Category Archives: New Releases

Q&A With Russ Colchamiro

Crossline coverWith the debut of Crossline this week, we thought it a good chance for readers to further get to know Russ Colchamiro. Over the last week, Russ and I exchanged ideas and witticisms, the results of which follow.

C8: Why do you write?

Russ: Starting off with an easy one, I see. I write because I’m compelled to write. I’m energized, focused, and optimistic about the future when I’m writing, and if I go even a few days without clacking the keys, I get noticeably grumpier and unhappy. Some may call it an addiction — or even possibly a neurosis! — but I like to think of it as a calling. I simply have to do it. It’s not a hobby. It’s not just for funzies. It’s fundamental to who I am. Whether I’m the descendant of some Frankenstein experimentation, alien abduction, or other cosmic intervention, I seem to have the authordude chip permanently fused with my DNA.

C8: What is the appeal of science fiction?

Russ: Science fiction is fun because you can plausibly create almost any ‘universe’ you want, with any rules you want, just as long as you are consistent with them. Dogs talk? Right on. The Universe is overseen by a flamboyant talk show host from Eternity? Coolio. I also tend to write big. And by big, I don’t necessarily mean long, but expansive. I naturally trend toward multi-layered storytelling with a far reach. And science fiction gives me the opportunity to explore the big questions — science vs. gods, fate vs. randomness, multiple universes vs. self-delusion. I also like to juxtapose the big vs. the small. ‘My girlfriend might dump me. How do I win her back? But, wait. Hang on a second. The universe might explode if I don’t act now, so let me get back to you on the whole boo-hoo-hoo lovelife thing.’

C8: Which authors influence you?

Russ: For fiction, I’d start with Christopher Moore, Douglas Adams, Chuck Palahniuk, Tom Robbins, Kurt Vonnegut, Kurt Busiek, and Alan Moore. From them I’m extra motivated to find the big, the funny, and the scope. I also read a lot philosophy, mythology, and psychology, so there I’d say M Scott Peck, Carl Jung, Wayne Dyer, and Joseph Campbell, among others.

C8: Which authors are you currently reading?

Russ: I’m almost done with Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life, by James Hollis, PhD. He’s basically recapturing ideas Jung wrote about, but because of my age — I’m almost 42 — the themes are striking a chord with me. I’m also hoping to get to Aaron Rosenberg’s wacky scifi sequel Too Small for Tall (okay, shameless Crazy 8 plug!), but that DuckBob cracks me up. I’ve also got volumes 4 and 5 of the Chew trade paperbacks in my queue.

C8: How does Crossline differ from your previous work?

A: Crossline is a pulp science fiction adventure, about an American space pilot who is forced through a wormhole and into a parallel universe – a parallel Earth – where he finds himself in the middle of a civil war he may or may not have been destined for all along. So there’s some actual spaceships and such — which I typically don’t do — although there’s my usual time bending-philosophical shenanigans going on, and a lot of humor as well. Whereas Finders Keepers was a scifi backing comedy. Think American Pie meets Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

C8: What came first with Crossline, the character(s) or the concept?

Russ: Crossline is actually the melding of two completely disparate ideas I developed a dozen years apart. Back in the late ‘90s, I had an idea for a sci-fi comic book mini-series. It never made it to print, but the general idea was in place.

But to connect the dots … back in high school I wrote a trilogy of short stories — inspired by a girl, of course — and based on the ‘the troubles’ in Ireland, because who better to capture ‘the troubles’ then a 16-year-old Jewish kid from Long Island who knew absolutely nothing about Ireland?

I based one of the characters on a 10-year-old-girl who visited from Northern Island, and whose family had been severely impacted by that turmoil. As part of my story — which I wrote in 1988 — a plane flying from the UK to the U.S. exploded over the Atlantic Ocean. Within days of finishing my story, Pan Am Flight 103 from Lockerbie, Scotland actually exploded in real life. So I sorta freaked out. And to make it freakier, in my story, the 10-year-old girl character died in the bombing. The real life girl was supposed to have been on the Lockerbie flight (cue up Twilight Zone music here). Turns out she had a last minute change of plans, so she was okay, thank god. But it’s something I never forgot.

Then a few years ago I saw how my sci-fi adventure could raise the stakes to the earlier political, human drama, which I then rewrote to be far less ‘serious’ and a lot more popcorn fun.

C8: Did Crossline require a lot of research?

Russ: Yes. For instance, I wanted to capture what a pilot might experience when losing control of the instruments mid-flight, and facing a potential crash landing. I read many accounts, and consulted a friend of mine, who is an airline pilot. He read the text, offered a few comments, and then gave me his blessing. I also read multiple texts of American Indian mythology. In one Crossline sequence, we are taken through a sweat lodge meditation, and I wanted that experience to feel authentic.

