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 CodeSkull with three 13 year olds running from a computer that is very clearly evil

Zilla: If you’re as nostalgic for Goosebumps as I am—young-adult horror with ‘90s vibes—then you need to read our next guest’s novella, CodeSkull. Chloe Spencer’s been on this blog before, and we’re delighted to have her back! What’s your latest book about?

Chloe: CodeSkull is a YAt sci-fi horror novella set in 1998 which centers on a gamer girl named Mick who is one day gifted an RPG by her rival, Tommy. When she plays it, she accidentally unleashes a demon upon her town which can possess and control any electrical object. Now, Mick, Tommy, and a fledgling occultist/punk rocker named Cain must team up to save their town from total annihilation. 

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

Chloe: I was inspired to write this book when my publisher, Mad Axe Media, put out the call for it. They were looking for books set in the 90s that could harken back to the days of Goosebumps, and I was stoked, because I hadn’t had the opportunity to write a YA novella yet. I wanted to write something that gave me the same spooky feelings I had when watching things like Scooby Doo on Zombie Island. I also wanted to try to write a book where romance wasn’t a big focus (this is one of 2 published novels or novellas that I have where the B-story isn’t romance) and reflected on a lot of my friendships growing up. One of the characters, Tommy, is inspired in part by my childhood best friend. 

Zilla: I love asking authors what their characters would say to them, but in your case it’s an extra-fun question since one of the characters is inspired by a real person. So—what would they all say?

Chloe: Mick would absolutely say, “How COULD you?!” 

Cain would ask, “Was all that necessary?” 

Tommy would say, “Actually, that’s not how any of this happened, can I rewrite this?” 

I have no doubt that all three of them would roast me. 

Zilla: That’s delightful. It sounds like you were following the old rule to “write what you know” for this book. Did you end up needing to do any research?

Chloe: One of my goals with writing CodeSkull was to create a story that was more geared towards a younger audience. My two other YA works, Monstersona and Haunting Melody, are more for readers who are 16 and up. When I was promoting Haunting Melody, I encountered a lot of teachers and parents who were desperately looking for something for their 13- and 14-year olds. And I was like, “Oh, surely there has to be a LOT of books out there for 13- and 14-year olds, right?” And I was surprised to discover that there weren’t that many! I remember having access to tons of books with characters that were close to my age when I was a kid, but nowadays, it’s very rare to encounter a character in the YA space that’s under the age of 16, which is interesting, because YA as a whole is supposed to be for kids between the ages of 13-18. 

I have a lot of knowledge in the YA horror space already, but I lacked that same knowledge in middle grade, so I ended up checking out a lot of books for that age range so that I could try to write something that could successfully serve as a “transitional” read between those two age groups. 

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?

Chloe: You can find out more about me at my website, www.chloespenceronline.com. I’m also available on Instagram, TikTok, and Bluesky @heyitschloespencer. You can get the paperback here, and the e-book here.

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.

A webcomic panel of the characters at a military hospital.

Zilla: From the written word to the sketched image, stories have the power to move us. Artemy’s queer WW1 webcomic is a story you won’t want to miss, so we’ve brought them here to tell us about Gentle Hands.

Artemy: Gentle Hands is a queer-centric story about the home front and the medical system during World War One. After suffering a severe injury that has left him paralyzed and unable to talk, Dmitri finds himself in an institution in France. Jadyn, a retired military surgeon, is assigned to be his nurse, but after some investigation he gathers some alarming details. Is his placement with Dmitri an elaborate hazing? And can he prove himself as a capable doctor despite that? 

Zilla: What inspired you to write this book?

Artemy: When I was 17 I discovered I would be disabled for life. For this reason I really enjoyed stories about disabled characters and could never get enough of them. So when I discovered webcomics I knew I had to make my own. 

Zilla: The webcomic is clearly written from the heart—I can see how personal it is. Who is your favourite character in your story?

