Singularity Cover Reveal

 

Singularity Cover August 2015

The time has come.

The time is now.

Singularity is the new novel from Helena Hann-Basquiat, with Sara Litchfield, Sandy Ramsey, Lizzi Rogers and Hannah Sears.

Singularity is the sequel to last year’s JESSICA — a metafictional look into Jessica’s possible pasts.

Singularity is coming August 1, 2015

Singularity is its own novel, and can be enjoyed all on its own, but if you haven’t read JESSICA, GO HERE to read the first chapter or GO HERE to purchase a copy in paperback or e-book.

Meet the Writers of Singularity

Most of what you read here is autobiographical. True life stuff that could be fiction, but isn’t.

That said, I have been known to try my hand at fiction from time to time and if you’d like a little taste you should head over to Who Is Jessica? today.

You’ll get to know a little bit about a project I am working on with some other terrific authors and read a separate piece of fiction I wrote a little while ago…the first I had the guts to publish to the world.

I’d love for you to give it a read and get excited about Singularity. It promises to be very, very interesting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo credit: Pixabay

 

Carpe Librum: Dear Stephanie by Mandi Castle

When the call went out offering an advance copy of Mandi Castle’s debut novel, Dear Stephanie, I couldn’t say yes fast enough. Being a friend of whose writing I am already a fan, I thought I had an idea what to expect.

I was wrong.

It was better.

Paige Preston is beautiful, aesthetically enhanced in any and every way possible in the quest for perfection. She’s filthy rich and lives an incredibly priveleged life.

If you don’t hate her already then let me add that gorgeous men fall at her feet, not caring they are only being used to quell her addiction to sex. She uses her sexuality to get what she wants from whomever she wants it, then leaves them bleeding in her wake. Top that off with her bitterness toward her family, her drug habit, and her disregard for human emotion and you have a full on despicable bitch.

But….Mandi Castle has proven that she is a master of the twist. As the tale unfolds you learn what has molded Paige into the woman she is. Looks and privelege aside…..she is a vessel filled with pain and torment. A shattered vessel, broken beyond repair.

Or is she?

It’s very difficult to write a review on a book that you just want to read out loud to the world to make certain that they get the chance to experience the story. It reaches in and doesn’t just touch the many different levels of human emotion; it grabs on and doesn’t let go.

In the end, you may still find that you hate Paige, but you will also find that you love her, some may even be able to empathize to an extent.

The emotional ride this book took me on left me sitting still, mouth hanging open, then shouting (as well as one can on Facebook) at my friend, this brilliant author, asking her how she could do this to me.

I sit here in hopes that soon I will have the privilege of reading what happens after….

A masterfully written debut novel. Congratulations, Mandi! And very well done.

Now, with the author’s permission, a small look into the mind of Paige Preston. Should you require more, Dear Stephanie is available on Amazon for Kindle and in paperback.

 

My first suicide attempt happened completely spontaneously, as a reaction to what happened with Mr. Preston. Every other time, it’s been calculated, planned. I get this feeling in the pit of my stomach, a dull ache, and then slowly, darkness begins to surround me, and the voices in my head start, whispering at first, and then gradually their volume increases to screams until I feel like I am at the bottom of a hole with no light, and I’m suffocating, unable to take a deep breath, unable to focus, and unable to make it stop.

Then a calmness comes over me, the voices hush, and it feels like warm honey being poured over my head until my body can feel agaim, and I know what to do. Sometimes it comes slowly, and sometimes more rapidly, but every time, the answer is the same. Depression is a monster. He seeks me and haunts me and tries to pull me into the darkness.

I keep getting the dull ache. I know it’s there. I feel it, and I can’t shake it. The voices whisper, “You know what to do. Do it. Do it. Do it.” The voices convince me that the world is better off without me, that I’m doing myself and everybody who knows me a favor by making my exit, and most of the time, I believe their words.

This time though, I don’t want to believe it. As much as Blake makes me happy, I can tell I do the same for him, or at least, I did until he disappeared.

