Thank you so much to all of you who entered the Tin Box giveaway! Between Blogger and Goodreads, we had 35 entries, which is great! Technically, that is enough entries for me to give away 2 e-copies of The Tin Box. But you guys were so great about entering and about spreading the word that I decided to do the third prize too.
The winners were randomly chosen with random.org:
E-copies of The Tin Box: Stacia Hess and Sin Chan
Print copy of The Tin Box and e-copies of Buried Bones and Housekeeping: TT Kove
I'll be contacting all 3 of you by email right away. Please check your email and let me know if my message doesn't get to you.
Many thanks to all of you for your support. The Tin Box has been getting excellent reviews, so if you haven't checked it out already, I hope you will!
You can get it at Amazon
at Dreamspinner Press
at All Romance Ebooks
or any other bookseller
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Friday, September 27, 2013
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Inspiration Post #20: The Asylum
My newest novel, The Tin Box, takes place in the Jelley's Valley State Insane Asylum. Although that institution is fictional, it was inspired by a very real place: the Insane Asylum of California at Stockton. The Stockton facility was built in 1853 and was once the largest mental hospital in California. It closed in 1996 and is now used for a variety of purposes, including a university campus.
You can see some historic images here. Here's a recent photo of one of the main buildings:
Here's a side entrance to that same building:
This is the house where the superintendents lived:
Some people find the place kind of spooky. There are stories that it's haunted. I've been there at night when I was almost alone (and I was once briefly locked in the morgue!), but I find it more sad than scary. The corridors are very long. This blurry photo gives a vague concept of what I mean:
There are numerous courtyards. These courtyards have trees and decorative tile, and recently patio furniture has been added. But you can still see the bars on the windows and they still seem lonely to me.
Thousands of people passed through this facility over the decades. Some had family who loved them, and some were eventually able to return home. But thousands died and were buried there. Some of the graves were marked, but many weren't. During a construction project several years ago, bodies were accidentally exhumed. It's impossible to know who is buried there, and where, because records were poorly kept or lost. There's a memorial there today.
When I've walked the corridors in Stockton, I couldn't help but think of how many lives were wasted--spent in misery and deprivation--because people suffered from illnesses with no effective treatments. There are still a great many problems with the way mental illness is dealt with in our society, but we've come a long way from the days of hopelessness.
Here are some more links on the Stockton facility:
Next week: historic treatments
You can see some historic images here. Here's a recent photo of one of the main buildings:
Here's a side entrance to that same building:
This is the house where the superintendents lived:
Some people find the place kind of spooky. There are stories that it's haunted. I've been there at night when I was almost alone (and I was once briefly locked in the morgue!), but I find it more sad than scary. The corridors are very long. This blurry photo gives a vague concept of what I mean:
There are numerous courtyards. These courtyards have trees and decorative tile, and recently patio furniture has been added. But you can still see the bars on the windows and they still seem lonely to me.
Thousands of people passed through this facility over the decades. Some had family who loved them, and some were eventually able to return home. But thousands died and were buried there. Some of the graves were marked, but many weren't. During a construction project several years ago, bodies were accidentally exhumed. It's impossible to know who is buried there, and where, because records were poorly kept or lost. There's a memorial there today.
When I've walked the corridors in Stockton, I couldn't help but think of how many lives were wasted--spent in misery and deprivation--because people suffered from illnesses with no effective treatments. There are still a great many problems with the way mental illness is dealt with in our society, but we've come a long way from the days of hopelessness.
Here are some more links on the Stockton facility:
Next week: historic treatments
Monday, September 23, 2013
I'm in a mood
I'm in a mood. Bear with me.
I received a box from Dreamspinner Press today. At first I though the postal service had managed to detour it through a war zone because it looked like this:
Then I touched the box and realized no, not a war, a flood. The cardboard was still pretty soggy.
Fortunately, someone at DSP did a fantastic job wrapping the contents in plastic, because this is what was inside:
Yay! My print copies of The Tin Box! And they arrived unscathed.
Later today, I saw an ad for this scarf. Why bother knitting when you can just drape the entire skein of yarn around your neck?
