Showing posts with label Twilight Tales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twilight Tales. Show all posts

"Three Fancies from the Infernal Garden" by Claire Cooney


"Three Fancies from the Infernal Garden", a short story by my friend Claire Cooney, can be read online in the Winter 2009 issue of Subterranean magazine.
One of the things I love about Claire's poetry (and here, her stories) is that they look like smiling candied apples until you get up close enough to bite into one and you find them biting back. Here she plays around with figures from Russian fairy tales-- there's a firebird, and the witch Baba Yaga, and people called Ivan.
Claire is a fellow member of the Twilight Tales writers' group in Chicago, a survivor of Saratoga Springs and the Battle of the Black Gate, grande dame in training and one of the booksellers who brought the late lamented Kate the Great's Book Emporium to life. And if you live in Chicago, you should definitely track down Katie and Claire's other ventures such as Top Shelf Books in Palatine, with its open mic on Thursdays-- and attend Twilight Tales (at the Mystic Celt until the Red Lion finishes remodeling) the next time Claire is reading. I would adopt her if it wouldn't cause talk, Claire being too tall for me to explain as a Third World orphan.

READING IN CHICAGO MONDAY NIGHT



A reminder for Chicago friends and family that I'll be part of the mix at The Mix in Chicago tomorrow night, as part of the Twilight Tales writer's group early Mardi Gras celebration.

I'll be reading a new story written for the occasion-- "If There's Anyone Here That Weeps Like Mary", a horror story about Buddy Bolden's years in the insane asylum, as well as a sketch of Bourbon Street at 3AM and "They Carry Knives", the mostly true story of why we call it "Jazz" instead of "Spasm".
There will be King Cake and the wearing of amusing hats.

Savage Northerners and Southern Transplants Tell Eldritch Tales of Chilly con Carneval



Monday, January 28
Mardi Gras: A Twilight Tales Tradition!

Easter is earlier than usual, therefore Ash Wednesday is earlier than usual, therefore tonight is Twilight Tales' own special Carnival.

Authors to include:
Jody Lynn Nye, author of SciFi, Fantasy, fun, and Cats
Michael Fountain, creator of "Blood for Ink"
Tina Jens, author of The Blues Ain't Nothin'



With special musical guest "Rollin' & Tumblin'," starring Chicago's only red-headed blues diva Liz Mandeville
plus King Cake! and Raffle Prizes! yes, even Beads!


Tonight will be at our temporary home Mix: The Lincoln Park Lounge 2843 N. Halsted (don't forget, there's free parking in the adjoining lot!)

Why Wayne's E-Mails Get Opened First

At 09:05 13-8-2007, jonalgiers@ wrote:
My name is Wayne Allen Sallee and I see several books reprinted in Dutch that I am in (YEARS BEST HORROR). I would like to purchase copies of anything you might have with my work, as I was never informed of the foreign sales.
Thank you in advance.
Wayne Allen Sallee

In a message dated 8/27/2007 3:00:40 P.M. Central Daylight Time, Kees Buis writes:
Dear Wayne,
According to my information I have two anthologies with a story of you in it.
"De beste horror verhalen van het jaar" published by Loeb in 1988 with your story "De ballentent"
"De beste horror verhalen van het jaar" published by Loeb in 1989 with your story "Bloed tussen de regels"
Freely translated the first story would be something like "The Tent of Balls"; the second would be "Blood Between the Lines".
With kind regards,
Kees Buis

In the name of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, can anyone tell me what story I could POSSIBLY have written that freely translates as Tent of Balls? What, when, how.....? These crazy foreign editions, especially the ones I don't know exist and never got paid for.....

Wayne

TWILIGHT TALES TONIGHT: "Better to be Loved Than Feared"


TONIGHT!
Fantasy, science fiction, horror and detective fiction by members of the Twilight Tales Writers Group.
Open Mic for July at the Red Lion Pub, in Chicago, at 2446 North Lincoln Avenue, starting at 7:30pm, 20 minutes for fiction, 10 minutes for poetry.

I'll be reading a complete crime story, "Better to be Loved Than Feared". A social reformer discovers that the reason for his success in city government is due to a serial killer protegee who takes Machiavelli just a little too much to heart.