Artemy: My biases lie with the main love interest, Dmitri. I’ve always wanted to write a nonverbal character, and Dmitri was my way of experimenting with that. His thoughts and feelings are so complex, yet his way of expressing them is limited. This has led me to come up with creative ways to communicate those ideas. Character-wise he has a lot of contrast, and that seems to be my readers’ favourite thing about him. 

Zilla: How much research did you need to do for your story? (I ask this as though I didn’t meet you on a server about writing historical fiction!)

Artemy: Initially, I started this story as a relaxed side-project. I told myself I wouldn’t fuss over the fine details or research. It only took two days to throw that out the window. I have since been chest deep in articles and archives. 

Zilla: Who did you imagine as your readers?

Artemy: I imagined a lot of disabled trans men with uniform fetishes reading my book. That is precisely what I got and I couldn’t be happier with the result.

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

Artemy: My series can be found online for free on both Webtoons and Tapas with weekly updates. You can also find me on tumblr at @leonardoeatscarrots.

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 read. Today I’m talking to Mel Grebing about their book, Bulletproof Heart.

Bulletproof Heart by Mel Grebing. Cover shows a person holding a gun in blue-grey tones.

Rachel: Please tell our readers a little bit about you and your work.

Mel: Hi ya’ll. I’m Mel/MsLanna and my pronouns are they/them. I’ve been writing since I was six though my first stories lacked plot. Nowadays I write Old Adult stories, mostly romance and SFF with a side of fanfic. I mulled my debut novel Bulletproof Heart over in my head for 30 years. This is what I landed on:

Professional do-gooder Salma comes up against an assassin hired to kill her. She tries to save his life anyway, and finds herself as his target in a very different sense. But to make this relationship work, they will have to take on an international organisation of hitmen. Pan protagonists, kinky sex, and a hint of autism give this novel its unique flavour.

Rachel: What inspired you to write this book?

Mel: When I was a young girl, I watched MacGyver (1985) on TV and there was this unkillable villain who looked hot in black with a bazooka. I fell in love and just never stopped. I spent thousands of hours telling myself versions of the story of how to love/be loved by that man. I’m glad I finally landed on a version I am proud to share.

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

Mel: Surprisingly little. I looked up how fast people die from burning.

Rachel: Oh my! Is your work more plot-driven or character-driven? Or a secret, third thing?

Mel: Bulletproof Heart is mostly smut driven. I had those scenes first and then constructed a plot
around them. In general my characters take priority. They have issues to work through and I only give them a journey to do that.

Rachel: Who did you imagine reading your book as you wrote it? And who ended up reading it?

Mel: I imagine myself reading the books I write mostly. Stories I want and need. I don’t know who’ll end up reading Bulletproof Heart. I hope there are pan people out there looking to see themselves represented in m/f relationships.

Rachel: What’s your next writing project?

Mel: A second romance is in the making for publishing spring 2026. A non-binary protagonist dating a millionaire to help him win a bet. What could go wrong?

In October there will be a short romance novelette set in a hotel convention titled “Pros at Cons” in which an nonbinary volunteer has to be personal assistant for a celebrity they crushed on hard.

Rachel: It sounds like you have a lot going on! Tell us where the Night Beats community can find you and find your work!

Mel: I have a website I neglect too often http://melgrebing.com/ and am mostly active on Bluesky Of course, you can find me under MsLanna in other places as well. I like grabbing my username just in case.

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 read. Today I’m talking to Janeen (Landry) Leese-Taylor about their book, Dot.Exe.

Dot.Exe by Janeen Leese-Taylor. Caption is "what does it mean to truly be alive?" The cover shows a beaded, tattooed, long haired person holding a device in one hand and the hand of a blue haired person in the other.

Rachel: Tell our readers a little about yourself and your work!

Landry: My name is Janeen (Landry) Leese-Taylor (They/them and She/Her, non-binary AFAB), and I have self-published 6 books so far on my writing journey. I write mostly fantasy with a touch of science-fiction, with the majority of my current works set in the UK and Ireland. I love writing about places that I have visited and enjoy creating works that are urban, authentic and represent a wide range of people and cultures.

