Woot! Publishing!

And now, direct to you, my fabulously edited anthology Sassy Singularity, now available on Amazon’s Kindle!  Check it out!

Between now and Christmas 2012, I’ve got a rather rigorous and self-inflicted schedule of deadlines and e-book release dates.  Check it out:

  1. FEBRUARY 14: Sassy Singularity, an anthology I edited, which includes my short story The Bureau of Misdirected Destiny.
  2. MARCH 21: Hot Mess, an anthology Rachel Lynn Brody is editing, which includes my short story Traditionibus Ne Copulate. 
  3. APRIL 8: -untitled-, a collection of meditations for Easter, with Melissa Roberts. Nonfiction.
  4. JUNE 30: -hockey fantasy, working title-, my second novel which I like quite a lot. :)
  5. SEPTEMBER 31: -southwest, working title-, my first novel which is growing on me. :)
  6. OCTOBER 31: -untitled-, two anthologies that I will be editing, which will also include my short stories, one about the zombie apocalypse, and one about vampires. :)
  7. DECEMBER 25: -untitled-, my third novel, written with Liz Brauza. A murder mystery…

And 90 days after each release date, they’ll also be available for other ebook formats, through other retailers.  And is most of this stuff written already?  …well, some of it is.  Does that count?

Sassy Singularity

Sassy Singularity - cover artNow Available on Kindle!

Sassy Singularity is an anthology of all new short stories about the strength of women, just in time for Valentine’s Day!  Sassy Singularity will feature stories by award-winning playwright Rachel Lynn Brody, award-winning short story writer Sandi Layne, plus long-time writers Anne Baker, Sarah C. Munsey, Teresa Watson, Rhiannan Robinson and me, Sare Liz Gordy.  The stories range from quirky to heartbreaking to romantic, and there’s more than a dash of sass!

Look for Sassy Singularity on sale exclusively via Amazon, for the Kindle, until mid-May, when it will be available more widely in a variety of digital e-book formats.

Don’t forget to look for HOT MESS: speculative fiction about climate change, an anthology edited by Sassy Singularity author, Rachel Lynn Brody, featuring the editor, Sare Liz Gordy, Eric Sipple, RJ Astruc & more!  HOT MESS is due to be released exclusively via Amazon mid-March of this year!

Contents of Sassy Singularity:

  • ‘Of Beer and Blogs’ by Anne Baker
  • ‘Sweetheart’ by Rachel Lynn Brody
  • ‘The Bureau of Misdirected Destiny’ by Sare Liz Gordy
  • ‘The M-Word’ by Sandi Layne
  • ‘Katie’s Curler’ by Sarah C. Munsey
  • ‘Dead Wrong’ by Rhiannan Robinson
  • ‘Epistle to St. Cupid’ by Teresa Watson

Run, don’t walk to Amazon and purchaseSassy Singularity today!

Please pass the voodoo chicken

Alrighty folks.  This one came from this week’s Exegete.

Appropriate music to listen in the background: True Blood Sountrack, London Calling, or the Tallis Scholars.

Appropriate accent to affect in head while reading: Generic Southern.

This, on St. Paul’s commentary to the church at Corinth, concerning whether or not to eat meat sacrificed to other gods… (1 Corinthians 8:1-13)

Once upon a time there was a Voodoo Chicken.  It was known as Voodoo Chicken because it was used in a vaudun ritual, but you know, it was also marinated afterwards in the most mouthwatering fashion.  And you know, a dinner party is a dinner party.  You can’t fault your host for their odd taste in religious piety when they serve mouthwateringly good roasted chicken.  Some of us like to say a little, unobtrusive blessing over our food, but to each their own, right?  And since we all know (in our separate religions) that ours is the only right one, there’s no harm in letting other people attempt to invoke a god that doesn’t actually exist, so live and let live. And pass the chicken.

This is all well and good when you’re surrounded by people who are firm in their faith, whatever that faith may be.  The Vauduns know that eating the Voodoo Chicken will bring them closer to fine, and the Christians know that the Vauduns really know how to roast a chicken or twelve, and that their own understanding of God requires neither chicken nor lack of chicken for Divine Union.

However, it all goes to hell in a hand basket but quick when you’ve got newbies in your midst.  Newbies get a little rabid, you know, and they’re really clear about wanting to get things Perfectly Correct and Appropriate.  It really hits the fan when your newbie is their oldie.  Then you’ve got someone looking at your enjoyment of the damn chicken (whose not actually damned, just damned inconvenient) and their knee jerk reaction is that you’re getting a little closer to fine, when it’s really just the seasonings.  Now, these newbies know it’s not Divine Union, because our God doesn’t go in for Chicken.  This is about the time that the confusion and resentment sets in.  Perhaps there’s even some serious doubt about the bigger things of life – they are newbies, remember.

So, you know. Practice discretion.  Not because there’s anything wrong with the Om Nommy goodness of the Vaudun’s chicken dinners, but because in the long run, is your gastronomical satisfaction really worth causing that much angst amongst the newbies? Give the Voodoo Chicken a pass while they’re in the room, for heaven’s sake.   You can always have some next week.

Fantastic Dinner!

