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Daily Archives: May 23, 2012

Author Spotlight no.87 – Garden Urthark

Complementing my daily blog interviews, today’s Author Spotlight, the eighty-seventh, is of poet, essayist, short story author and novelist Garden Urthark.

Garden Urthark is the author of the Life Trilogy, which consists of three books illustrated by his wife, Sung Kim.

These books are Portraits Deep in the Castle, a collection of poems, stories, and essays, Self-Portrait of Somebody, and Other World, an epic mystery in five parts.

They present experience and analogies of experience in the life of an individual over a period of forty years (1970-2010).

A garden is an ideal or archetype that gives the Earth (Urth) a human shape.

Garden Urthark is an enterprise that contains, as in an ark, the revolutionary process of transforming reality into a vision of human love and freedom.

And now from the author himself:

Biographical Influences on Other World

In Other World, I wrote about the world I knew best, a world set in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area.  When most people think of Washington, they think of politics—the White House, Capitol Hill—and politicians.

What they don’t think about, or are not likely to think about, is that Washington is also home to about 5.6 million people, that is, who live in the Washington metropolitan area, which includes suburbs in Virginia and Maryland, the two states that border the city.

I was born in a hospital in the suburb of Bethesda, Maryland, although our family actually lived in Northwest Washington for the first four years of my life.  Our family moved for one year to Norfolk, Virginia, then we moved back to Washington (the suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland) before we moved to Bethesda, where I did most of my growing up.

I went to college and graduate school locally, attending the University of Maryland in College Park for college (BA, English) and George Washington University in Washington, DC, for graduate school (MA, American Literature).

After graduate school, I remained in the Washington area.  I have seen the whole spectrum of people who live here, from the homes of the very wealthy, which I visited as a friend to boys who attended the prestigious Landon School with me, to the very poor, with whom I shared an apartment building on the shores of a vast ghetto while in graduate school (my apartment there was even robbed).

In order to gain experience as a writer, I have worked every kind of job in too many places possible to name.  Among these many jobs, I have worked as an English tutor at Gallaudet University, the only liberal arts university in the world for deaf people; a copy boy for a major newspaper and editorial assistant for an editorial service, both in the National Press Building in Washington, DC; and an investigator on court-appointed cases handled by my uncle, a public defender in DC Superior Court.

These positions proved to be highly influential on the development of my novel Other World, particularly in that my uncle was murdered in 1990.  The murder translated into the murder of my main character’s (Moody Santo’s) deaf brother.  While a tutor at Gallaudet, I met my future wife, who is deaf.  She became the model for my deaf, Asian heroine, Norma Kim.  My experience in the National Press Building translated into my two journalist characters, one simply called Milstein, the other Dick Gilman (the suspected murderer of Moody’s brother).

I wrote about the world I knew best, hoping thereby to share the excitement, challenges, and drama of that world with readers, wherever they might be, through the hypothetical vantage point of Moody Santo’s epic quest for love and revenge.

Thank you very much, lovely to ‘meet’ you both. :)

Portraits Deep in the Castle is available in paperback from Amazon.com;

Other World is available as an eBook from Smashwords.

The blog interviews will return as normal tomorrow with multi-genre author Robert Spiller – the three hundred and seventh-ninth of my blog interviews with novelists, poets, short story authors, biographers, agents, publishers and more. A list of interviewees (blogged and scheduled) can be found here. If you like what you read, please do go and investigate further. And I enjoy hearing from readers of my blog; do either leave a comment on the relevant interview (the interviewees love to hear from you too!) and / or email me.

You can sign up to receive these blog posts daily or weekly so you don’t miss anything… and follow me on Twitter where each new posting is automatically announced. You can also read / download my eBooks and free eShorts at SmashwordsSony Reader StoreBarnes & NobleiTunes BookstoreKobo and Amazon, with more to follow. I have a new forum and you can follow me on Twitter, friend me on Facebook, like me on Facebook, connect with me on LinkedIn, find me on Tumblr, complete my website’s Contact me page or plain and simple, email me.  I also now have a new blog creation service especially for, but not limited to, writers.