I currently have several works in progress that I am hoping to publish before the end of 2026, including a fantasy romance based on my adventures in Japan.

My most recent release is called Dot Exe and it was released on 27 Jan. 2025. It is a standalone m/m romance about a computing engineer who rescues an Android that has become sentient. Set-in dystopian version of Dublin City, this action-adventure novel follows the pair as they try to reveal the evil corporation’s secrets to the world and save the Androids while they’re at it. Initially having been the very first novel that I wrote, it was held back due to a publishing scam. Once I finally got the rights back (after several long years of battling for them) I rewrote the book from scratch and cast a very familiar name as my new villain. 

Rachel: That sounds really cool! What are some of your influences?

Landry: I have always been inspired by the notion of magic hiding just out of sight and wanted to tell stories that blurred the line between the real world and fiction. Stories such as Derek Landy’s Skullduggery Pleasant and Eoin Colfer’s Artemis Fowl showed that sprinkling magic over real-world locations could make even the most insane tales feel strangely possible. Though I like to let my settings speak for themselves, the character’s have always been what drive my stories forward. Creating characters that feel real and have real-world flaws is essential to any story, I think.

Rachel: Can you give some examples?

Landry: My favourite fictional characters tend to be from video games, such as RPGs that lend themselves to more character-driven narratives. Lately, I’ve been drawn to wizards and mages in fiction such as Gale Dekarios from Baldur’s Gate 3 and Emmrich Volkarin from Dragon Age Veilguard. These have definitely had influences on the stories I am currently working on.

Rachel: Among your own characters, which are your favourites?

Landry: Trying to pick which of my characters is my favourite is a tricky task, because I feel like all of them live in my head and can hear my answer! I think, if I had to pick just one, it would have to be Officer Theodore Night from Strays/Fetch because writing grumpy characters is way too much fun! My husband is a big help when it comes to creating good characters, because he helps me to shape them and give them realistic flaws. It keeps them grounded and makes them feel like real people. If I write a scene that feels out of character, he is quick to get me back on track again!

Rachel: Where can readers find your latest release?

Landry: The book is available from Amazon and Kindle Unlimited: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dot-Exe-Janeen-Leese-Taylor-ebook/dp/B0DV7DZ9YL?ref_=ast_author_mpb

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 read. Today I’m talking to Kelly Rose Pflug-Back, editor of Up:Rising.

Up:rising: A collection of rebellious imaginings from authors with lived experience of mental health &  addictions. Cover is in green tones featuring a person with their face dissolving into night and trees sprouting from their body with one upraised fist.

Rachel: Tell our readers a little bit about the book!

Kelly: It’s got some tender parts, and some  brutal ones. I wasn’t sure what we would pull in when we cast our editorial net, but we received some very beautiful and unflinching work. The theme of the anthology is Rebellion, and people interpreted that in so many different ways. It’s really a full spectrum of human emotion. 

Rachel: Rebellion is inherently collective, and this book came about as a partnership between two incredible artist-run organizations. Can you tell us a bit about the process and what working with them was like?

Kelly: I’ve worked with Workman Arts in the past, facilitating workshops on grant writing. Part of their mandate is professional development for artists with experience of mental health and addictions. Because I have that lived experience, I’ve seen a lot of social programming that’s very patronizing, very infantalizing. So it was important to myself and the other two editors that this book exist outside of that framework. We really wanted it to show the excellence of the contributors, especially those who don’t have previous publishing experience. We also really wanted to keep the work free from censorship. Some of the pieces are pretty raw, and we didn’t want to deal with external pressure to make the book more “respectable.” I reached out to Strangers because they value radical ideas and I had a feeling they would see eye-to-eye with us. They’re on the US side of the border so it also turned out to be an opportunity for them to expand their distribution into Canada. That’s exciting to me!

Rachel: It is exciting! As are many of the authors in the anthology! Can you entice our readers with some of the standout poems and stories?