Read about the Twilight Tales Writers' Group here, the only literary group in the Great Lakes Region that would have me as a member!

How Does Wayne Do This? # 1 in a Series



Okay, so I'm collecting rejection slips as usual and my friend Wayne Allen Sallee, author of FIENDS BY TORCHLIGHT, THE HOLY TERROR, WITH WOUNDS STILL WET, and the only Penthouse story with "Division Street" in the title, sends me a picture of himself posing with GloriAnne Gilbert, actress and sci-fi model, star of BUSTY COPS 2, COUNTESS DRACULA'S ORGY OF BLOOD, and THE WITCHES OF BREASTWICK. He claims that he asked her to slap him and she felt sorry for him instead. In her film roles, Miss Gilbert's wide cheekbones, open smile and sweet demeanour set her apart from the usual hauteur of the B-movie barbarian princess, making Wayne's story weirdly plausible.

I'm starting to think the price of living in Kalamazoo, instead of one of the larger cultural centers, may be too high. Wayne's current adventures at the World Horror Convention in Toronto can be found at his blog, Frankenstein 1959 . Wayne sometimes wipes of the ichor, suppresses his bloodthirsty glee and pretends to be a tortured artiste. I look at this picture and I think Wayne is full of shit.


Angels in Cages on Honore Street


My buddy Wayne in Chicago, author of FIENDS BY TORCHLIGHT, DOWNWARD SPIRAL
-- and the only writer to publish erotica in Penthouse with the words "Division Street" in the title-- is an occasional photographer of Algrenesque and noir street scenes. I'm hoping someone in our Twilight Tales circle-- Roger, maybe?-- would use Wayne's photos for reprints of some out-of-print Nelson Algren books like NOTES FROM A SEA DIARY (my favorite), CONVERSATIONS WITH NELSON ALGREN and THE LAST CAROUSEL. Wayne has posted his favorite photographs of the year on his blog FRANKENSTEIN 1959.


TWILIGHT TALES in the TRIBUNE and A NEW SHORT STORY

I don't know whether to be delighted or appalled that something I participate in has been mentioned as one of the 10 Essentials Activities of Summer by The Chicago Tribune, along with Chicago style hot dogs, grass under your bare feet and the Windy City ThunderBolts:

"- RED LION PUB
A true British pub can feel like a second home, and this vintage Lincoln Park locale is easily one of the city's coziest spots. Not surprisingly, the pub's rooftop deck is just as comfy, a flower-filled place with a large, shady tree and all the ambiance of a private urban garden. On Monday nights, the deck might also be the setting for the long-running "Twilight Tales" reading series-an eclectic, sophisticated gathering where amateur and published authors read their work. 2446 N. Lincoln Ave. 773-348-2695."

'Eclectic' is a forgiving adjective, and 'sophisticated'? Crimes against God and Man, more like. Monday at open mic night I read a new short story, "The Ghost That Blocks the Door", that might or might not be included in the new and improved Tales of the Red Lion anthology
(the following laughingly copyright2006 by yr. 'umble servant):

