Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Arcing by Adria Bailton, featuring a heart with floral elements coming out of it.

Zilla: Maybe your next great read is actually an audiobook! Adria Bailton’s Arcing brings us a speculative story in audio form. Adria, can you tell us a bit about it?

Adria: Arcing: A Novelette is a speculative women’s fiction, coming-of-age story that may resonate most with Gen Z but, of course, with anybody who struggled with major life decisions at a young age.

 When a tragic event splits Rosa’s family apart, she finds herself on her own embracing freedoms she’s never had. She meets Dan on one such night of freedom.

Dan has dreamed of otherworldy Rosas since he was young, but never thought he’d meet her in his life. When he finally does, he can’t get her out of his mind.

Just as everything is looking up for Rosa – she’s found a man she loves and her life is stablizing – she’s forced to confront her own complicitness in her family’s destruction. Will Rosa choose love or family?

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

Adria:When I was working on finishing a novel to send to an author open call from a publisher in 2021, I was also thinking about the main character of this novel, Rosa. Why did she behave the way she does in the novel I was working on at the time? Additionally, I wondered about the character in a song that had been stuck in my head. As someone who is neurodivergent, I find comfort in listening to a single song over and over and this song was on my rotation. Finally, I had a dream, which may be embedded in the text somewhere. Of course, I had to work on this story of Rosa’s because I was on a deadline for the novel.

Zilla: So would you say Arcing is a character-driven novel?

Adria: Arcing is definitely character driven. As I said, I was thinking about characters primarily, ruminating on why Rosa seems so detached from her sisters. Why would she be like that in this moment of such turmoil for her whole family? I also was trying to get to the motivations of the character in a song, which produced Dan.

Zilla: From your characters to someone else’s—who are your favourite characters that you didn’t write?

Adria: That’s a tough one, but I’m partial to a couple of bodyguards, Joscelin Verrueil and Gideon the Ninth. Of course, I read Joscelin in Kushiel’s Dart over 20 years ago when I was still in formative years for reading. I enjoyed Cassiel’s Servant, which is a recent release of the same story told through his eyes recently. Sometimes a story is just such a good read. I tend to think the current Romantasy trend could use a trek through those books. Jacqueline Carey, in my opinion, is the assignment.

Gideon didn’t really grab me until the sunglasses in Gideon the Ninth and then I was all in. Apparently I love a sword-wielding bodyguard, whether they follow orders and a strict observance of their religious order or not.

Zilla: What’s your next writing project?

Adria: I’m always working on short stories, drafting or revising. Recently, I drafted a novel about a lesbian couple trying to find a home in the dinosaur apocalypse. It’s with some readers for feedback right now and I hope to get back to it for revision in mid-April. I also have the story of Nina, Rosa’s younger sister during this time, in a novel called Worlds Divide coming out from Balance of Seven in 2026 With those two novels and their revisions on the horizon, that’s enough in the long form for now. The short stories revolve around a personification of death and another is a list story about killing oppressors.

Zilla: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?

Adria:  You can find me primarily at my website. My socials are BlueSky, TikTok, MastodonYouTube, and Instagram. Arcing: A Novelette can be found on Goodreads and many places where audiobooks are sold. A sample and links to audiobook retailers are available at my website. Readers should also be able to find the book through their library app.

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Bounty by Jason Pchajek, featuring what looks like a ship and a tiny robot running.

Zilla: Cyberpunk and ecofiction might be genres made for each other. Jason Pchajek wrote a Canadian (!!!) book that combines both, so we had to have him here to tell us about it. Jason, take it away!

Jason: Bounty is my debut novel, a climate fiction and cyberpunk thriller set in 2120s Winnipeg where a bounty hunter works to save his city from ecological collapse. The best way to explain it is through the blurb: 

Nikos Wulf is at the top of his game. Within the sublevels of 2120 Winnipeg, he is the undisputed king of bounty hunters, working for the elite Bounty Commission Eco-Terror Taskforce. The job: maintain the delicate ecological balance in a city holding back climate collapse. But when a series of bounties go wrong, Nikos finds himself on the trail of a troubling new player among the city’s anti-establishment. Bound to a sense of duty to the city that made him, Nikos finds himself in a deadly game of catch-up with an insidious enemy bent on bringing down everything he’s fought so hard to protect.