C8: What was the biggest writing obstacle you had to overcome?

Russ: Life! I was about 80 percent done with the first draft of Crossline, and then my twins were born — a boy and a girl. So I went on hiatus for about a year — the only time in my life when I wasn’t writing but still felt truly fulfilled. And since then — my kids are 2 1/2 now — it’s been an ongoing challenge to squeeze it all in. I have a full-time job, the family, and my books. So … you basically know my entire existence.

C8: How do you write your books?

Russ: With words. I find the stories flow better that way.

Russ photo 2C8: Do you have a favorite writing spot or time? Are there writing rituals you observe?

Russ: I’m early to bed, early to rise, and ideally I’ll have at least two, if not three consecutive hours of uninterrupted writing time. I try to write quickly — I’m envious of those who can I do it well — but that’s just not who I am. I’m a ‘feel’ writer, in that I need to get into the headspace of the character or scene, and embody that energy, so it often takes me a little while to find my groove. I suppose I’m a ‘method writer,’ if there is such a thing. It’s not always easy to carve out the time, but as long as I’m willing to relinquish sleep and clarity, it’s usually not a problem.

C8: What about music? Some authors prefer silence, others create playlists to set the mood.

Russ: I rarely, if ever, listen to music when I write. I like silence, so I can concentrate. But when I’m editing, I like to have earbuds in, especially when I’m editing on the subway to or from work. Mostly rock n’ roll — a lot of Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Live, Green Day, AC/DC, Neil Young, U2, Coldplay — but sometimes jazz, or singer songwriters, like Crowded House, Billy Joel, or even Natalie Merchant or Sarah McLachlan. She has a great voice. But in one Crossline sequence, the pilot is flying through a wormhole, and the experience is really trippy. For that, I listened to a LOT of Pink Floyd, particularly Dark Side of the Moon. Fifty times easy. Probably more. I also listened to Break the Spell album by Chris Daughtry, and the song Spaceship off that album always put me in right mood for the crazy adventure I was writing.

C8: What is your proudest moment in the book?

Russ: There are scenes I’m really happy with, but there’s one longer sequence in the middle of the narrative when it was important — for reasons that become obvious when you read it — to create an entire back story for one of the characters. This was truly a time when I had no plan. Nada. It was purely organic. Beyond some topline information, I had no idea who this character really was or how the past would shape the present. I just sat back and let the story come to life. It was very cool. That also happened once or twice with Finders Keepers.

C8: How long did it take you to write Crossline?

Russ: Crossline was 25 years in the making. But in terms of sitting down to clack the keys, about three years, although I had a gap in the middle of the writing process due to family obligations.

C8: For someone reading this as their first exposure to your work, what would you recommend they read of yours next?

Russ: Finders Keepers

C8: And exactly what are you working on next?

Russ: The first of two Finders Keepers sequels. I hope to have the second book in print by early 2014. I’m shooting for the Farpoint con, but we’ll see how it goes. I may write the two Finders Keepers sequels back-to-back, or in between I may write a stand-alone book I have planned; it’s unrelated to any of my active projects. I’ll check in with my creative mojo at the time and see how I’m feeling.

C8: Where can fans find out more about you?

Russ: They can visit my web site at www.russcolchamiro.com, follow me on Twitter @authorduderuss, and check out my Goodreads and Facebook author pages.

I’ll also be the guest author for the #scifichat Q&A on Twitter, scheduled for Friday, March 29, at 3 pm Eastern.

C8: Where can fans find you at a con?

A: I’ll be doing author signings and panels at Lunacon in Rye, NY the weekend of March 15-17, RocCon Hudson Valley in Poughkeepsie on Sunday, April 7, and August 2-4 I’ll be at Shore Leave in Huntsville, MD, my first con as an official part of the Crazy 8 team. I may schedule other cons throughout the year. Hopefully NY Comic-Con in October, but that really depends on Crazy 8 Press!

Crossline Explained

By Russ Colchamiro

As with all great stories, Crossline was inspired by — what else — a girl.

I’ll explain.

Crossline is actually the melding of two completely disparate ideas I developed a dozen years apart. Back in the late ‘90s, I had an idea for a sci-fi comic book mini-series. A buddy of mine helped me see how big Crossline could really be, so I upped the action and then we put the very beginning of Crossline into layout. But the comic book never took off, so to speak.

Yeah. Okay, great. But … what’s this about a girl?

