News

The Little Prince

I got some exciting news earlier this week. It's nothing earth-shattering but was very cool and I'm super happy it worked out. Basically, when I initially wrote Man of Wax (which is scheduled for an October release, btw), I included a few passages from The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. It's a little great children's book which I read in one of my high school English classes for some reason and it stuck with me ever since.

Anyway, in Man of Wax I use a passage as the novel's epigram and then, later in the book, the protagonist reads the book with his daughter and she quotes two lines. While the use of The Little Prince isn't an integral part to my novel, it does give it that extra layer (whatever that means). But the thing is, the book isn't public domain (not like Billy Budd and The Princess and the Goblin, both which I use portions of as epigrams in my novels The Calling and The Dishonored Dead, respectively), which means I would first need to get permission from the publisher or the estate or whoever to use portions of the book in my book. (But what's strange is The Little Prince is public domain in a few countries, including Canada, but not here; why this is I have no idea.)  Which, as you can imagine, can sometimes take a lot of time and there is no guarantee that they'll allow it and sometimes if they do allow it you might need to pay something.

So, I sent my request awhile back and crossed my fingers but figured that, if push came to shove, I could always nix the epigram and the part where the daughter quotes from the book but still at least make reference to the children's book. But then, just the other day, I received an email saying that the publisher has no objections to me using the portions just as long as I give them proper acknowledgement.

As you can imagine, I am very relieved and thrilled about this.

The Tooth Fairy, Animated

Dustin Grella is one talented dude. He does this amazing kind of animation, as seen by his acclaimed piece Prayers for Peace. He also does this thing called Animation Hotline, where people can call in and talk about whatever and he'll animate it. Of course, he can't animate everything he gets, as he gets a lot of calls, but he tries his best. And he contacted me not too long ago saying he would be interested in doing some animations from the stories in the Hint Fiction anthology and would I be interested? Um, hell yes I was interested! So I emailed all the contributors telling them about this opportunity and a good number called in and read their stories and over the next two weeks Dustin is going to animate some of them. But to start with, he animated my very short story "The Tooth Fairy," which was published at Everyday Weirdness back in 2009. Enjoy, and hey, feel free to give Dustin a call.

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/27320160[/vimeo]

"The Hunter" At Swedish Zombie

My own special "Robert Swartwood" theme at Swedish Zombie concludes today with the publication of an original short story called "The Hunter." As I noted before, the story takes place in the world of The Dishonored Dead and is, in many ways, a "prequel of sorts" to the novel. It delves more into Philip's backstory and gives a startling revelation -- seriously, even I didn't see it coming. Of course, I wrote the story so it can be read by itself, but readers of the novel will no doubt appreciate it more. Please check it out. (Note: I have added "The Hunter" as a bonus feature to The Dishonored Dead ebook.) In case you missed it last week, Swedish Zombie reviewed The Dishonored Dead, and they liked it. Then over the weekend, they reviewed In the Land of the Blind (really liked it) and Through the Guts of a Beggar (sort of liked it) and then on Sunday they posted an interview with me about zombies and writing and whatnot.

My eternal thanks to Jonny at Swedish Zombie for not only being willing to initially take a look at The Dishonored Dead, but liking it enough to want to devote an entire week at his website for my work. It means a lot, especially as the novel wasn't published by a major press, or any press for that matter. If readers are a writer's best friend, then bloggers who are willing to take chances on self-published books are definitely a writer's second best friend. And if you like zombies, keep an eye on Swedish Zombie, as they plan to feature writers much more famous than me, including David Moody and Jonathan Maberry. Thanks again, Jonny, and keep up the good work!