Musings From Planet Wolfson
  • Home
  • A Writer's Blog
  • Fiction
  • Scripts
  • Favourite Quotes
  • Useful Links
  • Selected Markets
  • Contact Me

A Writer's Blog

13 The Anthology - Available Now via Amazon

12/9/2013

2 Comments

 
Picture
13 The Anthology is now available on Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com. It’s competitively priced at a mere 77p so please give it a chance and treat yourself. Ok, ok, I’m hardly likely to say anything negative about an anthology that contains one of my stories, but I genuinely believe that there are stories in this anthology for everyone. It’s a themed anthology centred around the number “13” but every writer was free to interpret that theme in any way they pleased. Let’s put it another way: The Editors gave each contributor creative freedom – although that doesn’t mean we weren’t asked to amend elements!

As a result this isn’t an anthology laden with horror stories, or sci-fi stories, or twist in the tale stories, or any other kind of specific story. It’s a diverse well balanced anthology. There is a sci-fi story in the mix, and there’s a ghost story too, but you’ll also find historical fiction, fantasy, dark drama, uplifting drama, black comedy, straight comedy, and great characters too.

My own story is very British, blackly comic, that hopefully will appeal beyond the English Channel.

Leaving my own work aside I can honestly state that I’m proud to have my work alongside the other works in the anthology. During the compiling stage the authors were all asked to read the other contributors work, and to comment. It was an interesting exercise, and there was diverse views from all of the writers. That process shows the care that was taken in producing this fine body of stories.

So please lend a helping hand and support some up and coming writers. You haven’t got anything to lose,  well OK 77p or 99 cents but that’s less than a cup of coffee.

If anyone does take the plunge please feel free to leave an Amazon review, or contact me directly to let me know what you think. You can even be critical; just keep it constructively critical!!!

Happy Reading,

Mike.


2 Comments

And This Years Holiday Reads Were...

5/9/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
I love holidays, but hey, who doesn't? This year we headed off to the sunny Canary Island of La Palma. One of the great joys of being away is the fact I get quality reading time. I packed six books to take with me, and I managed to finish them all.

Here they are, and rest assured there are no spoilers in the following text:

Full Dark House by Christopher Fowler

This is the first Bryant & May novel. The first one I read was The Victoria Vanishes which I enjoyed so much I decided to read the series in order. For those who don’t know; Bryant & May are two ageing detectives who head up the Metropolitan Police’s Peculiar Crimes Unit.

Full Dark House starts and ends in the present day but the narrative jumps back to world war two London, and it really tells the story of the young Bryant & May on their first meeting / investigation. Our central characters are colourful and engaging. Bryant is irascible, he doesn't understand women, he’s an English eccentric fond of a practical joke or two and damn the consequences. You can’t help but like him. May is his antithesis. Good looking, affable, popular with the ladies even in his advanced years.

Bryant is constantly looking for the unusual motive, while May is more grounded in his approach. Ultimately, they like and respect each other, while occasionally infuriating one another. Yes, they’re like a married couple.

The book is engaging and witty, while managing to incorporate elements of historical fact without dropping the reader into a history book. The plot is engaging and is set within London’s theatre world.

I didn't quite enjoy it as much as The Victoria Vanishes, but it’s a great introduction to the Peculiar Crimes Unit and the ever great Bryant & May. If you like crime fiction, and if you haven’t given them a go, I can heartily recommend this book.


Last Seen Wearing by Colin Dexter

This is the second Morse adventure, and I have to say that this was pure brilliance. Characterisation, pace, plot, dialog…I could just wax lyrical about this all day. If you haven’t read the Morse books, please, give them a shot.

The main story twists and turns so many times that you’re basically on the last page before you know where the endings going. I don’t want to say anything else in case I say too much. My favourite holiday read, and one of my favourite reads of all time.