Now can I complain about money? My older daughter began high school a little over a month ago. In that time, we've been asked to dole out money for 1. A tennis team trip to an amusement park, 2. A tennis uniform, 3. A tennis T-shirt, 4. A tennis servathon, 5. A choir T-shirt, 6. A yearbook, 7. A student ID card, 8. A mandatory PE uniform. For the younger kid, who's in 5th grade, we've been limited thus far to a field trip, a yearbook, and a cookie dough/wrapping paper fundraiser.
We're lucky--we can afford all this crap. But what about families that can't?
And finally, can I vent about colleagues at the day job who get pissed off at other colleagues but won't tell them directly, and instead expect me to act as mediator?
I feel much better now. Hey! Look at the beautiful book!
PS--Did you enter the giveaway yet? Did you catch my post over on Tali Spencer's blog, or my interview at Garrett Leigh's?
I received a box from Dreamspinner Press today. At first I though the postal service had managed to detour it through a war zone because it looked like this:
Then I touched the box and realized no, not a war, a flood. The cardboard was still pretty soggy.
Fortunately, someone at DSP did a fantastic job wrapping the contents in plastic, because this is what was inside:
Yay! My print copies of The Tin Box! And they arrived unscathed.
Later today, I saw an ad for this scarf. Why bother knitting when you can just drape the entire skein of yarn around your neck?
Now can I complain about money? My older daughter began high school a little over a month ago. In that time, we've been asked to dole out money for 1. A tennis team trip to an amusement park, 2. A tennis uniform, 3. A tennis T-shirt, 4. A tennis servathon, 5. A choir T-shirt, 6. A yearbook, 7. A student ID card, 8. A mandatory PE uniform. For the younger kid, who's in 5th grade, we've been limited thus far to a field trip, a yearbook, and a cookie dough/wrapping paper fundraiser.
We're lucky--we can afford all this crap. But what about families that can't?
And finally, can I vent about colleagues at the day job who get pissed off at other colleagues but won't tell them directly, and instead expect me to act as mediator?
I feel much better now. Hey! Look at the beautiful book!
Thursday, September 19, 2013
GIVEAWAY!
My newest novel (my 8th novel!) releases today!
The Tin Box is a contemporary romance. Here's the blurb:
I am especially proud of this book. And I fell so much in love with William and Colby that I was really sad when I'd finished writing. This was a little surprising, because William's really not all that loveable at the beginning of the story. As Colby so tactfully points out, "We just need to work a little on your social skills. Loosen you up a little. ’Cause Will, my man, you’ve got a stick so far up your ass you must be tasting it."
I hope you'll fall in love too.
To celebrate, let's do a giveaway!
The Tin Box is a contemporary romance. Here's the blurb:
William Lyon's past forced him to become someone he isn't. Conflicted and unable to maintain the charade, he separates from his wife and takes a job as caretaker at a former mental hospital. Jelley’s Valley State Insane Asylum was the largest mental hospital in California for well over a century, but it now stands empty. William thinks the decrepit institution is the perfect place to finish his dissertation and wait for his divorce to become final. In town, William meets Colby Anderson, who minds the local store and post office. Unlike William, Colby is cute, upbeat, and flamboyantly out. Although initially put off by Colby’s mannerisms, William comes to value their new friendship, and even accepts Colby's offer to ease him into the world of gay sex.
William’s self-image begins to change when he discovers a tin box, hidden in an asylum wall since the 1940s. It contains letters secretly written by Bill, a patient who was sent to the asylum for being homosexual. The letters hit close to home, and William comes to care about Bill and his fate. With Colby’s help, he hopes the words written seventy years ago will give him courage to be his true self.
I am especially proud of this book. And I fell so much in love with William and Colby that I was really sad when I'd finished writing. This was a little surprising, because William's really not all that loveable at the beginning of the story. As Colby so tactfully points out, "We just need to work a little on your social skills. Loosen you up a little. ’Cause Will, my man, you’ve got a stick so far up your ass you must be tasting it."
