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.

Guaranteed Bestseller Cover Teaser

Sabitha: Today we’re turning the blog over to two Night Beats authors, Dale Stromberg and Tucker Lieberman, to talk about Dale’s story ‘Art is a Service’ in the upcoming anthology Instant Classic (That No One Will Read). Dale, can you start us off by introducing your story and the anthology?

Dale: The anthology collects satirical takes on the creative industries. Creators are indispensable in the crafting of the stories, songs, and images we all love, but their rewards are often paltry. If you imagine a stream of money trickling from the public towards the creator, then here and there farther upstream, various people have built dams. Each dam is a chance to skim a few bucks. One such enterprising skimmer is the interviewee in “Art Is a Service,” Nao Hovgaard, a publisher whose innovative marketing involves, among other things, a trampoline.

Tucker: So, novelists on trampolines. In “Art Is a Service,” Nao Hovgaard compares plugging novelists into AI to using “trampolines to the nth power.” Some authors might say it’s all unfair: the AI trampoline, the regular trampoline, everything. But if all trampolines are bad, how can authors write and market books? On what may we jump to elevate ourselves?

Dale: I feel there’s a nearly Darwinian, invisible-hand–like inevitability to the advent of the trampoline whenever art, music, drama, or literature are commodified and subjected to the inexorable libertarian robo-logic of consumerism. Authors who hope to make a living from their work are, in a pragmatic sense, engaged in a consumerist pursuit: offering a mechanically reproducible product for sale at a thin margin and hoping that a bunch of people will buy it—cumulatively earning one enough that, at the least, one’s bones don’t end up in a pauper’s grave. For this, one depends on an appeal to the many.

I see no inherent link between success in making such an appeal to the many and success in the loftier pursuit of “the good” (however you define it) in the arts. If the peacock with the biggest plumage gets the mate, then peacock plumage evolves bigger, even if it encumbers the bird’s ability to fly. When, in the creative industries, the bottomless inventiveness of a human on the make furnishes the world with a “trampoline”—a business tactic or marketing gizmo that appeals to different drives/desires than a creative work itself might appeal to—and when this trampoline produces more “sales experiences” than literary merit can do, then the trampoline gets the mate. It passes on its big-plumage genes.

If I’m not wrong, if the vending of stories on a consumerist model must lead in the end to trampolines, then what alternatives can we envision? The diametric opposite of the appeal to the many is the appeal to the one: scoring yourself a wealthy patron, like some kind of Renaissance poet sucking up to a viscount. Which sounds far-fetched to me, but—not gonna lie—it’s at this point that I run out of ideas. So I can write you a snotty satire of the garbage chute we’re all funnelling down towards, but if you want a ray of hope that things could be any different, I’ve got nothing.

Tucker: When you pick up a book, do you ever sense that the author or publisher believes they are performing a service? And does that make you feel well served or ill served?

Dale: Hmm… I want to think about “service” itself first. We will say so-and-so “served as president” or “served as CEO”, which certainly isn’t the same thing as “serving in the Navy” or “serving as a juror”. Furthermore, none of these positions is the position of a “servant” per se. I note that our society has a great penchant for talking about “service” even as we avoid referring to ourselves as “servants”.

To be a servant to an imperious master is a hard lot, but do we not also conceive of service as noble in its humility, as when one human bends voluntarily to wash the feet of another? Still, when I hear “service” (and maybe this is true for you as well), what comes at once to mind is an economic transaction (probably somewhat demeaning): the exchange of money for labour whose aim is not to make a thing but rather to do a thing.

So, if someone provides you a book not as a thing made but as a thing done, what are they doing for you? How are they “serving” you? Perhaps they are “serving your turn”—fulfilling some concrete use (and I am reminded of all those dreary claims that reading fiction will power-up your empathy, much as the consumption of fine cuisine can stock you up with antioxidants); if so, yes, I can easily imagine many authors/publishers solicitously offering a written work as a kind of utilitarian vitamin supplement to the soul.