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

Jason: The main inspiration for writing this book was to represent my city and country in the cyberpunk genre. Quite often stories in this genre, and science fiction in general, even when written by Canadians, never seems to take place in Canada. So, I approached it with the goal of representing what I think my hometown of Winnipeg would look like 100 years in the future.

To accomplish this, I tried to imagine everything. How the city, country, and world would evolve technologically, economically, politically, and socially. A reviewer lauded my “innate understanding of how to build believable and credible worlds geographically, materially, and sociologically” and she called it an “immersive experience”, so I think I did a good job haha.

Zilla: How much research did you need to do for your book?

Jason: Since the science of climate change and other major technological advancements play a central role to the story, I had to do a lot of research. I had to understand how different areas of the globe would be impacted by climate disaster over time, how resource shortages and land loss would lead to conflict and displacement, how societies will respond differently to climate disaster, and so much more.

It was a lot of work to try and get it all as accurate as possible to create a feasible world.

One of the biggest questions was in climate recapture technology and how it could be used to create new building material. In Bounty the central megacorp, Argo, creates a new super-strong material called “argite” through captured carbon from the air and oceans. I reached out to a few geologists to ask if inserting carbon into the porous rock prevalent under Winnipeg could create denser and more durable material, and I was told that yes, it’s theoretically possible!

Zilla: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Jason: The Night Beats community can find me on most social media sites under the @jasonpchajek handle (Twitter, Instagram, and Tik Tok), but I am most active on Bluesky (@jasonpchajek.bsky.social). If you want to check out Bounty, it is available through most major booksellers, but you can find easy links on my website.

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Soulbound by Aaron Wasekuk, featuring three figures on a ship.

Zilla: Fantasy is for young and old, so today we’ve got a coming-of-age series from Aaron Waseskuk. Aaron, can you tell us a bit about your books?

Aaron: SoulBound is a series following the adventures of Jaelyn as she unlocks the hidden magic powers dormant within her soul. Through the teachings of Master Oum & his protege, Ethan, they impart wisdom and skills, granting her strength to fight her own inner demon—as well as pirates, Monsters, and a cult of arsonists. But will her newfound abilities help her reunite with her family?

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

Aaron: Originally it started as Naruto fanfiction ages ago, but I liked the original protagonist enough to want to make something out of it. Ironically enough, he’s not even my current protagonist.

Zilla: Which of your characters do you most wish you could meet?

Aaron: I’d want to meet Oum, the mentor figure in Volume 1 and Volume 2. I love talking to old wise mentors. Sharing a cup of tea with him sounds delightful.

Zilla: Which of your characters would want to talk to you? What would they say?

Aaron: I think Sebastian (the protagonist of Volume 3) would demand to know where his mother is and why I’m so mean to him. I don’t think he’d appreciate either answer. What’s twisted is that he is my favorite character… eventually. He needs time to mature first.

Zilla: What makes Sebastian your favourite?

Aaron: His ability to see the future (among other things) has so much potential for weird and trippy story telling. Plus I have a lot of big ideas planned for him down the road. Jaelyn is #2, because she is our first protagonist and succeeding in making her a good character felt like a huge win to me.

Zilla: How much research did you need to do for your book?

Aaron: For a work of fiction, a surprisingly large amount. From technology of the time period to physics to color and dream theory. Even the names are researched and carefully chosen for each relevant character.

Zilla: Is your work more plot-driven or character-driven?

Aaron: I like to think the characters make their own decisions and I just relay what they do. I have an idea of where I want things to go. But, quite recently, we revamped an entire plot in which our hero escapes a dungeon. Instead of finding help like originally planned, he runs into another character who ruins the entire escape. But a new plot emerges from the choices of these two and I’m excited to see what they do next.

Zilla: Who did you imagine reading your book as you wrote it?

Aaron: I imagined myself as a teenager when I first got into anime and fantasy. People who grew up loving stories like Naruto, Avatar, and the like. We modeled a lot of SoulBound off Japanese anime and manga from its release to the world. If you like those types of world and stories, you’ll enjoy this.