I hope you'll fall in love too.
To celebrate, let's do a giveaway!
- To enter, simply leave a comment below with your email addy.
- Follow me on Twitter (@KFieldingWrites) and/or like me on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/KFieldingWrites) and those will count as extra entries (just tell me your Twitter and/or FB name in your comment here).
- I will randomly choose a winner for a free e-copy of The Tin Box.
- If more than 20 people enter, I'll give away another copy.
- If more than 50 people enter (I'm dreaming big!) I'll also give away a print copy of The Tin Box plus an e-copy of Buried Bones plus an e-copy of my November novella release Housekeeping, all to one lucky winner. So spread the word!
- Winner(s) will be chosen at noon PDT on September 27.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Inspiration Post #19: Omaha Beach
My novella Violet's Present is a time travel piece about a modern Californian who makes a connection with a distant relative who died on June 6, 1944: D-Day. This is the photo that inspired the story:
I don't know anything about this young man who died that day. But he must have had a family, and I kept thinking about how, as he lay dead on that beach, his loved ones were going about their lives in Michigan or Tennessee or Idaho, not knowing. And I also thought about the sorrow of a young man traveling so far from home, only to end up alone and face down on Omaha Beach. It's still painful for me just to look at.
My story was also inspired by photos of the survivors. Look into the faces of these men and imagine how war changed them forever.
For more WWII heartbreak, read this letter.
Violet's Present includes a scene that was extremely difficult to write. But one of the benefits of being a writer is that a writer can change history, at least within the confines of her story. So that's what I did.
Next week: The asylum
I don't know anything about this young man who died that day. But he must have had a family, and I kept thinking about how, as he lay dead on that beach, his loved ones were going about their lives in Michigan or Tennessee or Idaho, not knowing. And I also thought about the sorrow of a young man traveling so far from home, only to end up alone and face down on Omaha Beach. It's still painful for me just to look at.
My story was also inspired by photos of the survivors. Look into the faces of these men and imagine how war changed them forever.
For more WWII heartbreak, read this letter.
Violet's Present includes a scene that was extremely difficult to write. But one of the benefits of being a writer is that a writer can change history, at least within the confines of her story. So that's what I did.
Next week: The asylum
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Stasis now available in audiobook!
As always, I'm donating all my royalties from this trilogy to Doctors Without Borders.
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Thursday, September 12, 2013
Many coming attractions
Summer was a little quiet for me, release-wise (although Buried Bones came out, plus the freebies The Gig and Treasure). I'm about to make up for that quiet summer with a very busy fall! I'm really excited about all my upcoming releases. Here's a rundown!
The Tin Box comes out September 20. You can preorder now. The blurb:
Also next week, audiobooks of my Ennek trilogy will be released. If you haven't read the trilogy already, it's a dark fantasy set in an alternate universe. I donate all my royalties from this trilogy to Doctors Without Borders, so if you buy, your money's going to a great cause. The audio publisher is Cherry Hill. Print and Kindle versions will continue to be available at Amazon.
I'll have a short story called "The Clockwork Heart" in the Steamed Up anthology. It comes out October 21 and should be available soon for preorder. The blurb:
In November, "Housekeeping" will release. It's a light contemporary novella about aguy named Nicky, who loses his job, his home, and his boyfriend all in one day.
And in December, I'll have a holiday short called "Alaska". It's part of Dreamspinner Press's holiday package, which means you can buy the whole thing and get a story a day in December, or buy my story by itself. "Alaska" is a fairly angsty contemporary.
Will that be enough to keep us busy for a while?
The Tin Box comes out September 20. You can preorder now. The blurb:
William Lyon's past forced him to become someone he isn't. Conflicted and unable to maintain the charade, he separates from his wife and takes a job as caretaker at a former mental hospital. Jelley’s Valley State Insane Asylum was the largest mental hospital in California for well over a century, but it now stands empty. William thinks the decrepit institution is the perfect place to finish his dissertation and wait for his divorce to become final. In town, William meets Colby Anderson, who minds the local store and post office. Unlike William, Colby is cute, upbeat, and flamboyantly out. Although initially put off by Colby’s mannerisms, William comes to value their new friendship, and even accepts Colby's offer to ease him into the world of gay sex.
