love being able to create characters and scenarios that are wild and unrestrained. Especially with paranormal romance, there are so many different opinions out there on spirits, that I like to gather my own and build my book from there.

Which authors have influenced your writing along the way? Tami Hoag and Emily Rhoda are huge influencers in my writing career. Both authors ignited my love for the written word and encouraged me to achieve my dreams.

If you could go back in time who would you go back in time to see? I’m a history buff so there are many moments in modern history I would love to see. I would love to meet Ava Gardner and Marilyn Monroe. I love everything about the 1940s so I would go back in time to experience that decade in history – the fashion, the movies, the film stars. Everything was so glamorous.

What’s the best piece of advice you could give someone who is just getting started on their author journey? Just write. And write what you want. Get onto social media and interact with your readers. Facebook, Twitter and Instagram are great platforms now. Start a readers group, do giveaways and respond to comments/emails your readers send you. Reputation is everything in this business.

BookBrushImage280Do you have an excerpt you’d like to share? The below excerpt is from my paranormal romance, Death Knows My Name

“You’re finally all mine, Aleida Fuller.” He lowered his lips over hers and thrust his tongue into her mouth, pushing against her own, licking her teeth, overpowering her. Aleida was paralyzed against the trunk, unable to move or scream, Albinus’ lean body pressing into hers. Albinus was strong, sucking every last ounce of energy from her body.

Flashbacks of her possession sparked in her mind, of the pain as her bones snapped, the searing heat inside her chest and the complete annihilation of her control. Albinus deepened the kiss, planting a hand behind her head.

Albinus invaded her body like a cancer, consuming every unspooled sinew and vein, muscle, flesh and bone.

Aleida felt her bones strain, ache, from the burgeoning new life force, and as Rafe’s shield was shattered, she felt the immediate effects, becoming weaker and more aware of the pain. Everything hurt, every cell aware. Then, an odd sense of euphoria overcame her as the demon finally won the battle.

 

 

 

An Interview With… J.S. Frankel

Hi, it’s great to have you here! Alright, so in the spirit of getting the mundane questions out of the way first, tell our audience a little about yourself and where you’re from?

Hi, my name is Jesse Frankel, pen name J.S. Frankel, and I was born many moons ago in Toronto, Canada. When I was twenty-six, I moved to Japan and never really went back. I’ve been here a long time, married a lovely lady from Osaka, and we have two eating machines, known as sons. I make my living, such as it is, as an ESL teacher, and I write at night.

 

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When did the writing bug first bite? 

For me, it was quite late, when I was around forty-nine. I started writing then, and my first novel came out when I was almost fifty. Now, I’m up to around thirty-six novels published, all in the YA Fantasy genre.

 

What do you enjoy most about writing? 

Trite as though this may sound, I love letting my imagination go where the story takes it. I love journeying to other worlds, making up alien names, and getting my characters into fantastic situations. 

 

Are you a plotter or are you more of a pantser? 

I started out as a pantser, but I slowly moved to the plotter’s stage. I keep things very simple. I write out a basic outline of what will happen during the chapter, do some dialogue and-or action sequences, and whatever else I can think of. I do try to keep things flexible, so everything is subject to change, but one constant is that I always leave the chapter on a mini-cliff-hanger!

 

 

What drew you to Speculative Fiction and/or Paranormal Romance?

For me, I wanted to see if I could write it. Fantasy is one thing, but with paranormal doings, particularly romance, I wanted to see if I could move in that direction. With Ether and What The Gods Allow, I think I did a pretty decent job of it. To seek the impossible, the unknowable, and then to write about it—that’s a kick.

 

Which authors have influenced your writing along the way? 

When I was young—as in kiddie time—I loved Ray Bradbury and James Blish, among others. When I got older, Robert McCammon and N.K. Jemisin. All of those authors and more had something to offer—and they were and are all great!

 

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Have you ever used a word or said a word aloud so many times it’s lost all meaning?

Not really, no. I try not to overuse words, and I constantly check myself to see if I’m doing so.

 

Has there ever been a book you couldn’t finish? Why or why not?