Or perhaps they are “serving refreshments”—offering nourishment not because it will fortify you with nutrients but because to do so is a kindness, and will comfort you, and is one part of the conviviality and ease we hope our labours will purchase us. I tentatively speculate that this form of service is part of what motivates many or most true creators. I think it laudable.Or perhaps they are “serving you the ball” as in a game of tennis—sending something your way, maybe a lazy lob, maybe a more challenging slice, and provoking a response. A book like that will say, “Your move.” It will nudge you to hustle, to see and judge and react. My own values and preferences tell me that this is the sort of service I’d be glad to receive as a reader, and would hope to offer as a writer.

Tucker: Hovgaard spake, “Fuck the bestseller list.” Do you not think his judgment might be a bit harsh? Do bestsellers truly deserve the bad rap? I’ve heard that some bestsellers are good.

Dale: Oh, what Hovgaard hates is the list itself. He’s the publishing equivalent of a libertarian tech bro, which means he makes “disruption” a point of pride and nurses especial contempt for his victims.

Now, the NYT list is, of course, notoriously inaccurate, based on spotty data, and not in fact based on sales figures reported by publishers—entities which themselves appear to have little idea how many books of theirs actual readers actually buy. In other words, the list is emblematic of a shambolic industry which seems actively haughty about its ossified, opaque, esoteric and byzantine business practices. This is the sort of field any entrepreneurial legerdemainist like Hovgaard would hungrily eye, as a leopard on the Serengeti eyes a wounded impala: ripe for “disruption,” which is a stylish way of saying, “Finding someone who gets money doing a thing, and making that money come to you instead.”

Such disruptive exploits, to the extent they threaten to capsize the rusting hulks of the industry, might actually inspire some merry schadenfreude in authors, whose hopes and dreams have traditionally made us easy patsies for trade publishers—until we realise where we will end up sitting within the new model Hovgaard offers. It is, in truth, merely a new take on the same old crap: the capitalist monetising someone else’s years of silent, private, unpaid, invisible labour even as that labourer is made to feel fortunate for the chance to surrender most of the spoils… the offloading of risk down the hierarchy (where the authors dwell) and the shifting of wealth up the hierarchy (where Hovgaard waits to collect it)… the precarity, the exploitation… the pageantry, the hauteur… the squeezing of blood from every available stone. Same grift, new name—or, if you like, same book, new cover design.

On the other hand, my guess would be that Hovgaard has no opinion either way on bestselling books themselves. He’s agnostic. He’s never read one.

Sabitha: Thank you both for this—I am so excited for this project! Where can readers get their hands on a copy? And where can they find your other work?

Dale: They can get a free review copy of the anthology here—all we ask in return is they share the anthology on a platform of their choice. Or they can pre-order a copy on Amazon. I hang out on Bluesky, Medium, and Goodreads, and info about my work can be found on my website.

Read the best book for pay-what-you-can

Most Famous Short Film of All Time is one of the best books I’ve ever read. Period, end of sentence.

I can’t tell you why. There are books that burrow into me and change me as I read them. Vita Nostra did this too. VALIS did, thought I didn’t love it the way I love the other two, it still burrowed inside my brain and laid eggs. I am a different person because I read it, and I am glad.

I’m not telling you about the plot of Most Famous Short Film of All Time. Why would I do that? It’s not about what happened in the book. Sometimes what doesn’t happen matters more. Sometimes an absence is something too.

It’s on for pay-what-you-can. Go to Itch.io. Read it.

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.

the dent in the universe cover

Sabitha: Want a witty science fiction thriller about the dark side of tech-bros? E.W. Doc Parris’s The Dent in the Universe is here to scratch that itch. Doc, take it away!

Doc: I tend to write matter-of-fact, hard science fiction grounded in the current scientific worldview, leavened with wit, and kindled by the warmth of human relationships. I’m a big fan of taking a scientific notion and asking, “What if?” Especially if that leads to questions of how badly this could go for humanity if things got out of hand.

For example: What if you could send information—internet data (emails, text, video, online orders)—into the past? What would you do? Order a pizza and have it arrive in an instant? Order that anniversary gift you forgot about? Place emergency supplies right where they’re needed before a tornado strikes? These sound like great ideas. What could go wrong? Well… what if your customers are monsters? Even just one? Because, y’know, some of them will be.