“It’s not the bar that’s haunted,” Joe said. “It’s the people that come in here.”
While I was chewing that over, Joe cleared the table next to mine and brought a second beer I hadn’t ordered. I was just going to have one and then wander over to my coffee date with Cindy and her friends, but if one beer tastes good, the second tastes even better, so I shrugged and had a nice long swallow off the top.
“You ever really, honestly, think this place is haunted?” I asked.
“I didn’t say that,” the bartender said. “I said that people are haunted, and they bring their ghosts in with them.”
The pub had a reputation for ghosts going way back before the Chicago fire. No one minded, it was good for business: brought in all the Halloween tours and a writers’ group.
“Do you believe in ghosts?” I asked. “You, personally?”
Joe shrugged. He went to the opposite end of the bar to adjust the sound on a war film he was watching, 'A Bridge Too Far'. Joe was on a Great SNAFUs of World War II kick that summer, reliving the world’s mistakes over and over and over. He spoke over his shoulder as he watched Edward Fox order men to a silly death. “It’s easy for us to pretend we have no ghosts, ‘cause we tear things down and pave them over.”
“Someone was going to put up a shopping mall at Fredericksburg,” I said. “Disney wanted to make it a theme park. Can you imagine a haunted TGIFriday’s? Or a Bennigan’s?”
“Now that’s scary,” he said.
I checked the time on my cell phone. “I’m supposed to be somewhere else.”
“Hot date?”
“Blind date.”
Joe raised his brow and wiped the bar where there weren’t any stains. “Oh, really?”
“Well, not really a 'date' date,” I corrected. “a woman I know from work, she’s meeting some friends for coffee across the street, and one of the girls is single, so if I just happen to pass by...”
“Hm.”
“It’s been a year, now,” I said. “More than a year. They think I’m overdue. You know how women are.”
Amos the bar cat jumped to the counter and head-bumped his way into Joe’s embrace. Joe scooped him up with a critical eye, cleared a bit of cobweb from the cat’s whiskers, and let Amos settle into the crook of his arm. Joe’s fingers found the spot underneath the cat’s chin that made Amos squint with pleasure.
“One door closes, another opens. It’s like this old guy here,” Joe said. “We would never have taken him in, if we hadn’t lost Sally.”
“Everybody loved Sally,” I said. Joe let Amos pour himself onto the chair next to mine. I was in no hurry to embarrass myself at the coffee shop, so I started scratching Amos’ ears.
“Sally was the Queen of the Silver Dollar around here,” Joe said. “The bar couldn’t open without her.”
“I think a lot of the ghosts that people hear were just Sally, climbing in and out of boxes in the storeroom, or knocking a door shut upstairs when it was supposed to be empty.”
“Like the ghost that locks people in the bathroom,” Joe said.
“Yeah, what’s up with that?” There are three or four serious ghosts in the building, and one slightly ridiculous one: here at the Red Lion we have a ghost that jams the door to the upstairs ladies’ room, trapping luckless women in the toilet.
Joe was still thinking about Sally. “We were late getting her checkup, she just looked a little droopy one day and before we knew what was what, her kidneys had failed. Spent a thousand dollars trying to save that cat.
“Now I would have thought that was the worst thing that could happen to an animal, losing little Sally like that, but you know what? Bringing her ashes back from the funeral home, and there’s a girl at the corner of California and Mozart, she wants someone to help her get a cat away from these kids that were using him for a football, and that’s how we got Amos here. The parents of the kids that were abusing him, those bastards were going to use him to train pit bulls. That’s how they blood ‘em; they give them a smaller dog or a cat to kill before they use them in a fight. When I feel bad about losing Sally, I’ve got to wonder, if Sally sacrificed herself somehow to save Amos from something worse.”
“Cold comfort,” I said. “I remember a lot of people telling me that the Lord has mysterious ways we can’t see, that the worst thing that ever happened to you happened for a reason, and you can’t see it, but it saved you from something even worse.”
“Like you were aborted to keep from dying in a war?” Joe asked.
“Hemingway said in a bar once that he knew the saddest shortest novel ever written.” I pretended to scribble on the napkin in front of me. “For sale: Baby shoes. Never worn.”
“You wanted to know about the ghost that locks people in the bathroom upstairs,” Joe said. “That’s what he’s about.”
“It does seem like an odd choice for a ghost to haunt,” I said. “What is he, some kind of pervert?”
“Keeps people from doing something they’d regret,” Joe said. “Delays them just long enough to save their life.”
“No shit?” I scoffed.
“You think it’s bad luck to get trapped in that upstairs bathroom? I say maybe not, because in at least three cases that jammed door was responsible for saving some woman’s life.”
“How is that?” I asked. “She was a minute too late to have a brick fall on her head?”
“Opal Something or other, my dad used to tell me about this one: Opal totters into the upstairs toilet in 1934, when we didn’t have the dining room or the patio upstairs, just a hook shop and a card game. The door to the bathroom jams shut, and she’s trapped in there until she finally kicks it open. Kept her from stepping onto Lincoln Avenue just as the G-men were closing in on Dillinger in the alley next to the Biograph, having been fingered by Anna Sage who wore not red, but a white blouse and orange skirt.”
“Like you were there,” I smiled at him showing off about the dress. “And if she hadn’t gotten stuck in the bathroom, Opal would have been killed in the crossfire.”
“Laugh if you will,” Joe held up his hands. “That ghost is the spirit of the road not taken.”...