We’ll Always Have Paris by Ray Bradbury

I love Bradbury. The Golden Apples of the Sun was the first book that blew me away, the first book that gave me that spark about writing my own stories.

This later collection of short stories doesn't quite live up to his earlier works, but there were quite a few in the collection that I really liked.

Nobody does nostalgia quite like Bradbury. His prose has a poetic edge to it that is unmistakably him. He takes us to Mars and to L.A, he tells us strange little stories along with tales of everyday life, but ultimately for me Bradbury’s stories are always about human nature. Simple tales of you and me beautifully told with colour and life.

The Mysterious Mr. Quinn by Agatha Christie

I love Poirot. I've never read a Miss Marple adventure, but Nemesis in in my reading pile. I've read several of her stand-alone books, and other tales of her lesser known sleuths. Christie’s sales and seemingly undying popularity speak for itself. I am undoubtedly a fan.

Having said that this collection of short stories featuring the titular Mr. Quinn was a mixed bag. These stories were very different from anything else of Christie’s that I've ever read.

Harley Quinn is not a detective, amateur or otherwise, he’s a supernatural figure of mystery. He appears at the most opportunistic times. All of the stories feature the unflappable Mr. Satterthwaite, who is basically the main character in all of the stories.

Mr. Quinn questions what people have seen, or at least what they think they've seen, and the aforementioned Satterthwaite does the rest. Once the conclusion is set the mysterious Quinn disappears in much the same way as he magically appears.

Worth a read if you’re a Christie fan and you fancy reading something slightly different.

The last two books on my reading list? They were guilty pleasures; two books from my childhood that I wanted to revisit. Very much geek material so I’ll spare you the details.

More posts soon including a release date for the 13 Anthology.

Take care,

Mike

0 Comments

    Author

    M J Wolfson - That's me. 
    A short story writer and an Indie filmmaker. I've had multiple short stories published in various anthologies, magazines, &
    E-zines. I've recently embraced the world of film-making. I've written and directed  one very short film, and I plan to make more. I was the Assistant Editor at Firewords Quarterly for the first seven issues. A project I was very proud to have been a part of. I'm a book collector, autograph hunter, part time lion tamer, and a full time fantasist. Feel free to say, Hello. Everybody's welcome!

    Archives

    August 2017
    November 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    December 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    December 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013

    Categories

    All
    13 Seconds
    13 The Anthology
    A Brief History Of Doozer's Cyclic Theory Of Re-Invention
    Acid House
    Agatha Christie
    Andromeda Spaceways
    A Quiet Retirement
    Authonomy
    Beautiful
    Bernard Cornwell
    Brington Tower
    Chris Chibnall
    Christopher Fowler
    Colin Dexter
    Daily Life
    Dancers
    Darkfuse
    Domain Names
    Duotrope
    Elmore Leonard
    Erotic Shades
    Fantasies
    Favourite Quotes
    Firewords
    Flash Cricket
    Flash Fiction
    Grrm
    Hellnotes
    Hello!
    Hemingway
    Holdfast
    Horror D'oeuvres
    Inspiration
    Iversity
    Jane Hunter
    Lester Dent
    Michael Moorcock
    Monsters
    Night Owls
    Peer Review
    Pen Names
    Pili-isms
    Plotting
    Project 13
    Publication Rights
    Ray Bradbury
    Reading
    Robert A Heinlein
    Round Robin Challenge
    Saints & Sinners
    Selected Markets
    Shush
    Submissions
    The Ending
    The Man On The Train
    Theme Of Absence
    The Remote Control Love Affair
    The Things We Can't Foresee
    The Thirteenth Camera
    Triggerstreetlabs
    T S Eliot
    Useful Links
    Wiped Clean
    Writer's Block
    Writing
    Writing Courses
    Writing Tips
    Zoetrope Studios

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Home
  • A Writer's Blog
  • Fiction
  • Scripts
  • Favourite Quotes
  • Useful Links
  • Selected Markets
  • Contact Me