« Posts tagged Fiction

State of the Blog: 8-17-10

So, yeah, that was a bit of a snafu wasn’t it?

For one reason or another the database locked in a loop and tried to add about 5000 of the weekly Twitter Roundups. I’m not entirely sure why as of yet, but it may have to do with the plugins we are using and Twitter’s new authentication system.  Again, I apologize to everyone that saw those post come down their feed.

In other news:

  • Brotherhood of the Hand will be late this week as there is still a lot of fixing that needs to be done to the site
  • Principle photography has wrapped on the Brotherhood of the Hand movie! We’ll drop some pics into the feed here at some point.
  • We’re still looking for folks to contribute to bkI, be it reviews, fiction, poetry, art, music, comics, interesting uses of duct tape, etc.  If you’d like to contribute, drop us a line at slushpile@badkarmaink.com

Again, apologies and thanks for putting up with the problems over the weekend.

110 Wonderful Years

Via Wikipedia

May 17th 2010 marks the 110th anniversary of the publishing L. Frank Baum’s classic The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Yes, this epic story, commonly associated with the great depression, was published in 1900.

The intrepid tale of Dorothy’s journey through Oz has been told many time in different media. The most popular being MGM’s 1939 movie version The Wizard of Oz.  There has also been a resurgence of popularity with Gregory Maguire’s novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and it’s Broadway adaptation, Wicked. None of these would have been possible without the original story.

In the introduction of the book, Baum says:

Folklore, legends, myths and fairy tales have followed childhood through the ages, for every healthy youngster has a wholesome and instinctive love for stories fantastic, marvelous and manifestly unreal. The winged fairies of Grimm and Andersen have brought more happiness to childish hearts than all other human creations.

Yet the old time fairy tale, having served for generations, may now be classed as “historical” in the children’s library; for the time has come for a series of newer “wonder tales” in which the stereotyped genie, dwarf and fairy are eliminated, together with all the horrible and blood-curdling incidents devised by their authors to point a fearsome moral to each tale. Modern education includes morality; therefore the modern child seeks only entertainment in its wonder tales and gladly dispenses with all disagreeable incident.

Having this thought in mind, the story of “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” was written solely to please children of today. It aspires to being a modernized fairy tale, in which the wonderment and joy are retained and the heartaches and nightmares are left out.1 »Read More

  1. Public domain via Project Gutenberg []

Review: The Lost Symbol

Five bucks and a tube sock full of pistachio nuts to whomever bitch slaps Dan Brown on my behalf.

Bring the backhand around for a second pass, and I’ll promise to ensure the tube sock is clean.

Now, I’m not a Dan Brown hater, who knew I was going to dislike the book before I even read it. I don’t particularly like his books, but I don’t hate them, either. He has some good ideas, he just can’t seem to write them down in an evocative or interesting way.

This review contains some mild spoilers. That shouldn’t matter, because it’s a fucking Dan Brown potboiler. The whole point of reading it is you ALREADY KNEW WHAT THE FUCK WAS GOING TO HAPPEN. If you didn’t…well, I’m sorry, but I have to revoke your library card. Please cut it up until itty bitty pieces, place it in a just opened bottle of Rittenhouse 100 Bonded Rye whiskey, and mail it to me at PO Box 132, Madison, WI 53717.

In The Lost Symbol, Brown continues his tradition of leading you through the story using a carrot on a stick, a ring in your nose, and a riding crop on your ass. If it were any more obvious that he wanted you to read the book non-stop because you have to know what happens next, the book would be called Don’t Put Me Down.

Actually, that would have been a good name for this review. Not that Dan Brown will read it. Or ever know that I exist. Or even spit upon me from the lofty golden perch he has erected with the millions of dollars he has made.

Here, Mr. Brown pulls us through another Robert Langdon adventure, in which the college professor saves the world from the horror that would occur if we knew what the Freemasons did.

Except we know what the Freemasons do. We know they drink wine from skulls, and practice ritual death, and do all those crazy things. We read books about it ages ago. People do weirder things every day, and most of them don’t make the news, even if they do involve politicians.

Also, even if half the government got kicked to the curb, and special elections were held for everything imaginable, we’d just be a few extra billion in the hole, and a bunch of idiots just like the last ones would be in office. Only the rich can afford to run for public office, and precious few of them give a flying fuck about really doing anything good for the country.