I’ve had a few DNF novels in my time. As for why, many reasons. Sometimes, it was the narrative, sometimes it was the poor characterizations or head-hopping…and more. Unfortunately, many of those novels were self-published, and my thought was that if only the authors had spent more time on the editing process, they could have had a halfway decent novel on their hands.

 

If you could go back in time who would you go back in time to see? 

My parents. My father passed away thirty-four years ago, and my mother passed away twelve years ago. They were very good to me, and if I could speak with them again, that would give me peace of mind.

 

What’s the best piece of advice you could give someone who is just getting started on their author journey?

At first, just write. Don’t worry about mistakes. Just write. Get your thoughts down. Get the plot hook ready within the first five to ten pages, preferably earlier. Keep writing, let nothing stop you. It’s your vision, your child. Raise it, nurture it, and when it’s edited, polished, living and breathing, and when it’s ready to step out of the pages, as it were, then you know you’ve done your job.

 

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Do you have an excerpt you’d like to share? 

Yes, I would, and this is from Ether, a YA paranormal romance/fantasy. In this scene, the protagonist of the story, Sam Timmins, a social outcast, has just been saved by a wind sprite from a beating by a bully.  Sam runs home, trying to make sense of it all.

 

A breath of wind touched me on the face. Instinctively, I backed up, semi-fearful that what had happened to the boyfriend-girlfriend connection a few minutes ago would happen to me. “Who are you?” I asked. 

No answer, but then again, I hadn’t expected one. “Look, you can tell me who you are. I believe you exist, okay? Are you a ghost or are you something else?” 

Let’s go with the something else concept, as the wind swirled around me and then went to the coffee table where a few magazines were stacked. One magazine slid off the top. The first page flipped open and then a few more pages. Freak… me… out, and my heart sped up due to the sudden adrenaline influx, “Holy crap, you are real.” 

Curious now, I edged over, and an invisible finger depressed certain words on the page. I’m real and I’m not. “You’re real and you’re not,” I echoed, wondering if I was experiencing a first-class delusion. “So if you’re not a ghost and I’m not going crazy, what are you?” 

Silence at first and then a young woman’s voice, someone who sounded young, like me, spoke in a silky whisper. The voice didn’t sound exactly human. It reminded me of the tinkling of wind chimes. But it was still feminine. “Are you ready for the answer?” 

It spoke to me. Whatever it was, it had actually spoken to me. After a few seconds, I managed to force the words from my throat. “Yes. Do you have a name?

“It’s Esther.” 

Do you want to tell me who you are?” 

“I’ll make you a deal,” the girl called Esther said. “Your school’s letting out for vacation next Wednesday, right?” 

How could she know that? “Uh, yeah, it is. You know about my schedule?” “Yeah. When your school lets out, I’ll tell you what I know.” 

She disappeared in a flash, with only the papers fluttering around the room signalling her departure. “Holy crap.” 

My voice cracked as it came out. I’m real and I’m not. What was happening here and now went beyond the boundaries of what people would call normal. So far in the past few days, I’d been saved twice, discovered a being from the great beyond—maybe—existed, and soon that person from the great beyond was going to fill me in on a brand new origin story. Somewhere, there had to be a movie in all this.

 

 

Social links: 

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/J-S-Frankel/e/B004XUUTB8/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1

Twitter: https://twitter.com/JessSFrankel

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100007640056961

  

Hawthorn & Ash

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I’ve been looking into more online publication opportunities of late and thought I’d bring this one to the attention of other writers just in case you hadn’t seen it yet and you’re interested in getting your words out into the world.

It’s an open submission call from Iron Faerie Publishing and they are after stories for their blog that range in length from 100 to 500 words.

I don’t know about you, but I love drabbles and flash fiction. You’re forced to think about what you’re writing in a way you may not with longer fiction and they’re quicker to write, which is a bonus, in my book given how busy I am.

They are seeking FANTASY and SPECULATIVE FICTION short stories.

Reprints : No

Simultaneous Submissions : No

Multiple Submissions : Authors may submit one story per week.

Publication : Online. An anthology is a possibility in the future.

Author Compensation : Exposure only at this stage.

Additional information can be found on their website.