Merry Christmas! Listen to “On Dasher”, live on the Drabblecast now

December 28, 2008 in General Topics

And a happy new year. Remember when I said fantasy and I were getting along better these days?

Trot on over at a merry gait to The Drabblecast and listen to “On Dasher”, which I tried my level best to make the strangest Christmas tale you’ve ever heard.

I want to thank the guys at Drabblecast, especially Norm Sherman, who pushed through a dead computer and clean reload on new hardware to get this piece live.

Merry Christmas everyone, and a Happy New Year. I’ll be back here for the 2008 wrap-up in a few days.

Stay tuned.

Estranged

December 11, 2008 in General Topics

Fantasy and I don’t get along well. I’ve had some success with science fiction, particularly the dark stuff, to the point that you could almost say I’m two-timing behind science fiction’s back with horror. Horror’s been good to me, too.

But Fantasy, she’s used that “I have to wash my hair” excuse more times than I can count.

What I refer to is the uphill struggle to garner any of my fantasy pieces a place in a like-minded publication. Sure, the feedback in those rejections is sometimes great — I’ve got one tale in particular that has been given pretty solid feedback just about everywhere it’s gone — but it always seems like my fantasy pieces are just shy of making it into some genre mag’s pages. I swear I’ve heard just about everything imaginable to explain why a fantasy piece of mine an editor otherwise apparently loved (based on what they’re telling me) didn’t make the cut. I’ve even one in the trunk right now that was shortlisted before being turned down.

In all these years being a serious genre fiction writer, I’ve exactly one fantasy work published, “One Night at Ollie’s Stump”, still waiting for you to listen over at Sniplits.com.

Well, the drought is over. I have planted seed in the bitter soil of the fantasy magazine markets and I’ll be damned if I’m not looking at a green sprout coming up. I can’t tell you yet what’s coming — it’s a surprise — but I’ll give you a hint: never in a billion years would you have guessed the combination of characters you’ll see in this piece.

Stay tuned.

“Best in Class”, now available in audio and print!

November 3, 2008 in General Topics


I’m pleased to announce that “Best in Class” is now live in audio form on Variant Frequencies, and is also available in the upcoming release of issue #6 of Murky Depths.

One of my first tales in print, “Paston, Kentucky”, landed a spot in issue #1, so it’s a damned fine pleasure to come back for a return visit. My fiction can be seen in this latest issue alongside a host of other notables, including Lavie Tidhar and Luke Cooper, so go order a copy now.

“Best in Class” was inspired by watching the Barrett-Jackson collector car auctions, and a host of other events similar to them. In many ways I’m a car buff, admiring the art and engineering in a fine vehicle, but in other ways I loathe these devices. How much of our land is covered in pavement? What do miles of these things baking in traffic do to our stress levels? Our quality of life? Our cities?

They are indeed creations of inherent dichotomy. And with this tale, I wanted to take that to the extreme. “Sunday Night Special” is the finest car ever built. Doors are open. Step inside and let’s take it for a spin.

I want to thank the MD staff, as always, especially for agreeing to let this puppy run on Variant Frequencies alongside the print release. I also want to thank Rick and Anne Stringer, two knock-out great people who have been so open to my work appearing on their podcast. Check out Rick’s production and that oh-so-slick cover art. The man is a wizard and deserves a Parsec — oh wait, he’s already won three. And I want to extend sincere thanks to Chuck Tomasi, the narrator in this story, for bringing the piece to life. Check out Chuck’s work at his official site. The man is quite multi-talented.

Thanks so much and as always, if you love the tale, leave feedback at Variant Frequencies or Murky Depths‘ official sites or shoot me an e-mail. Even better yet, buy an issue of this wonderful print magazine and tell them Jonathan sent you.

Happy Halloween — now have a free story

October 29, 2008 in General Topics

I’ll see you again next week, kids. Here’s a free story for you — my valiant attempt at Apex’s Halloween fiction contest. Congratulations on the winners!


GET OUT AND BLOAT

copyright 2008, Jonathan C. Gillespie

“I tell you, it’s a new game since we’ve given the damn things the right to vote. Those bastards–sorry, don’t run that, okay?” And Paul Orson dives back into his sandwich.

He’s a no-nonsense man, a portly fifty-something that spends fifteen hours a day in a suit. They couldn’t handle him in the private sector, but his campaign gigs ram candidates into office with the brutal efficiency of a toddler attacking a stack of Duplo blocks with a hammer.

If Paul’s your strategist, people put you into power. But this election was different, and although his customer, President-elect Price, has achieved that most magic of titles, Paul says this year was his last. And your company landed exclusive rights to his memoirs.

He comes up from his plate with mayonnaise on his chin. He nods over behind you, you follow his gaze. Something is clawing at the frosted glass of the restaurant’s windows, fingers outstretched. It used to be human, then it wasn’t, now it is again thanks to a piece of paper.

“28th Amendment, my ass.” says Paul. “And I don’t care if they’re not infectious anymore, we need to be better about our security.” Another figure approaches the first. It turns and follows as the newcomer motions to it.