Zilla: What’s your next writing project?

Aaron: We are looking into sci-fi for our next genre. It’s actually something we’ve been outlining for a while. Ghost Hunting, but in space. I’m excited to get to work on it once time allows.

Zilla: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Aaron: This link has all the stores where you can buy our physical book and ebook, as well as our social media platforms. Audio and as early releases of chapters are available only on our Patreon. We are most active on Bluesky, Instagram, and Facebook.

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Cover for Rhino: The Rise of a Warrior: A Hell Divers novel by Nicholas Sansbury Smith, along with a photo of the author, a young white man.

Zilla: Write what you know, they said, and what Nicholas Sansbury Smith knows is disaster management—so he wrote a post-apocalyptic adventure novel Rhino. Nick, can you tell us the blurb?

Nick: Centuries after the Third World War reduced civilization to ashes in a global nuclear inferno, humanity clings to life in giant airships sustained by Hell Divers—brave souls who risk their lives plunging to the surface to salvage essential supplies to maintain mankind. But this is not their story. This is the saga of the survivors before them, the survivors on the ground.

 Embark on this riveting post-apocalyptic adventure centered on Nick Baker, a frail orphan born in the perpetual darkness of an ITC bunker. As raiders from the great Cazador empire descend—massacring and enslaving Nick’s people—witness his epic rise from boy slave to fearsome warrior bent on freeing his people from bondage. And discover the legend of a man whose enemies will come to fear as Rhino

Zilla: I love a good fight scene, and it sounds like Rhino: The Rise of a Warrior delivers with plenty of them. As a writer, how do you keep action sequences engaging while also realistic? Within ‘realistic’ for science of course—I’ll accept a mech suit but I won’t accept someone twisting out of a well-executed arm lock.

Nick: My action sequences are often based on the characters and their personal limitations and skills. Rhino might be the best story I’ve written to explain just how this works. For example, in the beginning of the story, when Nick Baker is just a boy, he is frail and has no fighting experience. He has the fire inside of him, but fire doesn’t translate into knowing Kung-Fu. This isn’t the Matrix. Instead, Nick gains weight, trains, and eventually is taught the art of warfare. It takes years before he can actually fight. He learns different weapons and how to use them. Accurately describing weapons is another important part of realistic fight scenes, as is depicting how the action works.

One thing a lot of writers don’t understand, and a lot of people in general, is that fighting requires extreme endurance. Just look at how tired boxers get over the duration of a long fight that goes to the bell. With action sequences it’s most authentic to show your characters getting winded and fatigued from combat, and for injuries to not just slow them down but disable them if severe enough.

In Rhino, I used all of the above to illustrate one boy’s transformation into man, and ultimately—warrior.

Zilla: On the news, we see the horror stories of national emergencies, but we also see community resilience as people come together. What did your time in Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management teach you about people’s ability to look after each other, and how did that play out in the book?

Nick: My time at HSEMD taught me humans are inherently good and help each other in the face of natural disasters. I also saw political views being pushed aside and people coming together. Neighbors help each other and communities organize. Of course, there will be some anomalies where this isn’t true (thieves, opportunists—often from outside of the disaster area), but for the most part when disasters strike, human instinct is to help. That is, when there are resources. That often changes when food, water, and supplies run out. Then you’re talking more of an apocalyptic novel, and I’ve written about that a lot on how people react. There are still communities coming together, and neighbors helping each other, but when shit really hits the fan, you start seeing more desperation, which drives people to panic, and sometimes—violence.

Zilla: I am a massive Mad Max fan, plus I love all the various sequels and spin-offs. Are there specific motifs from that series that inspired you as you wrote?

Nick: Definitely the world building and the plot around controlling the petrol. If an apocalyptic world like that were to exist, just like in Rhino with the Cazador Empire he becomes part of, survival would be driven around resources, specifically fuel. This is a theme in this story and the entire series for that matter. Other inspirations would be from the modified vehicles. I’ve done that to the boats/ships in the Hell Divers series. You’ll see some of that in Rhino as well. I absolutely love writing in this type of destroyed environment. It’s haunting and brutal, in a beautiful way.

