My Appearance July 4th Weekend At InConJunction XXXI

Insignia of the Circle of Janus, the fan organization running the con.

I’m excited to announce I’ll be appearing at InConJunction XXXI (July 1-3, at the Indianapolis Marriott East).

I can’t say enough good things about this con.  There’s lots of brainy nerds there, and there are many, many presentations on actual science in addition to SF, Fantasy, & Horror.  It’s a fun, relaxing, laid-back atmosphere.  The focus is really about interacting with readers, rather than professional networking.  Which is nice (I’ll get a lot of the latter in mid-July when I jet off to Boston for ReaderCon).

In addition to signing copies of How To Eat Fried Furries and Werewolves & Shape Shifters, I’ll be appearing on and/or moderating several panels.  Here’s my programming schedule (as given me 6/23, subject to change…as these things sometimes do).

 

Friday:  No panels

Saturday:

10:00 a.m.  “The Weirdest Speculative Fiction Books We’ve Ever Read”

3:00 p.m.   “Death to Writer’s Block”

5:00 p.m.  “Beyond Blade Runner:  The Work of Phillip K. Dick in Fiction & Cinema”

9:00 p.m.  “Religion in Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Horror”

10:00 p.m. “Candlelight Horror”

Sunday: 

10:00 a.m. “Publishing in the Future”

If you’re a reader in the Indy area (or in the Midwest, generally), I’d love to meet you at this event.  If you think you might be coming, leave a comment after this post so I’ll know to keep an eye peeled for you!

 

Reader Mail! (…in Which Our Heroine Takes The No-Furry Pledge)

Not All Furries Hate The Book...

Back in the old days, comic books used to always include a letters column near the end of each issue.  I never wrote a fan letter, but I enjoyed reading those mailed in by others.  It fostered a sense of community among those who read the comic.  If I were tech-savvy, I’d start a message board.  But I’m not tech-savvy.  If I were further along in my career, I’d have someone volunteer to do this for me.  But as far as my career goes, I’m a baby.  Seriously, in terms of building a writing career I’m, like, a genuine 100% crappin’ my diaper, spitting up, occasionally cute-smiling baby.  So a message board is out of the question.

Besides,these days there are a number of ways readers reach out to authors.  I’ve gotten feedback from Cushingistas via Twitter, comments left on older, more obscure posts of my blog, etc.)

So, in order to centralize all the feedback in one place, I’m starting an irregularly-published “letters” column.  Moreover, I hereby promise that I won’t cherry-pick the most favorable feedback. Yes, in the interest of even-handedness, I’ll even highlight your hate “mail” (hate-tweet, hate-status, hate…well, get get the point.)

To whit…

Back in January, self-proclaimed furry Christopher started a thread on my almost-never-noticed Amazon.com message board with the ominous title “WTF are you?”  He goes on to write:

*

From the title “How to Eat Fried Furries”, am I to assume you’re yet another

in the misinformed about what a furry fan really is, or are you one of the

a’holes who knows nothing about it and decided to write a book bashing us?

*

I never got around to answering him on the Amazon board, so I guess I’ll go ahead and give an answer here (while I’m on the subject.)

Christopher:  Your question presumes that I’m either A. uninformed or B. an “a’hole” who knows nothing about furries and wrote the book to bash the furry community.  Surely, this is a false dilemma.  It could be rightly said that the furries in my book aren’t even furries.  In fact, one of longer reviews of the book makes that observation.  To me, the book was really more about society trying to stitch together pseudo-solutions (for example, forcing people into animal costumes to rationalize cannibalism as a remedy for world hunger).  I even thought about giving the book another title (PANTOMIME PLANET was one possibility I was kicking around).  But ultimately, HOW TO EAT FRIED FURRIES had a definite Bizarro feel to it, and a Python feel to it, too (can’t you just hear Eric Idle saying that?).

However, if it makes you feel better, I hereby promise to never write a book about furries again.  I’m sure that will delight the furries (as well as any potential agents reading this).