Sabitha: That sounds wild in the best possible way. What inspired you to write this book?

Doc: This story came from two conceptual vectors. The first was wondering how much trouble you could get into with the simplest possible time machine. Just a machine that allows you to send emails into the past. The second was, if everybody believes the zombie apocalypse is inevitable, how would it start? I mean, everybody has plans for the zombie apocalypse, right? Most movies don’t show us how it starts. Those two ideas came together in a really fun, scary way that you’re going to love.

Sabitha: I’m sure I will! Do you have a “fan-cast” – do you have actors you’d cast as your main characters?

Doc: The character Cliff Price was informed by a few performances by Cameron Britton (Mindhunter, The Umbrella Academy). Walrus Roberts could be played by some cross between Hurly on Lost (Jorge Garcia) and Jeff Bridges in The Big Lebowski. I only see Steve Jobs when I think of Stephen Lucas. Young Steve. 1990 Steve.

Sabitha: That gives me such a clear picture. What book do you tell all your friends to read? Besides yours of course!

Doc: I’ve just finished binge-reading The Murderbot Diaries, and I’m telling everyone about them. Most of them are novellas and quick reads or audiobook listens. Read those. Martha Wells is a genius.

Sabitha:  Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become a better writers? 

Doc: Write those stories that you just can’t avoid. If you can sit and watch Netflix at night after work and think you’d like to be a writer, forget it. If you find yourself more interested in your story than in binging the latest streamer, if you can’t tear yourself away from your own story—those are the stories we want to read.

Sabitha: Absolutely. So what’s your next writing project you can’t tear yourself away from?

Doc: After The Aurora’s Pale Light, the next book in the WalrusTech Universe series, is released in the spring of 2024, I’ve got a story called The Land of Nod in the pipeline. It’s a story of the development of nanotechnology and machine learning being used to repair human neural networks for things like nerve damage or strokes. It feels like a miracle until things get out of hand.

Sabitha: 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?

Doc: The Dent in the Universe is available exclusively on Amazon through November. Kindle Unlimited readers can devour it for free. You can find the link on the Magic Genius Books 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.

corona cover

Sabitha: Looking for a deliciously dark and dystopian science fiction novel? Look no further. We have David Arrowsmith here to tell us about his novel, Corona!

David: In a fallen London, how far will one man go to save his family—and himself…

…or is it already too late?

Trapped in his top floor mansion block apartment in Denmark Hill, South East London, can The Man escape and pick his way through the crumbling ruins of the city, avoiding the violent gangs that now vie for supremacy, and find his heavily pregnant ex-wife?

Can a belated act of heroism wash him clean of his sins, or is he too far gone?

In a world where civilization has fallen, what hope is there for the future?

Corona is a story about the dark—and the light—inside all of us. It’s about man’s inhumanity and humanity. It’s a story in which the threat, the danger, comes from within us—not from the undead or vampires or even a virus, but from our neighbours, our friends, and even ourselves. Corona combines elements of dystopian fiction with the literary survival horror of works like J.G. Ballard’s High Rise and Concrete Island. It’s the perfect read for fans of The Road, I Am Legend, The Last Of Us, Children of Men, The Walking Dead, Mad Max, or 28 Days Later.

Sabitha: What inspired you to write this book?

David: This novel began life as entries typed into the Notes app on my phone—a brief personal diary as I attempted to document the extraordinary and scary first few weeks of the lockdowns and that first summer under the cloud of Covid-19, trapped in a garden flat in SE London, with my wife and our young daughter. I didn’t want to publish a diary, or a factual account—and then I hit on the idea of turning it into a dystopian novel, inspired by my love of JG Ballard and his stories like High Rise, Concrete Island, The Drowned World, The Drought and The Crystal World. It’s also got some major The Last of Us vibes!

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

David: I do! It’s on Spotify. I picked songs with a grimy, dark or mysterious and isolated London vibe – so there’s lots of classic 70s punk like ‘Anarchy in the UK’ by the Sex Pistols, ‘Guns of Brixton’ by The Clash, and ‘Message in a Bottle’ and ‘So Lonely’ by The Police. But the book also has a beauty and connection with the environment and the weather, hence tracks like ‘Bitter Sweet Symphony’ by The Verve, ‘Wild World’ by Cat Stevens and ‘Have You Ever Seen the Rain’ by Creedence Clearwater Revival. Give it a listen and let me know if you enjoy it!