Zilla: What’s your next writing project?

Nick: I am working on multiple projects: a military sci-fi saga with a co-author, and then a LitRPG apocalypse trilogy, plus more Hell Divers books. I enjoy writing multiple storylines at once, as it keeps them from going stale for me. Readers are smart, they know when writers are bored with their work. I don’t get bored usually because I take time off from writing stories that might otherwise feel more like a chore if I had to write the same thing every day. I got asked the other day if I ever run out of ideas—nope, I wish I had more time to turn more of those ideas into stories!

Zilla: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Nick: I’m on Instagram, X/Twitter, and Facebook. You order Rhino on Amazon, Apple BooksB&N, or| Bookshop.org.

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

MEDIANICAL AGE: Drifting through the tides of time by M.A. Alvarez, showing a group of characters in a space setting.

Zilla: M.A. Álvarez brings us a time travelling blend of science fiction and fantasy, Medianical Age. M.A., can you tell us a bit about your novel?

M.A.: Medianical Age: Drifting through the tides of time is my first work to be translated into English. The book was launched on February 28, 2025, the same day as the great planetary alignment of seven planets!

The book includes illustrations by me, such as the one featured on the cover, depicting the characters in the novel. Medianical Age is a play on words composed of medieval, age and mechanical. This is because the story takes place in medieval times and in a distant mechanized future as follows:

One promising day, sometime in the Middle Ages, a deceitful and charlatan surgeon goes to a castle and assures the lord that he can cure his son’s madness by removing a stone from his head. Since childhood, he has claimed to see strange beings, which only he can perceive, and this has led to his confinement by his ashamed family.

In the distant future, a renowned visionary known as K-79 receives an important award for his work in the world of science: the construction of cyborgs from people who were about to die in the past, for different purposes.

Everything seems to be going according to his plans; however, K-79 detects an anomaly in the Middle Ages and discovers that its existence is in danger …

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

M.A.: I enjoy writing historical fiction, and for this novel, I was inspired by the contrast between a bygone era, like the Middle Ages, and a distant, technological future. I wanted to explore the conflict between superstition and science. It also gave me the opportunity to combine different literary genres.

Zilla: Getting historical fiction right isn’t easy! How much research did you need to do for your book?

M.A.:This book required a lot of research, especially for the Medieval period. Fortunately, I am passionate about history, and I love researching information for my books. Additionally, I often attend historical tours, and I have visited many medieval castles!

Zilla: How is the plot structured?

M.A.: The structure of the plot is like a puzzle, where the pieces fall into place in the end, affecting all the characters. This is due to the time travel elements—particularly one that is quite unexpected…

Zilla: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
M.A.: The book is available on Amazon and you can find more information about it, as well as my social media links, on my website.

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Antifa Lit Volume 1: What If We Kissed While Sinking a Billionaire's Yacht? with an introduction by Chris Gorman. The logo has the red and black antifa flags with the text around a circle. There's a starburst in red and blue. A silhouette of a yacht is going down in the background, with two orcas leaping up in the foreground. There's a long list of authors.

Rachel: With us today is Benjamin Gorman, editor and contributor to the Antifa Lit Journal, which, if I do say so myself, is a rad book. Tell us a little about the anthology, Ben! What is it, and how did it come together?