Moving right along…

In March things began to improve.  I woke up bleary-eyed one Saturday morning to find a tweet from Travis, a reader from Australia, who really dug my story “All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Piggy Class” in the John Skipp anthology, Werewolves & Shape Shifters:  Encounters with the Beast Within.  As a newer author, I have to confess this is the sort of stuff that thrills me.  Unfortunately, I’ve never been to Australia.  Chances are, I’ll never travel there (my only foreign travel was a trip to Quebec, Canada a few years ago).  But my story’s in Australia — in bookstores and in the mind of a reader who enjoyed it enough to let me know.

Tweets being, by their nature, concise, Travis keeps his praise short and sweet.

*

“The short story ‘Everything I Need to Know I Learned in Piggy Class” by @NicoleCushing is brilliant…”

*

(Now all I have to do is figure out the exchange rate between U.S. and Australian dollars so I can properly reimburse the man).

May brought more positive feedback from Fried Furries reader Ted, who left a neat-o message in the comments section on the I Read Odd Books review site.

Ted says…

*

A wonderful book , the next time any misguided vagina hater

points out that women are not equipped to produce subversive

humour I will point them to this book…I really enjoyed Cushing’s

style ,the way each each story is interlinked and I even tried

some of the recipes but I was unable to locate Bunnybeer so

maybe that’s why the hamburger pie ended up a bit dry.

*

Leaving aside, for the moment, the small point that most misogynists don’t hate the vagina per se but rather everything else that surrounds it, I enjoy Ted’s enthusiasm for the books’ unconventional structure.  Some other folks (not naming names, let’s just call them Ublishers-Pay Eekly-Way) were ambivalent on the matter…which is better than totally getting panned…but not as good as being lavished with unreserved praise.  Alas, Fried Furries seems to have landed in PW purgatory.  (To check out the PW review, go to the Fried Furries Amazon.com page. )

(By the way Ted spelled “humour”, I wonder if he’s another one of them-thar foreigners who like my book!  I hope so.  I’m not dissing American readers, but there’s just something really cool about having readers in other countries).

As for my subversive humor/humour, I’ve been playing around with a variety of different styles lately.  Some more humo(u)rous than others. Some not humo(u)rous at all.  Some of the stuff I’ve been writing lately has just been unrelentingly grim.  But I suspect a dash of dark humo(u)r will always weave itself into everything I write.

Finally…June brought us new reader Larry, who offered some more praise for Werewolves & Shape Shifters (left as a comment on an antediluvian — well, about one year old — post I wrote announcing the TOC).  There’s some kudos for my story, but the bulk of the praise really goes out to editor John Skipp.

*

Just finished this book, its incredibly awesome and your story was amazing!

I especially liked the range and variety of authors, from the classic masters to the

current trailblazers,such as yourself. John Skipp does the best anthologies ever.

*

Larry:  You’ll be delighted to know that Skipp has another anthology in the series coming out, Demons:  Encounters With The Devil and His Minions, Fallen Angels, & The Possessed.  And have you already checked out his Zombie anthology from a few years back?  Anyway, thanks for the kind words.  Being in the same table of contents as Lovecraft, Gaiman, and George R.R. Martin is probably the high water mark of my career so far.  I’m now focusing on crafting even better stories than “Piggy Class”, and I’m at work on my first novel, too.

By the way, Larry maintains a fascinating blog about all things boobies horror (wherein there are photos of several Cthulhu/”My Little Pony” hybrids that are to die for…no pun intended).  Y’all should check it out.

Well, that’s all I have energy for tonight, kiddies.  I’ll try to provide this “Reader Mail” feature every so often.  If you’d like to give feedback (good, bad, or — like PW — ambivalent) about my fiction, feel free to contact me on Facebook, Twitter, this blog, or — if you must be old fashioned about it — via email at nicolecushingwriter (at) gmail (dot) com.

Skipp: “Nicole Cushing Is One Of My Faves In The New Wave Of Bizarro Authors”

Groovy Fact #1:  My short story “All I Really Need To Know I Learned In Piggy Class” appears in the John Skipp mass market anthology Werewolves and Shape Shifters:  Encounters With The Beast Within.

Groovy Fact #2:  My story is in-between the same covers as work by H.P. Lovecraft, Neil Gaiman, Charlaine Harris, Joe Lansdale, Chuck Palahniuk; as well as my bizarro buds Carlton Mellick III and Jeremy Robert Johnson.