William’s self-image begins to change when he discovers a tin box, hidden in an asylum wall since the 1940s. It contains letters secretly written by Bill, a patient who was sent to the asylum for being homosexual. The letters hit close to home, and William comes to care about Bill and his fate. With Colby’s help, he hopes the words written seventy years ago will give him courage to be his true self.
Also next week, audiobooks of my Ennek trilogy will be released. If you haven't read the trilogy already, it's a dark fantasy set in an alternate universe. I donate all my royalties from this trilogy to Doctors Without Borders, so if you buy, your money's going to a great cause. The audio publisher is Cherry Hill. Print and Kindle versions will continue to be available at Amazon.
I'll have a short story called "The Clockwork Heart" in the Steamed Up anthology. It comes out October 21 and should be available soon for preorder. The blurb:
Dante Winter makes a living repairing broken things. Socially awkward and rejected by his father over his too-fanciful work, he’s alone in the world. Dante's life changes when he finds a badly damaged male golem, a lifelike automaton created for service and pleasure. He does his best to fix the golem, whom he names Talon, and comes to find that the creature is very human—perhaps more human than Dante. But when Talon tempts him with something more than friendship, Dante must decide whether a clockwork heart is capable of love.
In November, "Housekeeping" will release. It's a light contemporary novella about aguy named Nicky, who loses his job, his home, and his boyfriend all in one day.
And in December, I'll have a holiday short called "Alaska". It's part of Dreamspinner Press's holiday package, which means you can buy the whole thing and get a story a day in December, or buy my story by itself. "Alaska" is a fairly angsty contemporary.
Will that be enough to keep us busy for a while?
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Inspiration Post #18: L'Angelo
In my novel Venetian Masks, Jeff spends some time sightseeing in Venice. I was lucky enough to spend a week in Venice a couple of years ago. Despite the vast number of tourists, it's a beautiful city, unlike any other place in the world. It's full of unique pleasures: getting lost (but never too lost), riding the vaporetto, listening to the gondoliers' calls.
One place I enjoyed visiting in Venice was the Peggy Guggenheim Collection. Because if you are fabulously wealthy and have a lot of amazing artist friends, you can buy a villa on the Grand Canal and fill it with 20th century masterpieces. Jeff visits there too.
One of the pieces of art that catches Jeff's eye is a statue by Marino Marini, entitled L'angelo della città (The Angel of the City). Interestingly, the piece was meant to reflect the artist's despair (read here). I think that guy on the horse looks pretty happy, actually.
I'd sort of love to own a sculpture like this. It'd look great in my front yard. My 11-year-old daughter was too embarrassed to even look at it, while my 8-year-old didn't care because she was too preoccupied with wanting to sit on the throne.
Next week: D-Day
One place I enjoyed visiting in Venice was the Peggy Guggenheim Collection. Because if you are fabulously wealthy and have a lot of amazing artist friends, you can buy a villa on the Grand Canal and fill it with 20th century masterpieces. Jeff visits there too.
One of the pieces of art that catches Jeff's eye is a statue by Marino Marini, entitled L'angelo della città (The Angel of the City). Interestingly, the piece was meant to reflect the artist's despair (read here). I think that guy on the horse looks pretty happy, actually.
I'd sort of love to own a sculpture like this. It'd look great in my front yard. My 11-year-old daughter was too embarrassed to even look at it, while my 8-year-old didn't care because she was too preoccupied with wanting to sit on the throne.
Next week: D-Day
Monday, September 9, 2013
Please welcome Posy Roberts!
It's
common to have moments in life when you ponder, "What if I had a second
chance with (insert name here)?" Not that I truly want one because I'm
happily married. But thoughts like that sometimes spontaneously come after
looking old photos or yearbooks. I've thought about that friend in college with
the gorgeous red hair and blue eyes that I never took the chance to kiss when I
should have.