Kelly: We have really stunning short stories by Andrea Wilmot (author of Withered) and Cid V. Brunet (author of This is My Real Name). Also some really provocative and lovely poems by Daniel Oudshoorn, Shan Powell, and many others. And of course our opening story, by K. Zimmer, is a favourite of mine. I think when we talk about mental health, there’s this idea that everyone experiences some kind of mental health struggles…but one thing I love about this book is that we have pieces by people who live with some of the more stigmatized mental health labels, people who experience schizophrenic symptoms and have been institutionalized or left to live on the street. It means a lot to me to be able to publish those pieces. 

Rachel: Speaking of stigmatized mental health labels, can you tell our readers a little bit about Mad Liberation?

Kelly: Mad Liberation is about creating mental health frameworks outside of stigma, punishment, and institutionalization. The efforts for justice and self determination coming from the Psychiatric Survivors movement has its roots in the Civil Rights era, and there’s really so many facets and manifestations of people fighting for self determination and fighting to reclaim the word and concept of “madness.”

Rachel: It’s a civil rights movement that we don’t hear much about. What’s the relationship between madness/Mad Pride and radical politics?

Kelly: The dominant idea of mental illness, the structures we have for diagnosing and labelling people as mentally ill, it all has roots in colonialism and patriarchy. So I think we cannot have any kind of liberation movement without Mad Pride being part of it. 

Rachel: Having been lucky enough to read an ARC of the book, I can’t wait for our readers to get ahold of their copy. Where can people find you and the book?

Kelly: You can find my writing updates at textandtextiles.ca, and on Instagram at @kellyrosecreates. In the interest of keeping my jock/nerd ratio at an even 50:50 I recently became a weight lifting instructor, so you can also find me at lesspainmoregains.com or on Instagram at @lesspain_moregains. I embarked on that path in the interest of helping other people with trauma and addictions history through weight lifting. It has amazing potential for neuroplasticity. 

If everything runs according to schedule, the book will be released in November and will be available for order from Strangers, at Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness. Our Canadian distributor is this awesome distro called Ratti Incantatti, who you can find at https://rattiincantati.com. I will be posting the launch information on my website and social media, so stay tuned if you happen to be local!

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.

How to Write a Fantasy Battle: Basic Medieval and Modern Military Tactics for Authors by Suzannah Rowntree. It's got a dragon head and inside is some kind of epic battle scence.

Rachel: I found this guide so incredibly helpful, and I’m sure our readers will too! Can you tell us a little about the book? What made you decide to write it (and was it the Rings of Power battle scenes)?

Suzannah: I’m absolutely thrilled to hear that so many people are finding the book to be helpful!

The book had its genesis in my writer’s group near the end of 2023, when a friend was tearing out her hair about the climactic battle scene in her WIP. I suggested scheduling a video call wherein I would give her a crash course on how to write a battle. I started making notes for what I wanted to cover, and the more I wrote down, the more I thought of. It was all gushing out of me at once. I remember being at the casual day job the day before the call, intensely making voice-to-text notes on my phone, and one of my co-workers asked if I was OK. What do you tell someone when that happens? “Yeah I’m good, I’m just advising my friend on how to go to war.”

My friend really appreciated the call and left me in no doubt that something like this, expanded into a book, could be super helpful to a lot of people. I took the notes I’d made for the call and expanded them into the first draft of How to Write a Fantasy Battle. Afterwards, I got hit by imposter syndrome. Was the tone too snarky? Did I really know what I was talking about? I’d been reading academic-level crusader history books for ten years and following the current Russo-Ukrainian war since its beginning, but I didn’t have any formal training in either history or strategy – all I’ve got is a law degree. Plus, if I published a book on military tactics as a woman, would anyone take me seriously? It wasn’t until early this year, when the whole author group demanded to see the draft and then unanimously agreed that it needed to be published, that I felt I should move ahead.