Sabitha: 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?

David: All my social links can be found here. Check out Corona here or here. Read my short stories, Nevada Noir, here.

Guaranteed Bestseller Cover Reveal

cover of guanteed bestseller

Yes that is a demon with a face on its butt.

We are delighted (and a wee bit terrified) to reveal the cover of Guaranteed Bestseller to the innocent masses. Welcome to our darkly funny anthology about the perils of writing, not-writing, and signing contracts with the devil (other publishing houses are available).

If you want a copy for the low, low price of free, you can sign up for a review copy here. If you prefer to exchange money for goods and services, a pre-order link will be available as soon as we defeat the final boss and get Amazon’s sign-off, likely within 72 hours.

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.

Fireborn cover

Sabitha: Looking for a queer fantasy adventure? Look no further! We’re talking to Vanessa Ricci-Thode about her novel, Fireborn. Vanessa, can you introduce us to your book?

Vanessa: Fireborn is a fantasy novel about a queer teen rebuilding her life and fighting to reshape the future after she loses everything. Like her mother and grandmother before her, Spark is a uniquely skilled pyromancer born immune to fire, with a deep family connection to the local dragon population. But her power draws the attention of a dangerous faction. Spark needs to learn finesse and to conquer old fears if she and everyone she cares for are going to survive.

Sabitha: What inspired you to write this book?

Vanessa: Fireborn was heavily influenced by the How to Train Your Dragon films and TV show, but with queer teens and a female lead.

Sabitha: Do you have a playlist for your book?

Vanessa: I listened to a lot of the How to Train Your Dragon soundtrack while writing it, to keep me in the spirit of the original inspiration for the book. And the Mad Max: Fury Road soundtrack came in handy when it was time for me to write this book’s climax. The climax includes a high-speed dragon chase through the desert, so Fury Road really set the mood.

Sabitha: If you could meet your characters, what would you say to them?

Vanessa: I would probably apologize. A lot. Especially to the main character Spark.

Sabitha: What book do you tell all your friends to read? Besides yours of course!

Vanessa: I’m obsessed with the Murderbot Diaries and recommend that everywhere. A less known book I also really love is World Running Down by Al Hess.

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

Vanessa: Spark is a blacksmith and I am very not, so I had to do a lot of research into how certain things are made and then figure out how and where Spark’s fire magic would fit into the process. I also did some research on aerial combat. Dragons are magic and don’t move quite like fighter planes, but having the basics and some terminology helped in describing some of the aerial fight scenes.

Sabitha: Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become better writers?

Vanessa: Join a critique group, but make sure it’s the right fit!

Sabitha: 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?

Vanessa: You can buy Fireborn here. You can keep up with me at my website or my newsletter—subscribers get a free short story from the dragon’s POV. I use the handle vriccithode on all the social media platforms I use (currently mostly Discord and Bluesky),

Cold Beans and Herbs on Bread with The Books of Earthsea by Ursala K Le Guin

Fiction To Sink Your Teeth Into, a feature from author and professional chef Rohan O’Duill!

There is a lot of food talked about in the world of Earthsea but this drew my attention as it was something that I hadn’t made or eaten previously. While it might not sound appealing at first this meal is delicious, vegan, and can be prepared in about 90 seconds. What’s not to love?

The Books of Earthsea next to a delicious plate of food
Continue reading

Book Report Corner

by Zilla N.

Assassin of Reality cover

The first thing you have to understand is that Vita Nostra is perfect. When something is its own ideal, fully encapsulated, how can there be a sequel?

The answer is Assassin of Reality.

Sasha is older now, more aware. They are all. They know what is being done to them, and they know why. They cannot become a concept without deconstructing their humanity; they cannot grow without retaining it, at least a little. Without love, and therefore fear, to trap them. They will trade freedom for harmony. They will become the trap.

Except there are always possibilities. A world where the ice fell on neither mother nor baby carriage, where you bought the fire extinguisher, where you swerved away from the bus. A world where love exists without fear.