Sometimes
people fall in love at the wrong time. It's like all the stars align but in
three weeks you’re leaving to tour the world or moving across the country. Or
maybe you were too young to settle down for the rest of your life and felt you
needed to go out and explore. Or go to college. Or like me with that gorgeous
redhead, at the time I was dating the man I thought I was going to marry.
Those
feelings of “What if?” are what inspired Spark, book one of my North Star
Trilogy.
Hugo Thorson and Kevin Magnus were deeply in love in high school, but then they
both left for college. The inevitable happened and they lost contact. Years
later they meet on a random lake two hours from where they both actually live
and they still feel that intense attraction years later. It's also at a time
that both are free to date. Hugo has been single for a year, and Kevin asked
his wife for a divorce eleven months prior.
Here's
an excerpt from Chapter 4 of Spark
just as Hugo and Kevin are reunited. You can read Chapter
1 here
Kevin laughed deep and warm in his chest and stopped
walking, pulling Hugo to a stop with him. “God, Hugo. I missed you. You always
did know what to say to make me feel better. How the heck did we ever lose
track of each other after everything we discovered together?”
Hugo shrugged, not knowing how to answer after their
gradual drift from talking on a regular basis during their first month in
college to nothing by the time winter break came. Hugo’s mom and sister had
moved to the Twin Cities mere months after Hugo left for college, and that
certainly hadn’t helped matters. But it was more, he realized.
“We just had different lives, I think,” Hugo said
with a shrug. “We went our separate ways after I said good-bye to you in your
driveway.”
“I still regret not kissing you that day. I should
have just said ‘screw it’ and kissed you like I wanted to, even if my dad was
right there.”
Hugo looked up the few inches to meet Kevin’s gray
eyes and tried to smile, but it probably came across more as sadness than a
smile. He couldn’t believe Kevin still thought of that day too. He wondered if
Kevin’s mind ever drifted to the kiss in the wooded meadow when he was bored in
a meeting or like Hugo’s had that very afternoon in the car. Slowly, he felt
the corner of his mouth turn into something akin to flirty, and he asked, “Oh?”
“Yes,” Kevin said as his warm thumb trailed across
Hugo’s jaw toward his chin. “I’ve thought about that day a lot, about our last kiss
and how I wish it never would’ve ended. Damn the rain. Would you mind if I
showed you how I’ve always imagined that moment in the driveway would’ve
happened? Or are you with someone?”
“No. I mean, yes, you can show me,” Hugo stammered,
his heart beating hard against his chest.
Kevin’s smile lit up his face, and he looked so
young just then, the careworn lines that had appeared between his brows while
talking about his father smoothing.
“Okay, so maybe this isn’t exactly like I would have
said things back then, but this is how I wish I would’ve done it. Ready?”
Hugo nodded and licked his lips, drawing Kevin’s
attention to his mouth.
“So pretend we’re standing next to my open trunk,”
Kevin directed as he led Hugo near the tail end of a car parked in a driveway
close to the roadside. Kevin tilted his head left and right, shaking his hands
out loosely next to his body as if trying to get into character.
“Hugo,” he started, somehow pulling youthful
nervousness into his voice, “we should plan on getting together in a few weeks.”
“Sure,” Hugo answered, ready to play along with the
conversation he barely remembered. He recalled the feelings he’d had, though:
excitement about leaving Austin but sadness about leaving Kevin. “I can get a
ride down to St. Peter, or you can come up to Minneapolis. It’s not that far.”
That drive never ended up happening for either of
them because Hugo auditioned for a play in the U’s theater department and got a
lead role as a freshman, something unheard of. He had no time to get together
on weekends because he had homework to do and lines to memorize and blocking to
learn and sets to help build.
“Seventy miles or so.”
That’s where Hugo vaguely remembered Kevin’s dad
clapping his big hands and telling Kevin he’d better hit the road. Now there
was just the sound of far-off waves and traffic from the highway on the other
side of the trees peppered with exploding fireworks.
“I’d love that,” Hugo said, regretful he hadn’t
taken the time to find a ride and just go. “I’ll make it happen,” he promised,
and he wished he’d kept it.