How to Write a Fantasy Battle contains exactly what the subtitle suggests: Medieval and Modern Military Tactics for Authors. I mainly discuss the basics of how battles were fought in the high middle ages, which is my area of expertise, but I also include stuff that I’ve learned about war from other periods, especially the present day in Ukraine. There are certain commonalities across history, whatever kind of technology we’re talking about, and it’s these commonalities that I think fantasy authors will find most useful to know about. The fantastical and magical elements in your work might not exist in real life, but chances are that they’ll fulfil a similar role in your fantasy battle as some modern technological innovation does today.

Rachel: What’s an example of a battle scene you think is done well? How about one that isn’t? And why?

Suzannah: I spend a lot of time in the book discussing the battle scenes in Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, which are impeccable. Tolkien had a strong grasp of medieval history, plus he had witnessed two world wars and fought in one of them. This doesn’t just affect his grasp of military tactics; he also uses military logistics to complicate the narrative, and of course the whole book is a profound examination of trauma.

Apart from The Lord of the Rings, there’s also the John Woo movie Red Cliff, which is one of my favourites. It isn’t perfectly realistic as it uses certain heroic tropes suitable to an adaptation of the Chinese classic The Romance of the Three Kingdoms. (If you do watch Red Cliff, be sure to find the original, two-part cut for Chinese markets, which combined is nearly 5 hours long, and every minute counts). Still, despite its romanticism, Red Cliff is a deliciously well-informed depiction of an ancient war that also depicts a lot of the topics I cover in the book.

Probably the worst battle scene I have ever witnessed is the one in Disney’s live-action Mulan. The army leaves its nice, safe, cosy fortifications to go face the nomad army in the field, which they do on very thin justification, but okay. Once they are within range of the enemy, though, they don’t hide behind some of the available hills in order to execute an ambush—they just hang out in the open, half-heartedly concealed behind a smokescreen. They don’t even send their cavalry off to hide out as surprise reserves. Then, as the crowning idiocy, the nomad army of light cavalry wheels out siege engines. Where did the siege engines come from? How did they get transported to the battle scene by the light cavalry? How did the nomadic light cavalry-based army, who do not seem familiar with siege warfare, develop the specialised expertise in ballistics necessary to design, build, and operate these siege engines? How do they bulls-eye the good guys first time, with no bracketing shots? For that matter, how come the good guys are stupid enough to form tortoise formations against the magical siege engines? Do they want to maximise their own casualties?

I’ve seen a lot of crazy things but this one takes the cake. There’s a reason we call them siege engines, and it’s not because they were super useful in a field battle against moving targets.

Rachel: Flaming arrows: Yes or no?

Suzannah: You know, flaming arrows are a lot less common in history than fantasy books and movies will lead you to believe. Incendiary weapons go back a long way – notably the Byzantine Empire’s closely-guarded Greek fire, which ignited on contact with the air – as well as its imitators. But I don’t believe I’ve ever heard of these incendiaries being delivered via arrow. Hollywood will show a star dragging an arrow through a torch’s flame before shooting it, but in reality if you want an arrow to catch and stay alight, you probably want to add some oil-soaked fuel to it, and that’s going to affect both your aim and your range. Nope – most of the time incendiaries seem to have been delivered in a small sealed jar via siege engine, and would smash and catch light only on impact. The exception is the use of fireships, for instance in the Spanish Armada campaign. And, of course, the Byzantines actually did develop other ways to deliver Greek fire: including a sort of flame-thrower.

Rachel: You’re anticipating defending a fixed location against a superior force. What do you prepare in advance of their arrival?

Suzannah: First: Supplies, supplies, supplies. Food, water, medicine, vehicles, and weapons. Stockpile everything you can get your hands on, and make sure you’ve got more than you need, because you’ll probably have a massive influx of non-combatants who need to take shelter with you. Even better, secure a resupply route if possible, through which you can bring in more supplies, evacuate your wounded and bring in fresh fighters.