~From Dear Stephanie, a debut novel by Mandi Castle

Dear Stephanie Amazon

 

****************************************************************

Mandi Castle

Mandi Castle is a daydreaming stay at home mom of two who spends most her time reading and writing. She loves watching football, is obsessed with music, and has a serious addiction to smart funny people. She can often be caught having dance parties in her kitchen in Dallas, Texas. To connect more visit her at mandicastle.com.

You can also connect with her on Facebook and Twitter.

Carpe Librum: Order of Seven by Beth Teliho

Here in the blogosphere, I have met some of the most incredible people. I read the words these people write and I learn. I laugh and I cry. I am left speechless, empowered, intrigued, and inspired…sometimes all at once. Some of these people have become very important to me and I consider them friends no matter where they are. When they celebrate moments of triumph I am lucky enough to be able to share in a small part of the exhilaration. It is, in a word, astounding.

Beth was one of the first bloggers I ever met. I was reading one of her blog posts and vividly remember thinking I loved her immediately. She was fun and feisty and there would come a day when I would realize she was nothing short of courageous. I don’t know exactly when I found out she was writing a book. She would be off the grid every once in a while when she was truly in the zone or in her own words, ‘editing like a mo-fo’. And then came the day. The day her book was done and ready to publish.

order-of-seven-cover-beth-teliho

I jumped at the chance to read an advance copy. I went in knowing it would be good. What I didn’t know was how good.

Beth brought characters to life with a story that was nowhere near typical in the young adult genre. I found myself very involved in the journey with the characters especially Devi, the main character. She is real and believable, strong yet vulnerable. That isn’t always easy to do in paranormal fantasy. There is also a delicious heat between Devi and Baron, one of the secondary characters who, in true Beth style, is sexy as hell.

One of my most favorite facets of the book is how all of the characters have a part in the story and how beautifully Beth works through them to bring the adventure to its conclusion.

Beth managed to weave together a story with impeccable detail and then have it keep making sense at every twist and turn. Very often when I read a book that veers in a different direction the story becomes unbelievable and hard to follow. Not this time.

With the rich history and research so obviously put into the story, along with incredible imagination and writing, I was never disappointed and the ending tied up so wonderfully, BUT it seems to me it’s not quite over yet.

Thank goodness!

This, my friends, is a magnificent debut novel by Beth Teliho and I anxiously await book two.

In the meantime, here is a little gift from the author herself:

Allow me to set the stage: the curtain opens to reveal the main character, 18 year old Devi Bennett, who has the ability to channel energy from a specific tree. When she channels, she receives visions. Some replay moments from the past; other times the vision is a glimpse of something yet to come. Devi’s brother, Nodin, is an empath – he’s able to feel the emotions of others. In the following scene, Devi is channeling and describing the experience.

The massive oak tree towers above me from the far right corner of the yard. Thick branches dip nearly to the ground, like a giant’s hand awaiting a passenger. I reach up to my branch—the one I’ve used to climb it since I was five—and lift myself into its arms. The urgent energy transforms into soothing waves, twining through my fibers, entrancing me. My breath comes in short gasps, taking in what feels like clearer, sweeter air than before.

I’m lured higher and higher until I get to my chair, a forked branch that makes a perfect seat. I wilt into it, my cells merging with the tree’s essence. My arms and legs are the branches: weighted, powerful, rough with thick bark. Warm sap runs through my veins, and vibrations from the earth tremble in my bones. I reach up and feel my bark crackling, the warmth of the sun, and the undeniable, immense connection down deep in the earth. Anchored. Rooted. Part of something bigger.

The vision comes immediately.

I’m with Nodin. We’re young. He’s chasing me around the tree faster and faster. I’m squealing and laughing. He’s wearing long sleeves and a hat to protect his pale skin.

He almost reaches me, but I bolt toward the fence and lose him, sticking my tongue out and taunting him. His face gets red with frustration. He walks to the rock towers we built by the porch and kicks mine over. I start to cry.

Nodin doubles over, my sadness saturating him. He stumbles to my side to console me and I punch him in the shoulder. It starts to rain as he returns to the rock piles and begins to rebuild mine.

I calm into sniffles and give him a tiny smile when he shows me my tower is now taller than his. He hangs his head in relief, rain dripping from the brim of his hat.