Ben: We had decided as a family that we would need to leave the US if Trump won the election, so between Election Day and Inauguration Day, we liquidated our possessions and Chrys (who wrote the introduction to Volume 1), our kid Franke, our three dogs, and our two cats relocated to Spain. In the midst of all the insanity of the move, I processed it by writing an explanation that started as a draft of a Facebook post, then a longer blog post, and became a whole book, Dear America: A Breakup Letter. It was published by Not a Pipe Publishing just as we were safely across the border, and it did surprisingly well. A lot of people were in the same headspace, though I understand not everyone can leave the country. Watching all that interest in the book while we were absorbing the daily nightmare of American news, Chrys suggested publishing an anthology of anti-fascist poetry and short fiction. Not a Pipe has published themed anthologies before, like Written with Pride, the all-LGBTQIA+ anthology, and Strongly Worded Women, by exclusively women authors. The response from authors and poets was overwhelming. So many talented writers were desperate to have a venue to speak out against fascism, to process their fear, and to provide readers with an alternate vision of the future. As we poured over all the submissions, we realized we could easily populate a regular journal with high quality short fiction and poetry. So the anthology became Volume 1. And our intention is to keep it going as long as there’s an appetite for it. I don’t foresee this regime going away nearly as quickly as some people expect, and I think we’ll see increases in fascism, especially in terms of would-be-autocrats leveraging anti-immigrant sentiment, all over the wealthy world as the people from countries we’ve made uninhabitable through our climate colonialism decide to move to the places where they can still live above water and below 130° F/ 55° C. There will be very real consequences in terms of housing, supply chains, etc., and I fear that instead of trying to be welcoming, a lot of countries will turn to demagogues. We’ll need people of conscience to speak out, and writers often fill that role. 

Continue reading

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

120 Murders: Dark Fiction Inspired By the Alternative Era, edited by Nick Mamatas. Closeup of a screaming white man wearing sunglasses.

Rachel: Nick Mamatas is a fantastic author and a longtime friend, and every time he puts out a new book, I know I’m going to love it. This one is no exception, and I’m thrilled that he’s here to tell you about it. Nick, please tell us about yourself and 120 Murders.

Nick: I’m Nick Mamatas, an author and editor. My most recent editorial work is the editing of the anthology 120 Murders: Dark Fiction Inspired by the Alternative Era. I asked top writers of noir, gothic, and horror fiction to write a story inspired somehow by the songs played on college radio and “alternative” music video programming blocks, and, boy howdy, did they!

It’ll be published by a new independent press, Ruadán (pronounced ROO-ah-dawn) Books, which focuses on all manner of dark speculative fiction.

120 Murders includes brand new stories by William Boyle, Selena Chambers, Jeff Chon, Libby Cudmore, Jeffrey Ford, Meg Gardiner, Todd Grimson, Cara Hoffman, Maxim Jakubowski, Alex Jennings,  Cyan Katz, Josh Malerman, Michael Marano, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Zandra Renwick, Jason Ridler, Veronica Schoanes, Elena Mauli Shapiro, Brian Francis Slattery, Molly Tanzer, Chris L. Terry, and Paul Tremblay, as well as little notes about their musical tastes.

Rachel: One of the hazards of growing older is that delusion that the pop music you listened to when you were 17 was truly the best pop music ever produced by humanity. For GenX, of course, that is objectively true. In Ghosts Of My Life, Mark Fisher talks about the material conditions that led to post-punk, and how they no longer exist to produce music with the same originality and emotional resonance. Is there something about the alternative era that lends itself particularly well to horror, dark fantasy, and noir?

Nick: There might be some biases built into that conception. I remember when Don’t Tell a Soul came out; most Replacements fans I knew thought something along the lines of “What the hell is this?!” and now that album is a classic, I guess. Do people still listen to Helium? I suspect not. I just tried and almost made it through “Superball.” Yow! 

But I do agree; the 80s and 90s were the last time when rents and rehearsal space were cheap enough, but recording equipment expensive enough, that bands would write and play out and perfect their sounds, and then be discovered and signed. The incubation period for songwriting has been drastically shortened thanks to self-releasing, and labels for lack of something to spend their capital on so focus on brand development over band development, and high-priced producers and songwriters/punch-up artists that flatten sounds and eliminate lyricism. You can’t mass produce “It’s so easy to laugh, it’s so easy to hate/ It takes strength to be gentle and kind.” It doesn’t rhyme!

Deeper lyrics tend to be darker. Analog production tends to sound dirtier. Reagan, Thatcher, and Kohl, those great annihilators of society, gave everyone plenty to write about. Now everyone’s a Reaganite—1980s Reagan in economics and queerphobia, 1960s Reagan in racism. One can hardly even object to it anymore; what’s a ruin when it’s your cradle?

Rachel: Horrifying, though I am relieved it’s not just because I’m old. What was your process for assembling the collection? Did any authors have to fight it out for a particular song?