TO BE CONTINUED in print somewhere...

TWILIGHT TALES: DOING OUR PART FOR NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND


Godson Liam, aka Bondi, aka future editor of ORMONDROYD'S ENCYCLOPEDIA ESOTERICA, is being brought up properly with this
"Chibi" style plush Godzilla-- and when he graduates from infancy to baby-boyhood, on his nursery shelf there awaits a more realistic (but still cuddly) twelve-inch high plush Godzilla kaiju to snuggle. God pity the bad dream that wanders into a bedroom guarded by the Lord of Monster Island, GODZILLA, KING OF MONSTERS!

TWILIGHT TALES author WAYNE ALLEN SALLEE taught his young niece Ashley Mavros to read by introducing her to uber-texts such as Forrest Ackerman's FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND and the JOHN AGAR NEWSLETTER. MOLE PEOPLE synopsis from MST3K: "Smiling idiot John Agar takes Hugh Beaumont and Nestor Paiva beneath the surface of the Earth so that they have no place to run when he begins his windy pontificating through his muscled pie-hole. There they find Alan Napier and other thin men living out their sad existence in pleated skirts. Though aggressive at first, the pigmentless dress-wearers are cowed by Agar's mighty flashlight and shown the secret of their slaves, The Mole People. Actually, it's a matter of some controversy whether the mole creatures or their masters are the eponymous ones. Both could be considered "Mole People," as the former are indeed "moles" of a sort and the latter live among them - "Mole People." I became distracted by this and don't remember the rest of the movie, though I think Agar and friends escape. Without Nestor Paiva, no big loss. " As of this writing, there is no plush John Agar available.

MICHAEL FOUNTAIN READING NEW STORIES MONDAY NIGHT AT THE RED LION PUB, CHICAGO



MONDAY NIGHT, APRIL 10 at TWILIGHT TALES, Upstairs at
THE RED LION PUB
2446 N LINCOLN AVE., CHICAGO
(773) 348-2695
Yrs. Truly (Man About Town, Student of Mystery, White Bluesman, Editor of Ormondroyd's Encyclopedia Esoterica, and Love Child of Beatrix Potter and Edgar Allen Poe) will be reading:
* A new crime/horror story, "Binky Wasn't Ever Going to Get Up"
* A non- fiction excerpt illustrated with pretty pictures, "Tarot Without Superstition"
* And a short fantasy: "Ogopogo, or the Sea-Serpent Redemption"
Also appearing will be JJ PIONKE with
"Gender Bending Gaijin Dreams with Poetry-- A fiction-writing academic, JJ brings Twilight Tales a mix of everything Monday night."

CHICAGO'S RED LION PUB:

* built in 1882 when Lincoln Park and DePaul were nothing but farmland
* haunted by a score of Chicago's finest ghosts
* just across from the Biograph Theatre, where Dillinger was fingered by the Lady in Red and shot in the alley by G-Men
* Reputedly inhabited by eight (8) count 'em eight ghosts-- including the retarded girl who smells like lavendar, Sharon who blocks the door to the upstairs ladies room, the dark bearded man killed over a gambling debt

THE TROUBLE BEGINS AT SEVEN.

"SIGNIFYING MONKEY" -- NEW SHORT STORY ONLINE!

  • "SIGNIFYING MONKEY"
  • by Michael Fountain

    Science Fiction, Horror, and an Animal's Revenge...
    Animals are the poor children of Fortune. The research described in this story is all too real. If we cannot rescue Seventeen, why not a dream in which his tormentors feel just a little of what he feels...?

    Featured at
  • TWILIGHT TALES:
  • A weekly live reading series based in Chicago, every Monday night at the haunted Red Lion Pub. The web site features short fiction, articles, and essays, as well as books by Twilight Tales authors available for purchase.