Well … back in high school I had a crush on a redhead, who was a tried and true American Irish lass who also happened to be fiery and passionate about all things Ireland and the IRA. So of course I had to write about it, because who better to capture ‘the troubles’ then a 16-year-old Jewish kid from Long Island who knew absolutely nothing about Ireland?

And so a trilogy of short stories came to be. They were lumpy and unpolished, but there was a real cross-border love story set within political action and intrigue, and each story was an improvement over the last. The framework for something special was in place.

(For the record, I never published the stories, and to my chagrin at the time, I never got the girl.)

And yet … I held onto the story idea, and when at long last I saw how the sci-fi component could really raise the stakes to this human drama, I started writing the novel. It took almost 25 years, but Crossline has finally arrived.

The space adventure gets the action rolling, but there’s a saga that comes with it. And lest this all sounds a bit heavy … fear not. I replaced the original teenaged angst with some philosophical musings, cosmic shenanigans, and loads of humor, cuz like Plato himself liked to say, that’s just how I roll (or maybe it was Confucius, I forget).

In any case, if Crossline sounds like your kinda thing, it will be available both in print and e-book through my pals at Crazy8 Press. Coming soon.

Coming in March: Crossline by Russ Colchamiro

Up until now our little gang at Crazy 8 has published books by just our little band of writers — the founding members, as we like say (ahem-hem). But we finally thought, you know, it’s time we opened our doors to some of Russ Grooves an Alienour fellow writers and bring them into the Crazy 8 family. As announced at Farpoint this afternoon, this will be our next offering and one we’re excited about.

With that, let’s  welcome our newest brother in arms — author Russ Colchamiro.

If you don’t know Russ, his debut novel was the hilarious sci-fi backpacking comedy Finders Keepers, which he published to some nice fanfare through 3 Finger Prints.

In fact, review site Ruled by Books had this to say about Russ: “There are only a handful of comedic authors that I enjoy, tops among them being Douglas Adams and Christopher Moore. After reading Finders Keepers … add Russ Colchamiro to that list.”

And now he’s back with his latest novel, Crossline, which will debut in Mid-March as the first official Crazy 8 novel written by an outside author.

So what’s Crossline about?

If you ask Russ, he calls it a modern-day Buck Rogers/Flash Gordon-style space opera, with his usual time-bending, philosophical shenanigans mixed in, as well as action, space soaring thrills, some deadly, but lovely ladies, and of course, loads of humor.

Space battles? Check

Wormholes? Check

Alternate realities? Check

Pot smoking shaman? Check

You want more? Keep checking in with us here  for further updates and pretty soon we’ll hear from Russ himself about how this crazy space opera came together.

Mike Friedman Joins the Blog Hop

Aztlan front coverA couple of weeks ago, my pal Ilsa Bick asked me if I wanted to do the Big Blog Hop. What’s a blog hop? I asked. Turns out it’s an elaborate game of tag. Ilsa tags me, I talk about my latest book, then I tag someone else, who talks about theirs. If you’re nice enough to play along, you get to meet one author after the other until you’re dizzy and you throw up.

Or something like that.

Ilsa, by the way, is one of the spookiest writers working today. Her  latest book is The Sin-Eater’s Confession. Get it, read it, tell all your friends how good it is.

But in the meantime, check this out…

1) What is the title of your latest book?

Aztlan: The Maxtla Colhua Mysteries.

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

I’ve always been interested in the Aztecs, and with the “end” of the Mesoamerican calendar looming, I wanted to do something alternate-history-ish with it. On the other hand, I wanted it to be different — and what’s more different from your normal alternate history than a noire murder mystery?

3) What genre does your book fall under?

Alternate history, if it falls under any genre at all. But unlike most other alternate histories, it doesn’t deal with the events that follow immediately from the historical turning point. It takes place hundreds of years later, and all those events are merely part of the culture’s history. The focus is on the character Maxtla Colhua and the cases he has to solve as an Investigator for the Empire.

4) Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie version?

Maxtla might be played by Christian Bale. Necalli could be Harvey Keitel if he were twenty years younger. Eren could be Jennifer Garner. Calli could be Penelope Cruz.

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

One sentence doesn’t do it justice. So…

Maxtla Colhua is an Investigator for the Empire—a 21st-century Aztec Empire that, having successfully repelled Hernan Cortes in 1603, stretches from one end of what we know as the Americas to the other. In Aztlan: The Last Sun, someone has decided to punctuate the end of the Aztec calendar with a series of grisly murders reminiscent of the pagan sacrifices carried out in ancient times. Can Maxtla find the killer before his city is ripped apart and the Last Sun becomes the death knell for the Empire? In Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven, Maxtla is looking for the missing star of a brutal Aztec ball game in which gambling fortunes are won and lost. To find the idol of millions, he will have to challenge the most powerful men and women in the Empire—or see the streets of Aztlan run red with blood. Two murder mysteries set in an exciting world that never was but could have been—collected in a single volume!