“Anyway,” says Paul. “What you really want to know about is Deerknob, Ohio, don’t you?” And your grin gives it away.

He drops his napkin on the table and leans back with a satisfied sigh.

“So we’re down eleven points in the polls going into the primary, and Price is losing it, you know, with all the exhaustion and everything else. Complaining about a hundred thousand miles, lost years off his life for nothing. But we know Ohio’s the key, like it almost always is, and I got the Hail Mary that’s going to get ole’ Price to the endzone. Tell him to relax, help’s coming, at polling places across the nation.”

“Now understand something, straight up: protestors are a special breed. Either passionate on an issue, or just crazy. Kind of like our shambling friends out there–no happy medium. We had the loonies that day in Deerknob. You know, dumped buckets of blood on themselves, said we’re all going down for letting this happen. But most of them shut up when they heard the armored truck.

“It comes around the corner, Price’s campaign slogan on it. The driver’s sitting pretty in the cab. We didn’t expect it to work, we really didn’t. But we had an army of those things following the truck. Easily ten thousand. The first dozen was just coming in.

“The few pulses that came to the polling location aren’t pleased about it, but they can’t legally do a thing. They get out of there quick, back over to the enforced side of town. But the law hangs around, guns loaded, just in case. The walkers generally didn’t bite anymore, but why take chances?

“Our opponent starts wondering why he didn’t.”

You ask if Governor Willard was actually there that night.

“What? Oh, good Lord, no. I meant that shark Ben Bradford. Strategist. Smells blood in the water like I do. Almost.” He grins at that.

“You remember the fed voting system for the walkers? Six lines, pictures of the candidates over each. A walk through each line equaled a vote. We weren’t checking registration cards, but pictures were taken of each ‘voter’ to be sure no vote counted twice elsewhere. So we’re watching the only two lines that matter–all the rest are dipshit third parties and one abstain line. Price is starting to come around, says maybe all the armored televised campaign trucks we sent into the wastelands might have helped after all. Me, I’m watching our new key demographic file towards the lines.

“We got no way of knowing if this works or not, even with being allowed to do ‘lures’, like the truck, something I took advantage of and Bend didn’t. I chuckled at Ben as I notice the first walker in our line. I’ll never forget that first one–half his skin was missing, and his left arm was a burned cinder. But he had a stupid grin on his face. He seemed to really register Price’s promises of more live cattle into the wastelands.”

He chuckles.

“Price is watching his numbers start to shoot, and Ben is looking on in utter horror–when one of the protestors gets stupid. He comes charging out of the line, over the barricade, and he’s got an American flag. Harps on about brainwashing and welfare states. Two Deputies jump the barricade to come after him.”

“He makes it into a cluster of them, this stupid kid, and waves the flag in their faces. Bad move. Sudden movement spooks em’. One of them, this fat S.O.B, slashes him across the face. That’s it. Blood in the air. And they’re already riled up.

“They rip skin off him, then hold him down and start to go for his liver. He’s screaming and his girlfriend is screaming and the deputies are drawing their guns, and I shout at them to stop, that they know better than to shoot. The deputies back up. The walkers glance up once at them, but they leave them be. Kid’s kibbles, girl goes into shock. Family tried to sue us, we settled out of court. Lost some votes, but hell–that’s any campaign. And it doesn’t really matter any more, does it? The future goes to the man offering the most meat for the cattle.”

You wonder if that was a Freudian slip, absently, as your stomach rolls. You down a glass of water. Paul doesn’t give you much time to recover before he’s shaking your arm.

“Relax, kid. Order some desert.” He rises from the table. “When I come back from the john, I’ll tell you about Florida.”

He grins. “That’s where we really woke the dead.”

Snazzy Dual Story Acceptances!

June 7, 2008 in General Topics

I’m back from my vacation. It was good, and very needed with some of the stress I’ve been under lately.

Remember when I said this, in last week’s post?

Vacations have been interesting events for me as far as writing in goes. In each of the past two vacations I took, I came back to find acceptances in my inbox. I’m hoping lightning strikes thrice and I can snag another one over this trip.

Well, I must be burned to a cinder, because lightning did strike thrice. In fact, I got a double-jolt in this particular blast.

I’m pleased to announce that Murky Depths has taken “Best in Class” for their upcoming issue #6, December 2008. “Best in Class” is a dark science fiction tale of a prized collector’s car whose AI struggles to understand stark circumstances it has been thrust into. Murky Depths ran “Paston, Kentucky”, another tale of mine, for their very first issue, and it’s a pleasure to do business with them again.

In equally exciting developments, Something Wicked, a horror magazine operating out of South Africa, has taken “The Eighteenth Floor” for publication, details to be provided to me in the near future. I am thrilled to see this piece finally get its due. Every author has those extremely rare stories that they think they fired on all cylinders with — this is one of them. When this horror piece hits their pages, my fiction will have graced its third continent.

My sincerest thanks to those that have read my stories, and whom continue to read them. And I’d like to thank both these fine publications for running my work. It is my pleasure and honor.