Holy Macaroni, Batman!  Last night, I cooked a fantastic dinner for the House of Awesome.  Here’s what the menu consisted of:

  • Miso Soup
  • Tofu Tempura & Broccoli Tempura
  • Summer Rolls with Garlic Ginger Sauce

Sarey’s Miso Soup

You know, I have a set just like this. In storage.

serves 15, easily

  • 2 1/2 gallons of water
  • 5 or more cloves of garlic, pressed
  • 3-4 T fresh ginger, diced
  • 1/4 c or more crumbled seaweed
  • 1 1/2-2 1/2 lbs extra firm tofu, diced in tiny cubes (1 cm square)
  • 1 T salt
  • 2 t black pepper
  • 1 t crushed red pepper

Boil all of this for about a half hour.  (It can hang out longer, if you’re doing other things.)  Turn down heat to keep warm, but lower than a simmer.  Then add a generous cup of miso and stir-stir-stir, and serve!

So good. So amazing. So yummy. So many compliments. So many raw vegetables it’s crazy!

Spiritual Direction?

Have a cup of health!

Spiritual Direction.  Maybe you’ve heard of it.  Maybe you’re wondering if it’s a special type of cartography.  Either way, the question that might be rattling around right now, since I’ve mentioned it and all is… What the hell is Spiritual Direction?  Closely followed, perhaps, by Is Spiritual Direction right for me, right now?  And then of course, there are other questions to ask…

So if you’re curious, do read on! Continue reading

Sassy Singularity

Taking Care of Ourselves

Solidarity with the Single Woman is the theme of the anthology I’ll be editing and digitally publishing to the Amazon store for Kindle.  It will feature all new short stories from Rachel Lynn Brody (@girl_onthego), Anne Baker (@annebakerbooks), Sandi Layne (@sandyquill), myself and others!  It will be released just in time for Valentine’s Day this year, just when so many of our sisters are hit the hardest with seemingly supernatural attacks on their self-esteem, body image, and self-worth.  No more!  Solidarity with the Single Woman!

Information will be updated as we go along, so stay tuned!

Just In: Our Anthology has a name!  Sassy Singularity

Of Men & Whales…

Marzipan Whale by Alex Bruda

And the whale goes 'om, nom, nom'

I love Jonah!  Somedays, when I’m feeling awfully cranky, I think I am Jonah.  The fact that Jonah never actually existed is completely moot because he’s a perfect archetype for the outraged believer, a pair of shoes that can fit all of us on one day or another if we’re not ever-so-careful.  Can you hear it?  I can… Continue reading

Arkham Horror?

Arkham Horror

Tentacles are something of a theme...

What in blue blazes is this Arkham Horror thing?  You’ve heard about it on the barnraiser’s calendar, or seen it around and it evokes images of Batman and Prostitution.  Understandable, though off base.  Well, truth be told, it’s a slightly addicting board game with a lot of little pieces.  Everybody wins or loses together and dice is involved.  Reading all of the instructions involved counts as a solid check mark for your Summer Reading List, and understanding the mythos behind the game could either freak you out or qualify you for a really fab conversation with your pastor next Sunday regarding the struggle of good vs. evil in the hearts and minds of all humanity.

So, the game is based on a book and a heap of short stories that aren’t a series but certainly are all written in the same Universe/Mythos by the same author, who is H.P. Lovecraft.  (Heard of him?  Not heard of him but vaguely reminded of tentacle monsters, somehow?  Fantastic, you’re on the right track.)  Lovecraft wrote earlier in the last century all along a theme, or a basic assumption, and that assumption is this:  what if when poets and authors and musicians and actors and lovers got in touch with their inspiration, what they were actually touching on the other side of the veil produced… madness?  What if when mystics and spiritualists were able to look directly beyond the veil what they saw drove them mad?

Lovecraft, a rather depressed man (among other things), wrote as a response to what he understood to be baseless Christian Humanism, and this is possibly one of the reasons I love reading his work.  I like to get the full picture, so to speak, and my religious nay-sayers have got nothing on tentacle monsters from beyond the veil who if I’m lucky, will devour me last.  (The tentacle monsters, not the religious nay-sayers.  Just to be clear.)

And so I have fun rolling dice and killing monsters while lulling the unkillable Big Bad back to sleep, even while I think about what evil really means in the world, what grace means, what it does to a life to concentrate on peace, love, and joy rather than suffering, unhappiness, and the distance from others caused by resentment, anger and hatred.  And if you like, you can join me.  We play at 8pm on the third Wednesday of the month at Ol’ Wondermoth, 208 North St, 14201.  Beginners are welcome. :)

What if the USA were a truly Christian nation?

This isn’t a rhetorical question, nor is it a desire for the USA to become a one-religion state.  That’s just silly talk.  But I hear a lot of discourse, and most of it conservative, and it bemoans and bewails the fact that the USA was supposed to be a Christian nation (one nation under God, etc, etc), and now they’re not letting us pray in schools or display the 10 commandments in the courthouse.  Intentions of the founding fathers aside for a moment (you might be amused to hear about Jefferson’s personal theology, not to mention his reader’s digest version of the bible, but that’s another blogpost for another day), I’d like to posit an interesting juxtaposition for your consideration, care of the calendar and the makers of the Revised Common Lectionary. Continue reading

Anarchy, Discord & the Kingdom of Heaven

An Introduction

So, I was making the morning coffee in that bleary-eyed way one does, thinking about making breakfast with one of my housemates whereupon I spied a bright green tri-fold brochure which heralded “Discordianism: The Un-Religion”.  My curiosity was piqued…

Anarchy

One of my housemates is an Anarchist.  I can tell you that his name is Henri because his name isn’t actually Henri.  We didn’t get along very well at first, Henri and I.  This, I think, is because I would periodically show up looking like a cleric, and he had a tendency to be rather loud and just as angry, which puts me off my tofu.  Well, he’s mellowed and I’ve started speaking, and we found out that we have a metric fuck-tonne in common in the basic principles on which we structure our lives. Continue reading