My Books!

Showing posts with label literary fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literary fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Mama's Moon: The Hoodoo of Peckerwood Finch


GENRE  Literary Fiction

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BLURB:

A bond that can only happen on a dance floor happened in a cafe off Frenchman Street among four unlikely characters: a man who was about to die; his friend, an illiterate Cajun French yardman; and two of the most successful women in New Orleans.

Aging Captain Gabriel Jordan, retired, was given two months to live, three months before he met "Peck"--Boudreau Clemont Finch--a groundskeeper on the back lawn of his hospice on Bayou Carencro, Louisiana. It was at the hospice that Gabe told Peck his dream of seeing the Newport Jazz Festival before he died. They became friends, and Peck offered to help grant his wish by taking him there.

And they began their journey.

It quickly became a journey with complications and setbacks. They saved each other many times, but they were in turn saved by two extraordinary women: Sasha (Michelle Lissette), a real estate agent in New Orleans's posh Garden District, and her best friend, Lily Cup (Lily Cup Lorelei Tarleton), a criminal attorney.

Less than a year before the events in Mamma's Moon, Gabe and Peck wandered into Charlie's Blue Note, a small jazz bar in a side alley just off Frenchman Street, where the music was live and mellow and the dancing warm and sensual.

Here they encountered Sasha and Lily Cup, and amid the music, the dancing, the food, the flirting, and the cigar smoke, the four formed an unusual and lasting friendship that would see them each through a series of crises, disappointments, life-threatening situations, and moments of great joy and satisfaction.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~

EXCERPT:

Did you murder the kid, Gabe?” Lily Cup asked. The aging army captain, veteran of Korea and Vietnam, lowered his newspaper just enough to see over the entertainment page. 

“Close the door, honey, AC’s on,” Gabe said. 

In a tight, black skirt with a tailored matching waistcoat and white Nike walking shoes, she leaned and propped a black leather briefcase against the wall by the door. She stood like an exasperated tomboy, adjusting and refastening the diamond brooch on her lapel. 

“I heard you’ve been walking with a cane, dancing man.  What’s that all about? You’ve never carried a cane. You jazz dance for hours a couple of nights a week and Sasha tells me you started carrying one everywhere you go when you don’t need one. It’s smelling pretty premeditated to me, Gabe. What’s up with the cane thing?” 

“Does Sasha know about this morning?” 

“I haven’t told her anything. She’d have a canary.” 

Gabe lifted the paper again to read. 

“I need to know if it was murder,” Lily Cup said. 

“I don’t want to talk about it,” Gabe said. 

He closed the paper, folded it in half, and in half again. Dropping it on the arm of the chair, he stood and left the room. 

“Define murder,” he said from the kitchen. 

She tossed a handbag and white driving gloves onto the other chair, lifted Chanel sunglasses to the top of her head. 

“Gee, I’ll have to think on this one. Hmmm…Oh, I know. How about the police have a cane with blood on it and there’s a dead man.” 

“It’s a walking stick. My cane is over by the door.” 

“Well now it’s a goddamned murder weapon. They checked for prints, and yours are the only prints on it, and their guess is the lab will say the blood has his DNA.” 

Gabe came out with a coffee urn in one hand and his finger and thumb through two empty cup handles. He held the cups out for her to take one. 

“No more,” Gabe said. 

“You’re rather nonchalant for the spot you’re in. Why’d you clam up on me like that at the precinct? It didn’t set well with any of them. The DA entered a charge of second-degree murder. The police chief put out a warrant for you from lunch at Brennan’s.” 

He held the empty cups closer to her. 

“Just made it. Chicory and cinnamon.” 

“If you had television you’d have seen it—‘Daylight killing on St. Charles Avenue.’ It’s all over the news, freaking out the DA and the Visitors Bureau. No telling how many videos from streetcars going by will wind up on You Tube.” 

“That’s enough,” Gabe said. 

“People can live with violence after dark. That’s expected in any city, but when it’s in broad daylight, forget it. The DA pushed for an early docket with a magistrate and it’s Tulane and Broad for you at nine a.m. tomorrow.” 

“What’s Tulane and Broad?” 

“Magistrate Court. Congratulations, Gabe, you made the big time. You have to appear before a magistrate to hear the second-degree murder charge against you.” 

She took an empty cup in one hand, pinched his arm with the other. 

“Look me in the eye and swear it wasn’t murder,” Lily Cup said.

“This some kind of technique they teach at Harvard Law, Miss Tarleton?” 