Nick: I asked the writers whose short stories I like, and begged some famous friends whose short stories I like, to lend me their names and then went hunting for money. For the most part, everyone wanted something different to riff off of, though for a moment there 120 Murders looked like it might have ended up 120 Murmurs–an R.E.M. tribute. 

I was also quietly open to query letters, which, back in the old days, every anthologist was. The SATization of submissions by editors, who claim to be interested in new voices, mean that many anthologists don’t entertain query letters, which I think is a huge mistake. Slush piles are an extremely inefficient way to find new voices, but they do serve to make editors objects of respect and fear among hundreds of hopeful submitters, which is often rather the point of launching some anthology or magazine project. You get prominent writers to love you by giving them money, and would-be writers to fear you by holding forth on social media about how writers aren’t following submission guidelines or are otherwise being bad boys (almost always boys, of course).

One might say that querying serves as an in politic, as someone needs to know how to write an effective business letter, but that’s a skill one can master in an afternoon. Others suggest that it serves as a barrier against writers who are shy or lack confidence. I’ll say that several people tweeted/commented to me, publicly, to ask when/if/why wouldn’t I open to slush submissions. Anyone nervy enough to ask an anthologist to quintuple his workload, and to attempt a bit of public shaming while they’re at it, is certainly brave enough to just write and privately send a normal query letter.

Three of the stories in the final book were query acceptances, and a fourth was the author’s fiction debut. Cyan Katz was a student in an online workshop I ran and I was impressed enough with their work, which was wild and raw and had a very “punk” feel, that I solicited them for a story and worked to get it into great shape. Other authors generally needed light edits, or some rewrites, or were given a second chance after the first story wasn’t great.

Rachel: With BookTok and niche online communities, the many genre markets are increasingly segmented, and trend-chasing publishers seem to be leaning towards cozy, hopeful stories. What were some of your motivations and challenges when pushing back against these trends?

Nick: I’m very skeptical of the cozy trend, though every subgenre and movement has its virtuosos and its hacks. The top three percent of anything is going to be great. I do think there are two trends—plenty of cozy and hopeful, but also a lot of dark stuff. Barnes & Noble here in the US has a horror section again, major publishers have relaunched horror lines for the first time in thirty years, and neo-noir is pretty huge. There may even be a cozy story in 120 Murders, though the author and I disagree about how cozy it is. I think any story with a closetful of desiccated corpses is pretty dark.

In crime fiction, there’s been a microtrend toward anthologies in tribute to this or that musical artist. I even have a story in one, Lawyers, Guns, and Money, which is obviously a Warren Zevon tribute. Some of the book themes are a little shakier, honestly. I thought a broad musical range—all of college radio and alternative—and a thematic range of noir, science fiction, crime, and gothic—would make more sense, or would at the very least put a bullet in the head of the trend.

Rachel: I would never ask you to pick favourites, but are there any particular images or moments from any of the stories that live rent-free in your head? What are they?

Nick: Bunches! I’ll list a few. One of the stories begins with its author contemplating being solicited for the story she is writing and the reader is reading. My name is in it, so of course I love it. We have queer cyborgs who actually do queer things on the page, alleyways full of broken glass sparkling under the streetlamps, a big pile of sloppy joe mix plopped atop a cardboard chore wheel (ew!), poor Jeffrey Ford writing about a very Jeffrey Ford-type guy being shot in the head for being annoying (Jeff, no!) a horrific historical scene of butchery and cannibalism, and much much more.

Rachel: Cara Hoffman’s author’s note references “collective loneliness,” and “art from garbage and lack,” concepts that as a cynical Gen Xer immediately resonated with me. What does this era of music—and the stories inspired by it—tell us about our struggles today?

Nick: There’s a weird social media trend in which Gen X people describe themselves as feral and tough because they were latchkey kids and roamed the streets freely and had to get up and walk across the room to change the TV channel. It’s extremely tedious, if you ask me, and obviously just whistling past a graveyard.