Second: Communications. Send for help to anyone who might come to relieve you. Again, if you can secure an open line of communication with your allies, it’s even better, but at least send some messengers to find reinforcements.

Third: Fortifications. This might mean positioning yourselves with a cliff, river, or bog at your back, and a makeshift barricade of carts at your front. Or, it might mean tucking yourself safely inside a nice stone castle and refusing to come out until your reinforcements arrive.

Fourth: Outposts. At the least, you need scouts watching the enemy as they approach, counting their numbers and ascertaining their approach route. Better still, manned outposts – small fortified points – can delay and complicate the enemy’s approach, buying you that all-important time as you prepare your main position for defence.

One last note: make sure you bear in mind the tactical purpose of defence, which is to hold out until reinforcements arrive. If you have friends who will come to help you out, it makes sense to fight defensively in a siege. Even today, the rule of thumb is one fighter on the defensive is worth three on the offensive – so you can hold a fortified position quite capably if you have just one-third of the fighters your attackers have. That’s a powerful advantage to the defenders. But it comes with a corresponding disadvantage: fighting defensively will cede the initiative to the enemy. It’s the enemy who has a chance to grab a victory while you are slowly bleeding out on the defensive. Now, if you know your friends will come for you before it’s too late, this is a no-brainer. Go on the defensive. However, on rare occasions there is no hope of outside help, and in this case you need to fight differently: ideally, you should set up an ambush long before your enemy even reaches your fortifications. 

Rachel: Any advice for street-to-street fighting? Either when the citizenry is with you or against you?

This is called urban warfare, and it isn’t something I deal with in the book at much length because it is such a specialised field. But let’s put it like this: in medieval warfare, if you are attempting urban warfare when the citizenry is against you, you are dead, and if you are attempting urban warfare when the citizenry is with you, then your enemy has just made a very helpful error and you’ll be able to collect a shiny new medal and be home in time for tea. Urban warfare in a hostile environment is a suicide mission, unless you have overwhelming numbers pouring into the city at once, eg at the climax of a siege when half the population has fled and the other half is demoralised and starving. The only reason urban warfare isn’t a suicide mission these days is because fighters are specially trained to survive it.

Why so? One of the most important factors in war of any kind is the terrain, and in a city the terrain consists of walled buildings – that is, places that are easy to hide in and fortify. Lure an enemy into even a modern city, with its broad streets, and they will be easy to isolate, trap, and destroy. Medieval cities were even more defensible because of the narrow streets that could funnel enemies into a trap – during the Seventh Crusade in Egypt, a force of three hundred elite knights were trapped and annihilated in the narrow streets of Mansourah when the citizens threw beams of wood into the street to form barricades. In the mid-nineteenth century, whole neighbourhoods of the city of Paris were levelled to create the famous boulevards, specifically to prevent the populace being able to barricade the streets when they wanted to protest the way the government was treating them. The boulevards also allowed government forces to move around the city more easily in order to crush popular uprisings.

Rachel: Thanks for sharing this amazing resource with us. Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?

Suzannah: Thanks for helping me spread the word! I really think this book is going to be super helpful to a lot of authors. I can be found around social media, but at present I’m most active on Bluesky (https://bsky.app/profile/suzannahrowntree.bsky.social) and Instagram (@suzannahsnaps). At present How To Write a Fantasy Battle is available for pre-order as an ebook on Amazon (https://books2read.com/u/bO7Q5J ) for a mere USD4.99, but I’ll be uploading it to other ebook retailers as soon as I get the chance.

You can also visit my website and sign up for my author newsletter at https;//suzannahrowntree.site if you want to hear about my historical fantasy set during the medieval crusades and the late 19th century.

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 Journal Vol. 1: What If We Kissed While Sinking a Billionaire's Yacht? Image shows a blue and red starburst, a sinking silhouette of a yacht, and two orcas leaping up.

Zilla: Joining us today, we have Night Beats’ own Rachel A. Rosen, talking about her title story in the Antifa Lit Journal Vol. 1: What If We Kissed While Sinking a Billionaire’s Yacht? This is a story about whales and capitalism, so why did you choose to make the protagonist an art major?

