Flamecon 2.0: THIS weekend, August 20th-21st

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flamecon2

The summer has flown by, and I’m surprised myself that it’s already time for Flamecon 2.0. I’ve actually been looking forward to it since last year’s event which was hugely successful and a lot of fun. The con’s second run has expanded to two days: Saturday, August 20th and Sunday, August 21st. The 21st has been designated as Youth Day. Anyone under 20 enters free.

Last year sold out, and this year is getting close. So if you’re not under 20, I might recommend purchasing passes in advance. Visit the Flamecon website for all the particulars on the location and the schedule of events. And of course, if you go, be sure to look for me at the Genre Junkies booth.

Genre Junkies are an amalgam of authors including Christian Baines, who writes young adult (Puppet Boy) and paranormal fantasy (The Beast Without, The Orchard of Flesh), David Swatling, who writes crime fiction (Calvin’s Head), J. L. Weinberg, who writes paranormal horror (True Religion), and myself. We’ll have autographed books and giveaways and hopefully something for anyone who likes gay genre fiction.

We’ll be at booth #128 (see the map below). I plan to tweet and post photos on Facebook throughout the weekend. Tweet me back (@ayjayp #flamecon2) and stop by the booth for some freebies.

FlameConFloorplan5-01

 

New title imagines Atlantis as real world prehistory

via GIPHY

So here’s a press pinata I’m bursting open today. My new title Poseidon and Cleito is on sale for a special pre-order price of $2.99 at Amazon, with delivery to your e-reader on August 29th. Thereafter, it’s on early release from Kindle Exclusive for $5.99 and available EVERYWHERE on December 5th.

My suggestion: use the three bucks you save to get a nice, grande iced coffee from Starbucks.

How about a look at the cover?

Poseidon & Cleito Book Cover published by EDGE-Lite 2016

Nice, right?

Are you a book blogger, reviewer, or Goodreads user? Drop me a line, and I’ll send you an e-ARC to take a look at: ajpeters@andrewjpeterswrites.com. You can add the title to your Goodreads shelf here.

Here’s the publisher’s press release to tell you about the story:

Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy is pleased to announce the release of Andrew J. Peters’ fourth book Poseidon and Cleito, the story of how Poseidon became Poseidon and an intriguing portrait of the woman who Plato mentioned as his wife.

In the tradition of David Gemmell and Guy Gavriel Kay, Peters reimagines a well-known mythological character from a human perspective while illuminating a minor, female figure who was relegated to the margins by writers of the age.

Says Peters, “I consider Poseidon and Cleito my most ambitious book to date. Everyone knows Poseidon. It’s almost sacrosanct to break from the canon in portraying him. But I’ve always been curious about the origins of myths and the possibility that men became gods through the passing down of sagas that were embellished over the centuries. Similarly, I wanted to give a voice to a character who the Greeks didn’t tell us much about. Why didn’t Plato have more to say about Poseidon’s wife Cleito, other than putting her name in as a place-keeper in his very detailed account of the history of Atlantis?”

With rich description of its prehistorical setting, Poseidon and Cleito is parts speculative biography, a complex love story, and an action-adventure seasoned with a touch of fantasy. Peters plans to launch a series from this first book in his Atlantis saga.

“Poseidon and Cleito explores the Atlantis story from its early years,” Peters says. “It’s a kingdom that lasted for many centuries, and this first book provides some hints of what led to its demise and erasure from history. A mysterious magical element is introduced that will be developed more in future installments.”

The book is available through Kindle Exclusive through November, with worldwide retail release on December 5th.

Peters is best known for his portrayal of gay characters in mythic fantasy via The Seventh Pleiade, a 2014 Rainbow Awards Honorable Mention, and his 2015 title Banished Sons of Poseidon. Both took inspiration from the Atlantis legend.

Says Peters, “I guess I’ve become an Atlantologist like Lewis Spence and Edgar Cayce. I’m drawn to conspiracies.” On writing a book with heterosexual characters and relationships, he says he was undaunted. “In a way, Poseidon and Cleito is a prequel to my earlier work, and I handled the material with the same subversive approach, though not with the specific intention of ‘queering’ popular mythology. That didn’t feel right for this particular story. But there are gay supporting characters and bisexual supporting characters. I don’t think I’ll ever write a story in which queer characters don’t exist.”

A YA panel on fantasy, multicultural perspectives, and information for teens

YA Panel at the Rainbow Book Fair

On the Queens Book Festival Young Adult Stage, from l to r: Daniel José Older, Carola Dibbell, Dominque Taylor, and me

Last Sunday’s panel: “Expanding the Landscape of Fantasy and YA Imagination,” was a really nice event. It was hot and shade was at a premium at Kaufman Astoria Studios outdoor space, but folks of all ages turned out for a lively discussion about challenges and opportunities in the realm of young adult fantasy.

The panel included Daniel José Older who writes stories from Latino perspectives (Shadowshaper, Bone Street Rumba), Carola Dibbell, whose début novel The Only Ones portrays teen motherhood and economic class in a near future, dystopian world, and me. We were moderated by vlogger Dominique Taylor, founder of The Storyscape, who had us talk about our works, read from them, and comment on how marginalized voices and cultures fit into fantasy worlds.

I spoke about the need for LGBT experiences to be reflected in YA fantasy, and some of the themes that emerged from our discussion were how personal experience and culture informs our work, the importance of sharing information with young readers, and the problem of withholding information on critical topics like sexuality.