Kevin looked at Hugo with such intensity; even in
the darkness surrounding them, Hugo could see how blown Kevin’s pupils were.
“It’ll happen this time,” Kevin whispered against
Hugo’s mouth, lazily closing his eyes as he spoke.
Hugo tasted Kevin’s breath on his tongue,
remembering it, even with the faint scent of lemon lingering. A silvery thread
of his memory seemed to actually weave this moment to the moments in his past,
pushing Hugo back into that world, filling him with all those emotions he had
for Kevin when they were just boys. Kevin was the only man Hugo had really and
truly been in love with. He was the ruler every single boyfriend since had to
unwittingly measure himself against. And none, not a single one, had ever
gotten anywhere near.
Hugo took in a quick breath and pushed forward,
capturing Kevin’s mouth with his own as his fingers threaded through thick
blond waves and shorter razor-cut strands; his hands landed on Kevin’s neck.
Hugo thumbed over Kevin’s ears, allowing the pads of his fingers to tease the
fine hair along his earlobes.
They fused their mouths, opening and closing with
lips caressing, teeth nipping, and tongues pushing against each other in an
attempt to taste the familiarity that was new again.
Kevin trailed his hands down Hugo’s back, kneading
his fingers against Hugo’s ass once he got there, then pulling them closer. Hugo
felt Kevin starting to firm up beneath the thin material of his shorts, and he
wanted so badly to thrust. He barely restrained himself.
They stood on a darkened road and kissed how they
both wished they would have years ago, giving to each other more than they took
away. But by doing it that way, Hugo felt more content than he had in years.
“Come back to my place?” Kevin panted against Hugo’s
temple. “Please, Hugh?”
Hugo
nodded as he tried to catch his breath and then nodded again.
Incidentally,
I got to write about that redhead in my trilogy. She's Erin, Kevin's wife. So
even if I didn't get to kiss her in real life, I got to write about how
intelligent, kind, and beautiful she was to me. That's as close to a second
chance I'll ever get with her, but the nice thing about writing her into
fiction is that I won't be disappointed by reality. Thankfully, Kevin and Hugo
weren't disappointed with each other.
In
their small-town high school, Hugo and Kevin became closeted lovers who kept
their secret even from parents. Hugo didn’t want to disappoint his terminally
ill father, and Kevin’s controlling father would never tolerate a bisexual son.
When college took them in different directions, they promised to reunite, but
that didn’t happen for seventeen years.
By
the time they meet again, Hugo has become an out-and-proud actor and director
who occasionally performs in drag—a secret that has cost him in past
relationships. Kevin, still closeted, has followed his father’s path and now,
in the shadow of divorce, is striving to be a better father to his own
children.
When
Hugo and Kevin meet by chance at a party, the spark of attraction reignites, as
does their genuine friendship. Rekindling a romance may mean Hugo must
compromise the openness he values, but Kevin will need a patient partner as he
adapts to living outside the closet. With such different lifestyles, the odds
seem stacked against them, and Hugo fears that if his secret comes to light, it
may drive Kevin away completely.
Posy Roberts lives in the land of 10,000 lakes (plus a few
thousand more). But even with more shoreline than California, Florida, and
Hawaii combined, Minnesota has snow—lots of it—and the six months of winter
makes us “hearty folk,” or so the locals say. The rest of the year is heat and
humidity with a little bit of cool weather we call spring and autumn, which
lasts about a week.
She loves a clean house, even if she can’t keep up with her
daughter’s messes, and prefers foods that are enriched with meat, noodles, and
cheese, or as we call it in Minnesota, hotdish. She also loves people, even
though she has to spend considerable amounts of time away from them after
helping to solve their interpersonal problems at her day job.
Posy is married to a wonderful man who makes sure she eats while
she documents the lives of her characters. She also has a remarkable daughter
who helps her come up with character names. When she’s not writing, she enjoys
karaoke, hiking, and singing spontaneously about the mundane, just to make
normal seem more interesting.
Read
more at http://posyroberts.com
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/posyroberts11
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/PosyRoberts
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