Author Interview

1.Did you always want to be an author?
Yes. At least since the eighth grade when Mrs. Doxtator wrote on my composition, “This is the loveliest autumn I’ve ever read about”. My mother encouraged me to write since my birth.  She named me Jerome from St. Jerome – the librarian who translated the Bible – and Mark from Mark Twain – whose books she read when she was twelve.


2.Tell us about the publication of your first book.
I was working with a Simon and Shuster subsidiary editor. I had no Literary Agent.  We were having dinner one evening at her beach house. She told me it took 27 months for a book from a new author to get into book stores.  I was turning 70 and she asked if I wanted to wait that long. Of course, I didn’t.  She said that 90% of publishing was marketing and that I was a top professional and should consider opening an INDIE publishing company. I did – Little York Books.

My first novel – The Pompey Hollow Book Club – came out on December 7, 2011. In January the Syracuse University student body named me Writer of the Year.  In February a top executive with Barnes and Nobles’ headquarters called me at home, told me I was a true storyteller and asked if I planned to write more books – and when I said yes – she got me a distributor and into the Barnes & Noble stores. In the next twenty-eight weeks I spoke or signed in 28 different cities, libraries, bookstores or historical societies. The book was named Book of the Year by Writers and Authors.


3.Besides yourself, who is your favorite author in the genre you write in?
John Steinbeck for pathos, Max Shulman for humor, Ernest Hemingway for story telling.

4.What's the best part of being an author? The worst?
I get great tables in restaurants. At one time Governor Cuomo and his brother Chris Cuomo of CNN came over to my table, shook my hand. The governor had read two of my books. The worst? Finding a typo in a printed book.

5.What are you working on now?
The Delphi Falls Trilogy.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

AUTHOR Bio and Links:

JEROME MARK ANTIL writes in several genres. He has been called a “greatest generation’s Mark Twain,” a “write what you know Ernest Hemingway,” and “a sensitive Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.” It’s been said his work reads like a Norman Rockwell painting. Among his writing accomplishments, several titles in his The Pompey Hollow Book Club historical fiction series about growing up in the shadows of WWII have been honored. An ‘Authors and Writers’ Book of the Year Award and ‘Writer of the Year’ at Syracuse University for The Pompey Hollow Book Club novel; Hemingway, Three Angels, and Me, won SILVER in the UK as second-best novel. 

Foreword’s Book of the Year Finalist for The Book of Charlie – historical fiction and The Long Stem is in the Lobby – nonfiction humor. Library Journal selected Hemingway, Three Angels and Me for best reads during Black History Month. 

Before picking up the pen, Antil spent his professional career writing and marketing for the business world. In this role, he lectured at universities - Cornell, St. Edward’s, and Southern Methodist. His inspirations have been John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, and Ernest Hemingway.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GIVEAWAY INFORMATION and RAFFLECOPTER CODE:

Jerome Mark Antil will be awarding a $10 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
 


a Rafflecopter giveaway


Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Serpents and Doves


Serpents and Doves
by G. Lloyd Helm

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GENRE:  Literary Fiction

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BLURB:

Stephen Mitchell did not know what he was getting into at a small church college in Tennessee. Sex, protest, friendship, and Civil rights. The title “Serpents and Doves” comes from the warning Jesus gave to his disciples as he sent them out to preach the gospel, knowing the dangers they were going into. He said “I send you out as sheep among wolves, therefore be wise as serpents and harmless as doves.” Stephen Mitchell learns first-hand what that warning means when he goes to a Tennessee church college in the midst of the turbulent 60’s. He learns about friendship, war, protest, the sexual revolution, and civil rights.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

EXCERPT:

Ethan’s suicide rocked the school, but not nearly as much as Stephen expected. The New Jersey and New York folks mostly didn’t know anything about Ethan or the BSU so they noted the suicide as a bit of news, but it didn’t effect them much.  There was some anti-homosexual noise and the inevitable nasty jokes, but Ethan Patrick’s passing caused no more than a ripple for the most part.

There was some noise and protest from the Mason First Baptist Church when Billie Jo asked them to hold the funeral service, but finally they said they would bury him, but not in the church cemetery. They ignored the fact of his suicide and the reasons for it and held a small service. Stephen debated with himself whether he should go.   He had about decided not to when Cathy Powell cornered him and asked if he would go with her.  “I really don’t have the strength Steve,” she said. “I’m just a wreck. Can’t you please come with me?” 

Stephen seriously thought about saying, Why don’t you go ask David Hall? But didn’t say it.  “All right. I’ll meet you at the church.”