Be brave, Sasha tells us.

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.

Col Rush Cover

Sabitha: We have one of our Night Beats family here, Rohan O’Duill. Full disclosure—I’ve read Cold Rush and I absolutely love it. So of course we have him on the blog to tell us about his science fiction novella! 

Rohan: Cold Rising is told from the point of view of two characters. The first, Olgo, is a special agent tasked with improving the working conditions in the Martian underground metropolis. Olgo sees this mission as a stepping stone in their career and has little interest in the plight of the Martian people. The second main character, Suong, is a 12-year-old girl who works in a clothing company on Mars. After the two end up on the wrong side of the local cartel, they must work as a team to escape the caverns and what lurks there. 

Sabitha: As I understand it, the Cold Rush Novellas are not a traditional series—they’re a collection of stories set in the same time and place. How does Cold Rising relate to your larger universe and will we meet these characters again?

Rohan: Some of my friends would suggest that I never make life easy for myself, and the Cold Rush Novellas may be proof of that. I initially tried to put all of Cold Rush in one book, but that many POVs and storylines didn’t fit properly. I spent a long time playing around with the format and eventually landed on the idea of telling the story through interconnecting standalone novellas. I was careful not to fall into the Marvel trap where you have to have read 30 other books to get what’s going on in each one. Hopefully, I have created something that stands on its own feet while adding depth if you have read the other stories.

The next two novellas are complete and will not feature the main characters from Cold Rising, but Olgo and Suong will appear again in later novellas.

Sabitha: Having read several works in your universe, Olgo is by far my favourite of your characters. How did you conceive of them, and what was your process to make them such a compelling personality?

Rohan: I really enjoyed writing Olgo’s character even though Olgo’s backstory is not a happy one. They use an emotional control device to block the mysterious trauma they experienced as a child. The upside of the device is that it makes them an extremely effective and driven special agent. But they have limited battery life on the device, and when shit hits the fan on Mars they have to deal with the most trying conditions of their life. Olgo is forced to go through a major transformation to survive the pits of Mars. 

I think what makes Olgo stand out as a character is their uncomplicated, straight-talking view of their surroundings. They constantly make droll observations about human shortcomings while still being aware of how they are a pawn in a bigger game.

Sabitha: Hard sci-fi and Golden Age science fiction is a clear influence on your writing. These genres often star characters who are important explorers, scientists, and military and political leaders. In Cold Rush, you focused instead on the labour conditions of ordinary workers. Why do you think these stories are so important to tell?

Rohan: I think Golden Age sci-fi had a big influence on my life, never mind my writing. I grew up in a very conservative Catholic Ireland where I felt like an outsider. Finding the science fiction section in my library opened up a whole new world to me. I had no one to discuss these books with. Nobody I knew liked anything like this. So the books themselves were my companions. My first glimpse of a bigger, more diverse world came through these novels. And while these books didn’t talk directly about real world topics, they made comparisons and used fictional scenarios to examine genuine issues.

This is what I tried to do in Cold Rising—calling out our own hypocrisy in consuming products from countries with terrible working conditions and human rights abuses. As long as we can buy a steady stream of cheap goods, we turn a blind eye. Fiction can play a powerful role in reminding people about the woes of our world. I also think that pointing out these issues while telling an entertaining story can be more effective than slapping someone in the face with the facts.

Sabitha: 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?

Rohan: You can find my book here. You can find me through Night Beats and through Lower Decks Press. For now I’m still on Twitter, but I’ve also joined Blue Sky. And I’m on Instagram.

Get the free chapbook accompanyment to Melancholic Parables!!

cover and Melancholic Parables

Bellatrix Sakakino has lived many lives. She dampens electricity. She’s radioactive. She longs for a fruit that went extinct before she was born. She’s not above committing a massacre for the sake of a perfect omelet.

Are we the same person we were last year? Or last week? Or last story? Whimsical and dolorous, ironic and absurd, this slippery assortment of stories dances around these questions with ambiguous aplomb.

Melancholic Parables costs money, but Dale’s made his follow-up chapbook, The Galoofus, free here. Enhance your summer confusion with this delightful read.