So, the neat part of the book is the part about how we’re surrounded by symbols, many of them masonic. Which is true. Many of the founding fathers were Freemasons. Freemasons are pretty awesome, and have a great love for imparting wisdom incrementally, so learning is a journey. They like symbols, because they provide a feeling of enlightenment when you decode them.

So, Mr. Langdon follows a crazy dude through the nation’s capital, National Treasure style, and some people die. others get hurt. there’s some even crazier crap about Noetics that I don’t disagree with, but feels so tacked on in an effort to prove his points about apotheosis and the power of the human mind that they’re laughable.

Read the book if you want to see a pretty decent outline for a story that will probably make a great Hollywood big budget screenplay, and is a pretty damned middle of the road novel.

And don’t forget to smack Dan brown for me.

By the way…it was Mr. Brown. In the library. With the shotgun.

Quickie: DARK RISING: Great feeling!

Dark Rising

Dark Rising

Submitted by Jim R.
I think this was a testament to scifi-action-comedic -fantasy-romantic-(softcore) :D ….That we haven’t seen since the 80′s movies like Legend, Masters of the Universe, TROLL!, and even Evil Dead/II. Its not a remake or retelling, its a new story using well mixed 30+ year old story elements. Monsters and princesses with cowering princes, strength, magic and what I guess you could call fighting. Powerful female roles and with well acted male co-stars. Some excellent current era issues were also thrown in. The T&A was A-OK, the girls will relate with one of the female leads, I would recommend this to any well parented PG-13 audience though the man would probably give it NC-17 because of the amount of AWESOME BOOOBAGE!.

Original Fiction: My Souvenirs by George E. Hrabovsky

George Hrabovsky is a professional amateur scientist doing research in theoretical physics and severe weather. A game designer and writer for more than 30 years, he lives in Madison, Wisconsin, with his wife Dianna, two degus, a turtle, two hampsters, and a tarantula named Harry.

Now sit back, relax, and remember, folks, it’s all in the details. »Read More

Weekend Fiction: The Comeback

Via Wikipedia

Between the holidays, work, illness, and a killer 30th birthday party for Joanna, I’ve been a little slack in putting together the weekend fiction for the last few weeks.  To make up for it, I’ve got a bunch of goodies and a new addition to our regulars here in the Weekend Fiction zone.

First up, a holiday gift from J.C. Hutchins called In the Nick 0f Time. It contains previews of not 1, not 2, not even 10 books. No, it previews 12, count them, 12 titles. Now I’ve read several of these and stories by some of the other authors and let me tell you, after reading this preview, I really feel the need to go to the bookstore.

Second, there is Hub Magazine, a free weekly e-zine with stories, reviews, and features such as interviews and in depth looks at different fiction. Best part? They’ll email you the new issues.

In podcasts, Podcastle, Pseudopod, and Escape Pod have released a ton of excellent new stuff, but if I had to pick one from each, I’d say The Narcomancer, The Blessed Days, and Union Dues – The Threnody of Johnny Toruko. Speaking of sci-fi, The Clarkesworld Magazine Podcast put out 53+ minutes of awesome entitled The Things, a retelling of The Thing from the Thing’s point of view.

Also in podcasts, our buddies at Variant Frequencies put up the full version of Failed Cities: Hath a Darkness (link will work when there site gets back up).

And if you haven’t read it yet, we have a new story from Christopher A. Helton called One String at a Time.

And now, our new feature: Public Domain Goodies. Each week we’ll pick a public domain story or novel that we think are good reads. Why public domain? Well, that’s a another article entirely.

Anyways, this week’s Public Domain Goodies is Arthur Machen‘s The Great God Pan. Published in the 1890′s it was panned due to it’s depiction of sex and its decadent style, which puts it right up our alley.  It’s also a good one to compare to Dracula since they were both published in the same era and are very sexually charged compared to other stories of the time.  If you are also a buff of Horror Lit like myself, this was an important work that influenced H.P. Lovecraft who in turn influenced pretty much every horror since 1930.

That’s it for this week, but we could use your help. There is so much good stuff out there that we can use some help wrangling it, so if you have any suggestions, feel free to let us know.