Behind him a young boy and girl stand in tattered, filthy clothes. They are sad for Nodin, and although Nodin and I are soaked, they are bone dry.

My eyes flutter open and I bolt upright, shocked. I’ve never seen that boy and girl in a vision or otherwise, yet I’m almost certain who they are. I need to talk to Nodin. I start to climb down when thunder rumbles in the distance.

I cherish storms. I collapse back against the branches just as cold rain begins pelting my skin and nature’s symphony starts its slow march across the sky.

I will leave you with that little treat and highly recommend that you read Order of Seven by Beth Teliho.  It is available now for pre-order on Amazon and will be released on April 7, 2015.

You can also find Beth on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, and her website, Writer B is Me.

 

Carpe Librum: Helena Hann-Basquiat

One of the things I said I would always do was support projects I believe in. This is one such project.

Helena Hann-Basquiat came onto the scene and mesmerized with her incredible writing, a seemingly endless font of stories that could most certainly capture your attention and a wit that seemed unmatched. Whether writing as herself or as Jessica B. Bell, a most delightfully demented architect of all things creepy, I was never disappointed. If you have read her work you know exactly what I mean.

In quite the dramatic twist, Helena unmasked herself and introduced to us the man (yes, I said man) behind the curtain, Ken. Soon it was no longer really just about the writing, brilliant as it will always be. We became friends.

I am currently supporting Helena’s newest project, Memoirs of a Dilettante Volume Two via Pubslush and would encourage you to become a fan and, if you are able, to lend a hand in making this book land on the shelves.

Helena has generously offered a piece of her literary genius to share with you today. This will give you a small dip of your toe into the pool of creativity that is Helena.

Please…..read, enjoy, and share.

††††††††††††††††

The Exorcism of Helena Hann-Basquiat

There is a demon that lives in the fry oil of every McDonald’s – deep in your heart of hearts you know this to be true. And while it is a vile, loathsome demon, the fruit of its evil is ever so tasty, darlings, and more addictive than heroin.

I refer, of course, to that gloriously greasy golden gift, whose name is whispered in gluttonous growls like Gollum[1] petting his precious ring. Those crispy, potato sticks, which are ceremoniously sacrificed to the demonic oil and assaulted unsparingly with an abundance of salt.

French Fries.

Call them that if you will, and slather them with ketchup if that makes them go down any easier, and consider them a harmless side dish to have with a burger and wash down with an over-sized Coca-Cola if that lets you sleep at night. Go ahead and smother them with cheese curds and gravy and call it poutine if that eases your conscience.

But we all know exactly what those pommes frites really are, and that’s a delivery system for the demon that lives in the fry oil.

“No one forced you to steal my fries, Helena,” the Countess Penelope of Arcadia sighed, interrupting my introduction. You remember the Countess, darlings – my incorrigible niece – dresses like a nightmare version of Alice in Wonderland, suffers from self-inflicted multiple personality disorder, and is cold and heartless when it comes to my suffering.

And I was suffering, darlings – make no mistake about it.

The Countess had got it in her head that she really wanted a Big Mac – if for no other reason than the fact that she’d heard Bobby Darin singing Mack the Knife and I told her that it had been used in a really creepy McDonald’s commercial when I was a kid.[2]

“They had television when you were a kid?”

“Yes,” I deadpanned, “and running water, too. How about that?”

“But not the Internet,” Penny reminded me. “And aren’t you glad that you don’t have embarrassing pictures of yourself from high school all over Facebook and whatnot, forever commemorating your awkward youth?”

“Yes, well…”

“So, about that Big Mac?” The Countess Penelope of Arcadia (whose mascot is apparently a giant yellow M) prodded.

I sighed, as I always do when Penny gets insistent on something she knows I don’t want to do but will do anyway because I love her and because I’m weak-willed. Sighing is my only form of protest.

“Penny, you know that I can’t eat at McDonald’s.” I reminded her. “Everything there is loaded with MSG, and it’ll make me sick.”

It’s true, darlings. There’s not a thing on the McDonald’s menu that isn’t somehow infected by the flavour-enhanced demon that goes, in some circles, by the name Monosodium Glutamate. Well, maybe the cookies.

“What about the cookies?” The Countess countered contemptuously.

