Download “Mike’s Pond” for Free at Smashwords

Mike's Pond Cover Art

A few of my short stories are out of print, and I decided to publish them for free on Smashwords.

The first one up is a fictionalized memoir “Mike’s Pond,” which first appeared in the quarterly e-zine Wilde Oats. This was one of my earliest publications from back in 2011.

The story is special to me for a few reasons. I wrote it as an experiment for a critique group in which I was participating at the time. A couple of us were writing fantasy. Most were writing contemporary, literary pieces. Just for a fun challenge, we decided to all take a crack at writing horror.

My mind had drifted back to what had scared me as a kid. I grew up with an older brother so the source material was vast. We lived in a quiet, suburban town outside of the city of Buffalo. During the summer break from school, the thing to do was charting out the wooded pockets of land surrounding our tidily developed neighborhood. That was fine during the day, but there were stories of terrible things that had happened in those wild, abandoned places at night.

Mike’s Pond was the best-known legend. When my piece was published in Wilde Oats, I was happily surprised to hear from readers back in Amherst, New York who told me the story was alive and well. The one square-acre or so site had been idle for decades. But just recently, it was sold to a hotel developer, and it will soon be no more. Local residents, organized under the banner: Friend’s of Mike’s Pond, have tried to oppose the razing of the forested wetland, which is a vital ecosystem for wildlife. Sadly, it appears that they are losing the battle.

As a kid growing up in the 1980s, Mike’s Pond was both a playground and a cautionary tale. It seems that everyone in that neighborhood has heard the story that some young man named Mike drowned there, but no one can reliably say who Mike was, why he drowned, and when his death happened.

Those curiosities inspired my “horror story,” but it gradually turned into more of a coming-of-age piece. It became about my struggles proving myself to my older brother, wanting to be a “normal” boy, and confronting the frightening reality that I was not “normal” by the conventional standards of the time. Of course, those conventional standards were the only standards I knew as a twelve-year-old.

If you like the story, you might just give it a rating and/or review on Smashwords. Of course, you can do that if you don’t like it too. This was my first foray into Smashwords publishing, and I spent many hours working on the formatting, but I’m aware it’s not perfect. New respect for self-published authors!

 

The Next Big Thing – Lydia Sharp

I’m cross-posting the on-line interview from my first ‘taggee’ : young adult author Lydia Sharp.

My NEXT Next Big Thing

1. What is the title of your book?

MEANT TO LIVE

2. Where did the idea come from for the book?

As with all my projects, the idea for Novel #6 was a combination of different seeds all germinating simultaneously and progressively. The basic “time distortion” concept is similar to that found in the movie Frequency. But that is where the similarities between that movie and my novel end. (If you have never seen Frequency, by the way, I’m sorry but we can’t be friends until you remedy that malfunction.)

3. What genre does your book fall under?

Like Seven Deaths, Novel #6 is contemporary YA with a fantastical twist. I love writing stories about real teens in the real world that are suddenly faced with something other-worldly that only they can solve. Some call this magical realism. I’ve yet to see anyone agree on the definition of magical realsim, though, so I just call it contemporary YA and let the fantastical elements speak for themselves.

4. What actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?

God, I really hate this question, because I get too analytic about it. Not that I’m overly picky about who would play my characters (to a point), but I tend to think about the timeline of it all. When your main characters are teenagers and it takes years to publish a book, and then another few years to make a movie (if it even sells as a movie), by the time that happens there are new young actors and actresses to choose from and…

I just hate to commit to saying I would select a certain person who could very well have crow’s feet by the time my book is a movie, and not remain open to the idea of someone who is in sixth grade right now, but would be perfect by the time anyone is making a decision about it.

Sorry, I can’t do it. This question always kills me.

5. What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

MEANT TO LIVE is about a boy who receives a message from the future that he is only weeks away from killing himself, but he isn’t suicidal, and now he must reverse his own death before it happens.

6. How long did it take you to write the first draft?

It isn’t finished yet. I’ve been working on it since November.

7. Who or what inspired you to write the book?

I’ve been wanting to write something that involved time travel, or time distortion, for years. Which is odd because I’m not generally a fan of those types of stories. When they’re good, they’re really good. But when they’re bad, they’re really bad. There is no in-between. And I seem to find mostly the bad ones so it’s left a sour taste in my mouth.

But still, something about the concept keeps drawing me back. I’ve had other story ideas in the time travel arena but they never developed properly. This one feels like it’s on the right track.

The first specific inspiration for this specific story, however (aside from the movieFrequency), came quite clearly to me while reading this book. If you haven’t read the book, then I don’t want to spoil it for you by saying how it inspired my idea forMeant to Live. Just read it, it’s brilliant.

Also, this song:

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8. Is your book published, upcoming, and/or represented by an agency?

None of the above. It’s still very much a work-in-progress.