She smiled sadly, but Stephen thought he saw just the smallest glimmer of triumph in it.

The coffin was set across the aisle in front of the altar. Closed. It was silvery gray and looked more like a large tin can than a coffin. The congregation was small, mostly people from the BSU but a few from Beacon’s faculty including Dr. Conners and Dr. Marchant. Having the Pope there was no surprise. Probably here to make sure the sumbitch is really dead, Stephen thought, and then felt bad about thinking it.





Preorder Link

A Word From the Author

When did you first realize you wanted to become a writer?
I first started thinking about it in 7th grade. I had become a pretty voracious reader by then, but the thought of writing a book just occurred to me one day. I didn't really write anything much until college though. That was when I truly got the sickness, and I haven't been able to shake it since.

2.Besides yourself, who is your favorite author in the genre that you write?
I don't have any particular genre. As I said above, I am voracious, but I am also omnivorous. I read literature and science Fiction and Fantasy and hard science, history, and philosophy. Among my favorites are Robert Heinlein, Ernest Hemingway, Ray Bradbury, Ross McDonald, Lawrence Block and Mark Twain.But my library is chock-a-block with other authors and poets.

3.What are reading right now?
Just finished the Aubry/ Maturin series by Patrick Obrien and am looking forward to the Morte de Arthur . Also reading 1001 Ways to Market Your Books. Dull but necessary.

4.Which one of your characters is most like you?
All my characters have resemblance to me even the nasty ones, but in Serpents and Doves Stephen is very much me.

5.Which of your books is your favorite? Why?
I hate this question and I am always asked. It is like asking a parent which one of his children he loves best, but having said that I am gonna commit to one. About my favorite is my first one Other Doors. It isn't the "best" but it is close to my heart because of the subject matter. It is a story of a man who can stop war by simply saying STOP. I couldn't get anyone to publish it so I put Mouse Prints  publishing together  to publish it myself. Because of my association with the Air Force--my wife Michele is a retired Air Force Master Sergeant--I have sold hundreds of copies of OD on military bases around the world. I have the distinct honor of being able to say that my little book about peace has gone to every war zone in the world since it came out in 1996. It is refreshing and hopeful when some uniformed stranger greets me with "Peace be with you." which is a catch phrase in the book. The book is available from Rogue Phoenix Publishing, Amazon, and Barnes and Noble.



AUTHOR Bio and Links:

G. Lloyd Helm has been writing for 40 years, having published poetry in a wide variety of magazines and newspapers including “The New York Poetry Anthology,” “Stars and Stripes News,” “The Los Angeles Times,” “The Antelope Valley Press,” and “The Antelope Valley Anthologies,” among others. 

… Has published short stories and memoirs both in the US and in England in such journals as “Pligrimage” which published the memoir “Football” in spring 2005, and a second memoir “4 April, 1968” in the winter of 2008.  He has published short stories in “Citadel” the literary magazine of Los Angeles City College,” “Delivered Magazine,” which is based in London, “Short Story Library,” The University of S. Illinois’ “Eureka Literary Magazine,” “Tales as like as not,” and London’s “Black Gate Magazine.”  Recently published “Even Up” a Civil War Ghost story at www.ruthlesspeoples.com, an English on line magazine, and the short story “A Lovely Elephant” in “Delivered Magazine” an English fiction journal. “The Other Fellows Shoes,” Pulp Empire III, Metahuman Press, Cedar Rapids, IA Nov. 2010. Is being published in an on line experiment from Alfie Dog Publishing in England. May 2012.

…Has published three novels in the F&SF field, 1) OTHER DOORS, From MousePrints Publishing, and 2) DESIGN from American Star. 3) WORLD WITHOUT END from Rogue Phoenix Press, www.roguephoenixpress.com  OTHER DOORS, originally published in 1997, was published electronically by Rogue Phoenix Press in July 2010. Also Published a literary Romance novel called SOMETIMES IN DREAMS, from Siren’s call. Most recently a volume of short stories called TRAIN WHEELS, FLYING SAUCERS, AND THE GHOST OF TIBURCIO VASQUEZ. Many of these stories appear on the Alfie Dog site.

…Is in process of publishing an adult literary novel called SERPENTS AND DOVES with Rogue Phoenix Press, which will be out in May 2016.


LINKS:


G. Lloyd Helm will be awarding 10 paperback copies of the book to10 randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during the tour. (international giveaway) Use the link below to enter.


a Rafflecopter giveaway