“I said maybe the cookies,” I corrected.

“No, you didn’t.”

“I’m pretty sure I did,” I insisted.

“Whatever,” Penny allowed. “But surely the french fries are safe.”

“Ha!” I snorted, only, you know, in a very lady-like fashion. “Shows what you know! Did you know that they actually put beef flavouring – pretty much straight MSG – into the fry oil?”

“I thought there was a demon in the fry oil,” Penny remarked snidely.

“That’s another perfectly valid theory,” I replied, standing by my aforementioned introductory statement.

“Uh huh,” The Countess nodded. “Well, nobody said anything about you having to eat anything. Just take us through a drive-thru and get me my Big Mac and nobody needs to get hurt.”

But someone did get hurt, darlings. When you play with the demon, someone always gets hurt. In the end, that someone was me. In the end, the temptation was just too great.

*******

“I told you not to eat my fries,” Penny chided, holding my hair as I vomited the next morning; my heartbeat pounding in my head, threatening to explode in my brain.

“YOU… TOLD….ME…” I growled, sounding not entirely dissimilar to a certain Cummerbund Bandersnatch playing a gold-loving dragon.

It was at that point that my head turned around backward, I made certain un-repeatable blasphemous statements involving a crucifix, some Cheez Whiz, and Al Gore’s rectum, and then proceeded to crawl, crab-like, up the wall and onto the ceiling.

“The pain, Penny!” I cried pathetically. “It’s so bad you can’t imagine…”

“I’m sorry, Helena,” Penny said, stroking my hair. “Is there something I can get you? Anything that will help?”

“LET HARPER FUCK ME!” I screamed, and projectile vomited pea soup all over the wall, and then violated myself violently with a rolled-up copy of Maclean’s magazine which featured a story about Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the ravaging of Alberta’s Oil Sands. “HE’S FUCKING THE REST OF CANADA! LET HARPER FUCK ME!”

“Geez, Helena, can a person be both demon-possessed and political at the same time?” Penny interjected.

“I’m not certain,” I replied uncertainly. “I believe the correct response would be I think you can in France, though, in all fairness, I’m making this up as I go. When you feel like I do, you can do whatever you want, and be as random as you like.”

“So what is it you want, Helena?” Penny asked.

“THERE IS NO HELENA, ONLY ZUUL!”[3] I roared, my eyes rolling back in my head until only the whites were showing. Suddenly I was wearing a flowing red dress and floating three feet above my bed.

“Okay, so what is it you want, Zuul?” Penny placated me.

“BRING ME THE HEAD OF JOHN THE BAPTIST!” I growled, and then broke down into a painful sob. “And The Beatles’ White Album.”

“Well, you know, it’s not actually…” Penny began to correct me, an irritating habit of know-it-all-i-ness (yes, it’s a word now) that she inherited from yours truly.

“Yes, I know it’s not really called The White Album no more than the Metallica album that features Enter Sandman is actually called The Black Album, but cut the crap, okay? We both know which album I’m talking about, and which four songs I want to hear in particular, so chop chop.”

Bungalow Bill, While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Happiness is a Warm Gun, and…”

I’m So Tired,” I finished.

“I know, Helena,” Penny said sympathetically. “Is there anything else you want?”

“No, I mean, the fourth song – I’m So Tired.”

“Yeah, but what about Martha My Dear?”

“FUCK MARTHA MY DEAR!” I growled, and fell to the bed, where I writhed and twisted, and lifted the bed off the ground six inches and then dropped it and began laughing maniacally and making lewd gestures and telling knock knock jokes that didn’t make any sense.

“So, nothing else, then?” Sister Penny of the Sacred Gushing Chest Wound of the Arcadianites asked, ignoring my pain-induced tantrum.

“A couple of Monster drinks,” I requested, burying my head in my pillow. “And some lonelyTylenol.”

Penny left and returned twenty minutes later to find me curled up in the fetal position, blankets torn to shreds by my claw-like hands, my head wrapped up in a damp towel. She slowly approached the bed, fearful of my MSG-possessed rage, and held out a can of Monster energy drink – the demon’s only weakness.

“The power of Taurine compels you!” she cried. “The power of Taurine compels you!”