6) Is your book self-published, published by an independent publisher, or represented by an agency?

A couple of years ago, four other writers and I formed an indie publishing venture called Crazy 8 Press. That’s the publisher.

7) How long did it take to write the first draft of your manuscript?

I write two pages on a slow or otherwise cluttered day, of which there are many, or eight on a great day, of which there are few. So maybe 80 working days.

8) What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

I don’t want to dodge the question but it’s really not like anything I’ve ever seen or anything I’ve written before — which is why I wanted to write it. On one hand, it has elements in common with alternate histories, but in that it’s a noire mystery it’s also like a Mickey Spillane novel. Read it and tell me if there’s anything it reminds you of — your take is as good as mine.

9) Who or what inspired you to write this book?

Every writer I’ve ever admired, I suppose. No one in particular because — once again — I’ve never read anything like this.

10) What else about your book might pique a reader’s interest?

Aztlan is really about relationships–familial, romantic, professional, and so on. A big one in this book is father-son. My dad passed away a few years ago and I see now that I came to grips with what he meant to me in the pages of Aztlan.

The next writer on the hop is…

Peter David

 

Latchkeys: Mind the Gap

Bootleg cover FinalSo a while back, you saw that we here at Crazy 8 had announced a new property we were releasing—a strange, dark, spooky YA series called Latchkeys. Steven Savile led off with Unlatched, and we told you there would be new installments every six weeks or so.

Yeah, that didn’t exactly go according to plan, did it?

Why the long gaps between stories? Well, there were the usual real-world complications—people got sick, or moved, or changed jobs, or had some other project come up and insist on their full attention, and their Latchkeys story got pushed back. In a few cases, it was the fault of other books and other authors entirely—we try to give each new release room to breathe, and to shine, which means if a novel comes in late we may need to scoot it back in our publishing schedule, and that may shove back everything after it.

But there were also the in-story complications. You see, Latchkeys is an unusually collaborative venture. The HiveMind that created it has thirteen members, all of whom helped build the setting and the story arc and the characters, all of whom claimed one of the stories from that arc, and all of whom offered suggestions and feedback on each other’s stories. But no matter how careful your outline, when you sit down and start writing things change. They have to, really—you’re breathing life into that outline, giving it form and color and texture and flavor, and in the process you’ll fine-tune it, mold it, smooth out its edges and in some cases shift it slightly to give it a better cast, a better feel. What that means, though, is that your story won’t be a word-for-word reenactment of your outline—which means that anyone writing after you in the series will need to not only read your story once it’s done, but figure out what’s changed and how those changes will affect his or her story when its time comes.

And the more stories there are ahead of you, the more you’ll need to go back and reread to make sure you’re still in line with everything that’s happened before you.

Which meant that, for Time Limit, I had to go back and reread all five of its predecessors.

They’re all awesome, of course. But things have shifted a bit here and there, and that meant sitting down and rethinking Time Limit itself, figuring out what from the outline had changed and how to handle the alterations. After all, it does all have to dovetail.

In the end, I’m quite pleased with my job on Time Limit. It provides a lot more insight into some of the characters, cements a few interpersonal details, and tells a fun self-contained adventure but also lays the groundwork for a few other big events. I hope you enjoy it. It is now available on Kindle and Nook for your reading pleasure.

And I apologize for the wait. We’re working on getting magazines to set around the office.

Aztlan Omnibus Due in February

Aztlan front coverOkay. We promised you a paperback edition that brings together the novellas Aztlan: The Last Sun and Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven, and we’re delivering on that promise. In three to four weeks, depending on the whims of the publishing gods, you’ll be able to access Amazon and order Aztlan, a novel-sized work that presents the complete (well, for now) adventures of 21st-century Aztec gumshoe Maxtla Colhua.

Maxtla is an Investigator for the Empire–an Aztec Empire that, having successfully repelled Hernan Cortes 400 years earlier, stretches from one end of what we know as the Americas to the other. If you love alternate histories, if you love murder mysteries, or if you just love reading something off the beaten track…you’ll want to give Aztlan a try.

And of course, Aztlan: The Last Sun and Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven remain available as separate e-books from Crazy 8 Press. So there you go–your options are wide open.  Buy. Read. Enjoy.