Groovy Fact #3:  The book is available at stores everywhere.  In big box stores to little indie stores.  And on Amazon.com.

Groovy Fact #4:  Skipp has some complimentary things to say about my writing.  Check this out (from Skipp’s intro to my story):

“Nicole Cushing is one of my faves in the new wave of Bizarro authors.  There’s a focused intelligence and clarity at play throughout even the deepest patches of delirium — a genuine method to the unadulterated madness — that makes it so much more than merely weird.”

Huzzah!

Skipp WEREWOLVES & SHAPESHIFTERS anthology TOC Revealed

Awhile back I mentioned that my short story “All I Really Need To Know I Learned In Piggy Class” had been bought for the forthcoming John Skipp anthology, Werewolves & Shapeshifters:  Encounters With The Beast Within.
Now, I can share with you the names of all the other authors who also appear in the anthology.  I feel so honored and uplifted to have my work appear in the same book as theirs.

Here’s the whole lineup:

THE COMPANY OF WOLVES – Angela Carter
THE OTHER SIDE – Count Stenbock
THE LADY ON THE GREY – John Collier
GABRIEL-ERNEST — Saki
THE SHADOW OVER INNSMOUTH – H.P. Lovecraft
GRANDFATHER WOLF – Steve Rasnic Tem
FIRE DOG – Joe R. Lansdale
PURE SILVER – A.C. Crispin and Kathleen O’Malley
GIFT-WRAP – Charlaine Harris
SIDE-EFFECTS MAY INCLUDE – Steve Duffy
UNLESS YOU CHANGE – Francesca Lia Block
FORGIVEN – Eric Shapiro
THE COLD THAT FLAYS THE SKIN – Tessa Gratton
IL DONNAIOLO – Brad C. Hodson
WEREWOLF 101 – Mercedes M. Yardley
MANDIBLE – Alice Henderson
FAR AND WEE – Kathe Koja
BRAIDS – Melanie Tem
NOT FROM AROUND HERE – David J. Schow
THE SKIN TRADE – George R.R. Martin
THE ANIMAL ASPECT OF HER MOVEMENT – Adam Golaski
STRANGE SKIN – Bentley Little
BREAK-UP – Richard Christian Matheson
THE BETTER HALF: A LOVE STORY – Scott Bradley and Peter Giglio
PLASTIC FANTASTIC – Dieter Meyer and Maxwell Hart
WARM, IN YOUR COAT – Violet Glaze
ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED IN PIGGY CLASS – Nicole Cushing
HOWL OF THE SHEEP – Cody Goodfellow
PIECES OF ETHAN – Adam-Troy Castro
I COVET ALL THE WANING HOURS – Zak Jarvis
WHEN SUSSURUS STIRS – Jeremy Robert Johnson
WAR PIG – Carlton Mellick III
DISSERTATION – Chuck Palahniuk
ONLY THE END OF THE WORLD AGAIN – Neil Gaiman
SWEETHEART COME – Alethea Kontis

Sounds like this one is coming out in late September.  Can’t wait to see the finished product!

Mass Market John Skipp Anthology To Include New Cushing Tale

Hildie read the news of Cushing's success, and feared for the fate of decency.

I am pleased to announce that John Skipp has purchased my short story “All I Really Need To Know I Learned In Piggy Class” for his forthcoming mass market anthology Werewolves & Shapeshifters:  Encounters With The Beast Within (due out this fall from Black Dog & Leventhal).

Werewolves & Shapeshifters is a follow-up to last year’s successful Zombies:  Encounters With The Hungry Dead.

Skipp has also acquired my short story “The Bureaucratic Nativity of Panda Christ” for a forthcoming “mutational” issue of The Magazine of Bizarro Fiction which he is guest-editing (also due out this fall from Eraserhead Press).

I’ve known about both of these sales for awhile, but have been keeping them hush-hush until I got the go-ahead from Skipp to announce them.  But then… um…he announced them (and, in the process, made some complimentary remarks regarding my work) on the BizarroCon thread at Shocklines.

With these two stories coming out at nearly the same time as my first book, How To Eat Fried Furries, it looks like my readers will have a busy autumn!

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