But art from garbage and lack is totally it. The internet is dead; this interview may well be the only non-AI tainted thing a reader may come across today, and even then they’ll likely just find it via links you and I post to our social media accounts. Does anyone just stop by any website anymore to see what’s up? Amazon Prime Day, maybe! Ugh. So we are back to where we were in 1992—photocopy machines (many books are print-on-demand, that’s just big photocopying!) and homebrew movies (albeit with phones and not VHS camcorders) and singing over beats. If the Sisters of Mercy had Doktor Avalanche (the first Dr was a Boss DR55 drum machine that could produce all of four sounds) and toastmasters and MCs had the first twenty seconds of a vinyl track to work with in the 1980s and 1990s, well, so do we. The struggle is going to be to find our humanity between gaps in the algorithm, and as the last people to hit adolescence in an analog world, Gen X and Xennials have something to say and something to share.

Rachel: I’ve already read it, but where do normal readers get a copy? And how do they find you?

Nick: Find me on Bluesky at nmamatas!

On Instagram I mostly post license plates and pizza slices, but there I am concentrateandtryagain. You can get 120 Murders at a nice discount, with a bonus story by me bundled in with your receipt, at the publisher website. I would also highly recommend special ordering a copy from your local independent bookstore, though the book will also be available via the megachains—emphasis on the word chains, if you catch my drift. You don’t want to be chained, do you?

Revealing Blight (The Sleep Of Reason #2)


“They would have you believe all hope is lost. So let them see what it looks like when we fight without hope.”.

I’m so excited to share the cover for Blight (The Sleep Of Reason #2). It’s the sequel to Cascade, and follows the surviving characters as they struggle to navigate a new, post-disaster world shaped by feral magic, demons, and tyranny.

The cover illustration is by the fabulous Marten Norr. You can find more of his work at Flower Prince Draws.

As for the book itself—it will be released in Spring 2025 through The BumblePuppy Press. Can’t wait that long to read it? You can reach me through my contact page for an Advance Review Copy, or just wait for the ARC signup sheet that I’ll be posting soon.

If you haven’t read Cascade yet, what are you waiting for? I’m so excited for you to read Blight, but it’ll make much more sense if you read Cascade first. You can buy it anywhere online or through the publisher.

Praise for Cascade:

“A near-perfect blend of implacable horror, gallows humor, and ecological apocalypse.” — Peter Watts, author of Blindsight

“Finally, an urban fantasy that kills the cop — and the rest of the government — in your head. Relentlessly radical and often hilarious, Cascade will change the way you look at magic, and the state, forever.” — Nick Mamatas, author of The Second Shooter

Advance praise for Blight:

“Suffused with masterful horror and black humour and compassion for its beleaguered and all-too-human characters, this spellbinding chronicle of leviathanic magic, political intrigue, and righteous insurrection hurls a molotov cocktail at the evil lurking in humanity’s banal appetites for control.” — Dale Stromberg, author of Maej

 “Rosen is a daring voice in Canadian SFF, and she’ll break your heart while making you laugh.” — Michelle Browne, author of Meaning Wars

“Rosen’s ability to create such a beautifully vivid picture of a vicious world as it slowly chokes to death is simply breathtaking.” — Rohan O’Duill, author of Cold Blooded

“A worthy sequel to an epic ecofantasy. The world’s on fire, it’s time to lick our wounds and start putting it back together.” — Zilla Novikov, author of Query

Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview

Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Cover of Deads Rise! by Shawn Whitney. It's yellow and pink with a woman with her fist upraised and a skeleton overlaid on her. Other text is "No signs of life book one" and "Dying is just the beginning...".

Rachel: We love to get politics all over our pulp fiction, so here’s screenwriter and novelist Shawn Whitney to tell us about his latest book, Deads Rise! Shawn, tell us about the book!

Shawn: It’s the first in a series called No Signs of Life. When half the world’s population suddenly drops dead, humanity braces for the zombie apocalypse. But as the “Deads” reawaken hours later, it becomes clear this is something far more complex.

Tanitia Mortero never asked to die, let alone rise again. Now, she finds herself caught in a war between the living and the Deads – a war fueled by fear, misunderstanding, and a refusal to accept that death was just the beginning of a startling evolutionary leap.

Rachel: That sounds rad, and hints at something more complicated than your typical action-horror.