The panel was videotaped for The Storyscape, and I’ll be sure to share it when it goes live.

Many thanks to Sherese Francis, Johanne Civil and all the volunteers at the Queens Book Festival who made the event happen. And thanks to Dominique for hosting a great discussion.

 

25 Things You Don’t Know About Me: You Won’t Believe #5!

booklaunch1Borrowing from the popular tabloid feature, and more so from its parody made popular by my favorite political comedian Bill Maher, I offer you, my curious fan, or reader, or idle surfer who stumbled on my page while goofing off at work: 25 Things You Don’t Know About Me.

Likely, I could fill this page with 25,000 things you don’t know about me. Starting with who I am and why I have this website. I’ll let you browse through the menu if you’re curious about that. But here is my revealing, and let’s hope, shocking list.

25. I wrote under the ingenious pen name Peter Andrews from age 7 to 12, creating such multifarious works as the illustrated children’s book The Secret of Friendship, the mystery novel The Murders of Moosewood Mansion, and the stage musical Hey, Lucy McKay!

jif

Mmm…I love JIf.

24. In times of stress, I eat Jif peanut butter out of the jar.

23. I worked as an assistant zookeeper, which largely entailed shoveling shit, hauling bales of alfalfa, and chain-smoking.

22. I later worked as a biochemistry lab technician, which coincidentally largely entailed a good amount of chain-smoking.

21. I play four musical instruments, poorly: the piano, the cello, the guitar, and the recorder.

Yeah, that's me, 2nd from the left, in shades, tailgating at a Grateful Dead show.

Yeah, that’s me, 2nd from the left, in shades, tailgating at a Grateful Dead show.

20. I used to sell love beads outside of Grateful Dead shows.

19. I’ve never owned a car other than a Volkswagen.

18. I’m half Hungarian, but I don’t like paprikash, or water polo. I do like Hungarian water polo players.

 

Hungarian-Water-Polo-team

Go Team Hungary! Photo courtesy of thehoopla.com.au

 

17. I saw my first gay pride parade at age five, by accident, when it erupted around my family while vacationing in Provincetown, Cape Cod. These things leave impressions.

16. I have honorary degrees from nowhere.

15. My date to the high school prom was the daughter of a Perkins Prize winning author.

14. Besides that brush with celebrity, I also lived next door to the house where Vladimir Nabokov wrote Lolita, and to entice sub-letters, I advertised it was the house where Vladimir Nabokov wrote Lolita.

beanie babies

Why do I keep getting Beanie Babies?!

13. Some of my character names I can barely pronounce myself (Aerander, the Seventh Pleiade, Calyiches). I also loathe having to say anesthetic.

12. While in practice as a social worker, it somehow caught on for clients to give me gifts of Beanie Babies, though I was secretly mildly annoyed and embarrassed.

11. While stuck in traffic, en route from the wedding reception to the hotel, both my husband and I pissed in the limousine’s ice bucket.

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Me and Chloë, who doesn’t pay enough attention to me.

10. My past Halloween costumes include a Spanish toreador, a pirate, and the Unabomber.

9. I get angry at my cat when she doesn’t pay attention to me.

8. As a teenager, I had an inexplicable crush on Urkel from Family Matters.

7. If you ask to take me out to Cold Stone Creamery, I’ll go with you, even if I don’t like you.

6. When I worked at an animal hospital in high school, I used to sneak my friends in after hours to look at the dead pets in the ice locker.

FamilyMatters-SteveUrkel11

Wasn’t he cute?

5. I cry sometimes when I listen to the soundtrack from The Phantom of the Opera.

4. Instead of playing cops and robbers, I used to convince my childhood friends to pretend we were waiters at a high end restaurant.

3. I like Madonna in the abstract more than I like her in reality.

2. I’m not entirely sure what #3 means.

1. I’m still waiting for the day when I can Google myself and appear to be more famous than Andrew Peters, the former NHL player, and Andrew Peters, the disgraced Boston mayor, or even Andrew Peters, the concert organist from St. Louis.

Join me at the Queens Book Festival YA Stage!

New Flyer

If you’re in the New York City area this weekend, why not come out to the inaugural Queens Book Festival on Sunday, August 7th at Kaufman Astoria Studios?

It’s a totally free event that is being called: “the largest and most inclusive literary gathering in the ‘World’s Borough’ of Queens.” There will be talks and exhibits by over 100 authors, many, like myself with local ties. The festival will also have a focus on activities for children and teenagers, and I’m quite excited to be part of the Young Adult Stage.

At 12pm, I’ll be on a panel titled: “Expanding the Landscape of Fantasy and YA Imagination.” Here’s the description:

For a genre like Fantasy that includes fairies, witches, werewolves, aliens, and supernatural powers, the inclusion of the diverse worlds of humans is surprisingly lacking. How are the boundaries being pushed in YA Fantasy to be more inclusive and challenging? What is considered “inappropriate” works for young adults?

The other panelists include Carola Dibbell (The Only Ones) and Daniel Jose Older (Salsa Nocturna), and the panel is moderated by book vlogger Dominique Taylor (The Storyscape). I’ll also have signed copies of Banished Sons of Poseidon for purchase.

Sound like a good time? I hope so. 🙂

For directions and the full program, check out the Queens Book Festival website here.