Rachel: Because of my own background, there are a disproportionate number of characters across all of my fiction who care a disproportionate amount about art and art history. For this, I blame my own high school art teachers for making the subject far too interesting to my adolescent mind. You know what you did.

In terms of the story itself, I needed a “useless” major that would accumulate a student debt that Maria could never hope to repay by normal means. I don’t believe there’s any such thing as a useless major, but I do find it interesting the degree to which Western governments focus on STEM and business as the only possible useful majors. (I say “interesting” in that these same governments are largely uninterested in funding scientific research or listening to what actual scientists have to say.) Studying visual arts has always been a path to poverty, but it is also a vital body of knowledge, as it teaches you, more than anything else, how to see what’s in front of your eyes. It’s why Maria is the only character who is able to see through Chase’s slick image to what he’s doing behind the scenes.

Zilla: Is “eat the rich” meant to be interpreted literally?

Rachel: No thank you, I’m vegan.

Seriously, though, the rich are apex predators, prone to biomagnification, and you shouldn’t eat them as you’ll be ingesting the same toxic media ecosystem that they did. You don’t want to get RFK brainworms or a prion disease, do you? A better idea is to compost the rich and grow tomatoes in the soil, and if you need a good recipe or two for your tomatoes, I’d advise readers to check out the Sad Bastard Cookbook that you and I co-wrote.

Or, I don’t know, we could just have a fairer tax structure. Seems like it would cause less fuss.

Zilla: Can orcas smile?

Rachel: They can! And they also “kiss,” which is to say, they lightly bite each other’s tongues. Romance. You know how it is. My browsing history has been forever destroyed in an attempt to research far more than anyone ever needs to know about orca mating habits. In order to find out what, exactly, makes an orca smile, you’ll have to read the story.

Other fun orca fact: An orca can eat a moose. This happens rarely, but often enough that when they list the components of an orca’s diet, they do have to mention moose.

Zilla: Why are orcas the perfect symbol of the resistance?

Rachel: The trend of orcas sinking yachts is iconic to the point where I had to furiously Google to see if anyone else had already written a story about it. Why do they engage in this kind of behaviour? It’s because orcas are highly intelligent, highly social animals that communicate and learn from each other. (A lesser-known, though still stylish, orca trend is the fashion for wearing a dead salmon as a hat, which goes around every few years or so, like bell bottoms or acid-washed jeans.) Some people suggest that they’re playing with the yachts, downplaying the possibility that after several hundred years of all-out abuse of the ocean at the hands of the most predatory forces of capitalism, one of said ocean’s most intelligent lifeforms has decided to take a bit of revenge. It seems to me that, being on the frontline of humanity’s most shortsighted and reprehensible behaviour, they are engaging in the kind of action that we here on land are not courageous or desperate enough to undertake, even though we know the stakes.

It’s important to know that our ocean comrades aren’t perfect, and they often direct their violence towards targets that don’t deserve it. In addition to the yachts, they have been known to hunt blue whales for sport, or sink the craft of innocent small-scale fishers. But no activist or organization is perfect, and analyzing their shortcomings is also critical for building effective social movements.

Zilla: In your story, Maria seemed pretty trapped. How can us non-orca-types engage in resistance?

Rachel: [The following paragraph has been redacted for the sake of not further adding to the workload of the CSIS agent tasked with monitoring Rachel’s internet activity.]

You should write strongly worded letters to your local representative.

Zilla: *looking around nervously* Where can the Night Beats community find you and read this story?

Rachel: I am everywhere, including on this very blog! You can find me via my website, my podcast, Wizards & Spaceships, my Bluesky account, on Mastodon, or even on Instagram if you’re still on Meta for some reason. You can find this and future issues of the Antifa Lit Journal through the publisher, Not a Pipe Publishing, or wherever you buy books on the internet.

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.