The only journey is the one within. – Rainer Maria Rilke

People often say that the journey is more important than the destination, and I generally agree. I’m not one to flip to the back of the book to see how it all turns out, or pay no attention to the drive out of a simple desire to ‘be where I’m going, already!’

However, how much of the journey of a story lies in taking the time to get to know the story as it progresses? What if we could simply KNOW the story, immediately, without having sat and read the book over a dozen sunny afternoons? How much would that change our experience of the story itself?

Our experience of the story itself has changed miraculously over the past century. The ready availability of books and the education of the world’s young to a common point of literacy changed stories from an oral pursuit shared by large groups, to one of the solitary reader and their book. We then switched back with the advent of radio drama, with families sitting around the radio to find what happened to The Shadow or Fibber McGee and Molly. From there, we moved to the silver screen, and then the small screen, and have wavered between the two ever since.

How much does how we are told the story matter in the long run? I don’t mean in the sense that things are often removed from the story to transpose it to another medium. This is often done for movie adaptations, and is the reason many prefer the book, even if they saw the movie first. Movies (and to a much lesser extent, radio) shape concepts of the story for us in our minds, rather than allowing us the freedom to imagine it ourselves. Does this truly detract from the story itself?

Alan Moore certainly feels that the changes made to his work to move it to another medium is a horrid thing. Although I’ve enjoyed most of the adaptations of his work for what they are, I feel they never quite live up to the original source. Something about the layout of a comic book, and the way your eye tracks across the images and dialog, simply cannot be recaptured, no matter what medium it is moved to.

So, what will this mean when new mediums are made available for the telling of stories? We already know from the reaction of traditional media outlets that they become incredibly afraid whenever a new medium for telling stories becomes available. Publishers are still claiming they will be ruined by Ebooks, despite the fact that people with Ebook readers buy almost ten times as many books as those without. More importantly, what will this mean for those of us who consume the stories? How will changing the journey affect the audience?

Science has slowly come to know more and more about the functioning of the human brain as time passes. At some point in the future, I can only imagine that nanomachines of some type will be able to change things in our brain so that we simply know things. Direct manipulation of human physiology will alow stories to be downloaded directly into your consciousness. No interaction with the medium will be required. At that point in time, the journey of consuming the story will itself be gone. Only the story will remain.

Will that be a good thing, or a bad one, in the overall telling of our tales?

I’d love to find out.

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Rant: Looks Like Tuesday is Horror-ble at bkI

Adventures into Darkness, horror stories
Image via Wikipedia

«BEGIN RANT»

I realized the other day that a big chunk of my contribution to bkI content has been “horror”: I have 2 articles about vampires and our tag cloud contains HP Lovecraft, horror, vampires, Robert E. Howard, and Pseudopod.  The first thing that crossed my mind after that was “I bet these people think I’m one of those weird horror guys,” which was quickly followed by “Do I care?”

For the record, I both am, and am not, one of those guys.

See, when people ask me what I write, I say I’m a non-genre specific genre writer. In English, that means I jump genres for fun.  I try to write stories I want to read, and I want to read Horror.

…and Sci-Fi.

….and Urban Fantasy, and Crime Stories, and Noir Mysteries, and-

Well, you get the idea.

I’m just on a horror kick is all, writing-wise, mostly because of my Twilight rants. However, I watched the director’s cut of Payback the other night followed by Monsters vs. Aliens, and I’m worried I’m getting behind on my Deadpool comics.

I don’t understand people that limit themselves to a genre. There is too much stuff out there, good stuff, and your genre prejudices are going to get in the way of that.  One of the best Sci-Fi stories I ever read was written by a Horror writer. My Favorite fantasy stories were written by Sci-Fi writers.  One of the best Comic Book movies was directed by a guy that broke out thanks to Horror, and the next movie I want to see is a theater is Steampunk directed by a Crime guy.

Life is too short not to leave your comfort zone. You wouldn’t want to die without ever leaving your home town, not even for a vacation, would you?  I sure as shit don’t, so I moved 1200 miles away from home.  Yeah, it’s a little drastic, but even just a trip to the zoo in the city is a good enough change of pace for most folks.

Variety is the spice of life folks. I dare you to try something different today, be it a different hat, trying sushi, or just having one non-diet Dr. Pepper just to remind yourself what you are missing. At the very least, it’ll just make you appreciate life just a little more.

«END RANT»

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