Unfortunately, as I post an interview a day (amongst other things) I can’t review books but I have a feature called ‘Short Story Saturdays’ where I review stories of up to 2,500 words. Alternatively if you have a short story or self-contained novel extract / short chapter (ideally up to 1000 words) that you’d like critiqued and don’t mind me reading it / talking about and critiquing it (I send you the transcription afterwards so you can use the comments or ignore them) :)  on my ‘Bailey’s Writing Tips’ podcast, then do email me. They are weekly episodes, usually released Monday mornings UK time, interweaving the recordings between the red pen sessions with the hints & tips episodes. I am now also looking for flash fiction (<1000 words) for Flash Fiction Fridays and poetry for Post-weekend Poetry.

 
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Posted by on May 23, 2012 in ebooks, novels, poetry, writing

 

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Story A Day May 2012: May 23rd – The Best Man

Late April 2011 I discovered http://StoryADay.org and the project that is to write 31 stories in 31 days. Anyone who knows me or follows this blog, knows how passionate I am about short stories so my clichéd eyes lit up at this new marvel. And just a few days later there I was, breathing life into new characters. This went on to become (with some editing of course) my 31-story collection eBook Story A Day May 2011.

And here we are a year later doing it all over again. Today’s prompt was to write a story in third person omniscient point of view, where we hear from various characters’ heads. As per usual I wrote it in a hurry. My friend and I had just come back from the beach (as you do on a Wednesday afternoon) and I’d not started this story. He had sketch show rehearsals at 6 o’clock so I had an hour to write this and help him learn his lines!

So, here is my 308-worder.

The Best Man

Walking up the aisle, Aaron’s heart lifted as his best man, Joe, winked at him. I’m doing the right thing. Doing the right thing.

Please don’t go through with it, Joe thought but patted his friend on the back. “OK mate?”

“Absolutely.”

“She’ll be on time. She’ll look stunning and you’ll have a wonderful life together.”

“Can’t wait.”

***

As the Bentley swung round the corner, Mandy looked up at the imposing church tower. “Oh, God.

“OK?” her father Terry asked, patting down a crease in her train.

“Nervous.”

“So was I, but I did OK.”

“You and mum divorced.”

“But years later. After we had you and Nick.”

“You rowed constantly.”

“It won’t happen to you.”

“We do argue.”

“But you love him.”

Mandy hesitated. Love him. Love, or in love. “I do,” she replied honestly. But not in love.

***

Terry took Mandy’s hand as she got out of the Bentley and gave it a light squeeze. She took his arm and he walked her proudly along the old church’s aisle, then stepped aside as she joined Aaron. The two men exchanged nods and the ceremony began. The couple dutifully repeated their lines as they had done in rehearsals until it came to their names.

“Do you Aaron Edward Thompson take Amanda Susan Ford to be your lawfully-wedded wife?”

He looked at Mandy and after a moment’s hesitation said “I do.”

“Do you Amanda Susan Ford take Aaron Edward Thompson to be your lawfully-wedded husband?”

“No.”

A gasp rose up from the congregation.

“I’m sorry Aaron. I love you but I’m not in love with you.”

“But…”

“I know, and you know, that you love someone else.”

Terry lunged at Aaron. “Another woman! You…”

Mandy put up her hand to stop him. “No, Dad! It’s not another woman, but it’s OK.” Then she turned to Joe and smiled.

You can sign up to receive these blog posts daily or weekly so you don’t miss anything… and follow me on Twitter where each new posting is automatically announced. You can also read / download my eBooks and free eShorts at SmashwordsSony Reader StoreBarnes & NobleiTunes BookstoreKobo and Amazon, with more to follow. I have a new forum and you can follow me on Twitter, friend me on Facebook, like me on Facebook, connect with me on LinkedIn, find me on Tumblr, complete my website’s Contact me page or plain and simple, email me.  I also now have a new blog creation service especially for, but not limited to, writers.

Unfortunately, as I post an interview a day (amongst other things) I can’t review books but I have a feature called ‘Short Story Saturdays’ where I review stories of up to 2,500 words. Alternatively if you have a short story or self-contained novel extract / short chapter (ideally up to 1000 words) that you’d like critiqued and don’t mind me reading it / talking about and critiquing it (I send you the transcription afterwards so you can use the comments or ignore them) :)  on my ‘Bailey’s Writing Tips’ podcast, then do email me. They are weekly episodes, usually released Monday mornings UK time, interweaving the recordings between the red pen sessions with the hints & tips episodes. I am now also looking for flash fiction (<1000 words) for Flash Fiction Fridays and poetry for Post-weekend Poetry.

 
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Posted by on May 23, 2012 in ebooks, events, ideas, short stories, writing

 

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