“Very funny,” I said weakly, and reached out from under the covers to grab the can. I guzzled the whole thing thirstily and crushed it with demonic fury.

“So the next time I tell you to leave my fries alone?” Penny asked.

I growled in response. Or maybe that was my stomach, which had been emptied of any and all substances. I ignored her smart-ass question.

“Did you bring me anything to eat?”

Penny looked at me like she thought that perhaps an acceptable solution to expelling the demon from me might just be the loss of the host as well, and if she had to be the one to set me free, why, so be it.

“You didn’t ask me for anything to eat,” she said through calmly clenched teeth.

“I’m starving,” I replied. “Let’s go get some breakfast. Sometimes it helps to get something in my stomach.”

“Well, you know, the perfect cure for a hangover is an Egg McMuffin.”

My eyes flared red and my teeth elongated into needle like fangs in order to tear through the silly thick flesh of the Countess’ vulnerable throat.

“Kidding!” She wisely amended. “Only kidding! Geez, take a joke. We should get pancakes. Pancakes are good, right?”

“Good,” I moaned lustily. “Pancakes… gooooood.”

“Right,” the Countess smiled. “Pancakes it is. Doesn’t Katie owe you pancakes?”

Pancakes are something of a currency in my world, and indeed, I recalled that my friend Katie did owe me pancakes. But Katie was miles away, and virtual pancakes via the Internet were not going to cut it.

“IHOP?” I suggested instead, nursing my second energy drink. I’m well aware that it is inadvisable to drink more than one in a day, but that’s the recommendation for mere mortals. It takes more than one to kill the demon.

“Do they have pancakes there?” Penny teased.

“At the International House of Pancakes?” I answered, annoyed. “Yes, I think so.”

“Fuck, you’re humourless when you’re sick,” Penny remarked and grabbed my hand and pulled me out from under the covers. “C’mon, let’s throw some clothes on you and get you some pancakes.”

“Chocolate chip,” I mumbled. “Banana chocolate chip.”

My sister Cheryl used to make me banana chocolate chip pancakes whenever I was sick. It’s all I want when I’m feeling lowest.

“Yeah, Helena,” Penny said, suddenly quiet. “I know.”

“The power of pancakes compels you,” I moaned, stomach lurching as I pulled on random items of clothing from off the floor.

“I cast you out, foul spirit!” Penny chimed in, doing her very best Southern Baptist televangelist, which sounded ah say, which sounded a lot more like Foghorn Leghorn than Ernest Angley.

“Just say CHEESE SAUCE,” I added, and we both laughed as best we could.

“Pancakes?” Penny asked, holding the door for me and motioning for us to go.

“Pancakes.” I replied. Pancakes always made everything better.

[1] The creepy twisted little creature from Tolkien’s Hobbit/Lord of the Rings

[2] A guy in a tuxedo jacket with a giant foam crescent moon head and dark sunglasses, singing Mac Tonight instead of Mack the Knife. Truly, the stuff of nightmares.

[3] A reference to the demon-possessed Sigourney Weaver in Ghostbusters. “There is no Dana, only Zuul.”

———–

If you want to read more, BECOME A FAN at PUBSLUSH and pre-order Memoirs of a Dilettante Volume Two and Penelope, Countess of Arcadia

Available now! image06 JESSICA image07

The one, the only Helena Hann-Basquiat, everyone's favorite dilettanteThe enigmatic Helena Hann-Basquiat dabbles in whatever she can get her hands into just to say that she has.

Some people attribute the invention of the Ampersand to her, but she has never made that claim herself.

Last year, she published Memoirs of a Dilettante Volume One, and is about to release Volume Two, along with a Shakespearean style tragi-comedy, entitled Penelope, Countess of Arcadia.

Helena writes strange, dark fiction under the name Jessica B. Bell. VISCERA, a collection of strange tales, will be published by Sirens Call Publications later this year. Find more of her writing at http://www.helenahb.com or and http://www.whoisjessica.com Connect with her via Twitter @HHBasquiat , and keep up with her ever growing body of work at GOODREADS, or visit her AMAZON PAGE

Photo credit: Alejandro Escamilla/Unsplash