Shawn: My own work focuses on typically unrepresented folks. However, when I’m writing to pay the bills, I have to write what my publisher tells me. That means male-led and even restricts the kinds of men that can appear because apparently the audience for male-led sci-fi is so fragile that they can’t even handle a flawed hero or they will explode into a thousand tiny pieces of testosterone. Nonetheless, I try to squeeze in some thoughtful elements that relate to social change, changing consciousness and personal transformation.  

Rachel: Testosterone explosions sound like the least fun type of apocalypse. What inspired Deads Rise?

Shawn: It might have been seeing the film adaptation of The Girl With All The Gifts, to be honest. I saw it and thought “what if the zombies were the heroes in the zombie apocalypse story?” Originally it was conceived as a kind of YA TV series but getting anything past first base is easier at a Mormon summer camp than in the film/tv industry. So, it sat for a couple of years till I decided to make it a novel.

Rachel: Do you have a playlist for your book? Can you tell us why you picked a couple of the songs?

Shawn: Lots of Rage Against the Machine. Always. Maybe some Wet Leg and Gil Scott Heron —both the Revolution Will Not Be Televised and Whiteys On The Moon. Largely for the particular energy of the music for different plot points. Heron for a pivotal scene near the end of the book.

Rachel: Speaking of good taste, what book do you tell all your friends to read? Besides yours, of course!

Shawn: At the moment it’s Children of Time. I was blown away by how the writer handled an alien species’ consciousness, culture and history. And how they created a continuous character through multiple generations.

Rachel: And it’s another great example of making the “monster” the hero of the story. Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become better writers? 

Shawn: The most important thing to do is to write a lot and write to the end. Practice makes perfect. The more you work a muscle, the stronger it gets. 

Then start writing another novel because you don’t want to be one of those writers who never finishes their books. Once you get past your first, it’s important to learn not to be precious about it. I’m not saying you need to crank out ten a year—and maybe your pace of writing and the spaces in your life only allow one every couple years. But don’t let perfection be the enemy of the good.

There’s no right way. I started reading John Truby’s Into the Story and I got so annoyed with him constantly emphasizing how brilliant he was and how all other methods were wrong that I stopped reading it. There are some rules to writing—rising action, conflict, etc. But there’s many ways to skin a novel.

I remember people used to say “writers are readers. You should read obsessively.” Yeah, well, I don’t. I have a job, two kids, a house to maintain. And I also want to read about what’s going on in the world and understand the source of conflicts or scientific advances or whatever. Sometimes I want to watch TV. There’s only so many hours in a day. Don’t beat yourself up if you don’t read a book a week.

Rachel: What’s your next writing project?

Shawn: For my publisher, I’m ghostwriting a trashy, male harem fantasy story set in Hell. Gotta pay the bills! For myself, I’m torn to be honest. I just finished the second book in the No Signs of Life series. I’d like to take a break from that world and I’m tossing around a few different possibilities, all sci-fi. You know how it is; ideas are never wasted; they just come back as new story ideas down the road.

Rachel: We’re so looking forward to reading Deads Rise! Where can our community find you and your work?

Shawn: You can find me at my website, shawnwriteshere.com, or my Amazon author page. I can also be reached via email at shawn@shawnwriteshere.com. on Twitter I’m @shawnwriteshere. On FB I have a page called Shawn Whitney – author guy that absolutely nobody goes to.

Maej by Dale Stromberg with Vegetable Stew

Fiction To Sink Your Teeth Into, a feature normally written by professional chef Rohan O’Duill, has been taken over this month by Rachel A. Rosen, who co-wrote a book about being bad at cooking.

In Dale Stromberg’s Maej, Madenhere and Taræntlere eat meersaw-gossamy, described as a flavourful stew of “squash, aubergine, egg, and garlic.” I asked him for details about what it tastes like, and he told me they were never afraid to throw in chilies, and that “any dairy was rhinocerote milk and eggs are likely peahen eggs.” Lacking access to rhinocerotes and being vegan myself, I created a slightly less ambitious version.

An ebook copy of Maej by Dale Stromberg on an iPad. It's sitting on a rustic wood coffee table. There's a bowl of vegetable stew and some sticks bundled together.
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