Faerie News… and a new newsletter on the way

Shortly before Christmas I mentored a couple of groups of teens through the CWC Winter Camp, held at Douglas College again this year. Always a fun event!

This year we decided to rip the lid off the secret Faerie underbelly of the campus and the whole CWC organization, and the kids went out as intrepid reporters to collect the scoop. They came back with some amazing theories and footage as evidence: James McCann as a werewolf AND a butt-kicking Ninja Faerie; Lee Edward Fodi showing his inner vampyric sparkle [it’s no conincidence his middle name is…Edward!], Kallie George as a Faerie Princess, Alison Acheson as a Unicorn herder [and with a few wiccan leanings, as it turns out] and Shelley MacDonald as a brilliant Dragon Wrangler.

The full expose is available in pdf form to students of CWC via The Faerie Trakker and The Faerie Moon Times — so gang, if you didn’t get a copy via email, send me a note at author.kcdyer@gmail.com and I’ll send you a copy of either [or both] incredible publications.

Tonight I’ve been putting the final touches on my New Year’s newsletter which will go out in the next day or two. This is something pretty new for me, and these days it seems I’m sending it out to a couple of thousand subscribers a few times a year. It’s a really brief summation of what’s coming up in my universe. If you’d like to be on the list, please drop me a line at author.kcdyer@gmail.com and I’ll add your address!

 

More soon…

 

~kc

Here we go…

Today is a binary sorta day — 01-01-11. Or 1/1/11, if you prefer. Started the day off by ringing in the new year with two of my best friends in a kind of geek-aholic frenzy.

We played with Lee Edward Fodi’s new R2-D2 robot. Then, as I noted on twitter earlier, the geekfeast began with a brief appetizer of Robot Chicken’s StarWarsIII [Emperor Palpatine featured predominantly]. Main course was a rousing heckling of Clash of the Titans. We finished off with a dessert viewing of The Big Bang Theory. Throughout the evening, James McCann and I snacked on pig-killing Angry Birds, while both of us texted good wishes and sweet thoughts to far-flung friends. By my calculation, at any one time there were 3 MacBooks, 1 iPad, 1 iPhone, 1 cellphone, 1 projector and a robot in action. 

[We did actually eat Indian food, too, so not just technology was consumed…]

Fun!

To make up for all the subsequent sloth of this morning, I’ve interspersed a few shots of the first hike of 2011, taken, you’ll note, a bit closer to the evening hours of the day. The cloud formations were amazing as a new year’s fire burned in the sky…

These last few were taken looking toward the Sunshine Coast — in fact, in this last one you can see the lights of Gibson’s twinkling through the trees.

And to finish, a quick peek at the total mileage on the treadmill desk this year — in total, 1,026 km were walked over roughly 324 hours. Pictorially, you can see I’ve made it past Calgary in the [virtual] attempt to cross Canada.

 

 

And, as I type this…I begin again for 2011. Hope to better my total — wish me luck!

 

More soon…and a Happy New Year to all!

 

~kc

kc dyer on World Poetry Cafe Radio — December 28, 2010

So…tomorrow night I’ll be the featured author on 102.7 FM [in Vancouver] on the World Poetry Cafe show. Poet/presenters Ariadne Sawyer and Alejandro Mujica-Olea will co-host, and we’ll be talking about FACING FIRE, and possibly doing a wee reading or two.

This particular show is broadcast in English and Spanish and is heard in 25 countries.

Ariadne tells me I can bring a couple of books to give away, so I plan to do just that. Hope you’ll listen in from 9-10 pm for a chance to win!

You can listen to the broadcast online [or pick it up as a podcast afterwards] HERE.

I’ll post a link when my info appears on the World Poetry blog.

See you on the radio!

 

More soon…

 

~kc

A Christmas Day Post-Apocalyptic Novel Review…

…because where else would you find such a thing?

I first wrote this piece for this year’s Advent Book Blog, but soon realized that the format didn’t suit and decided to run it here, instead. [Need some ideas for spending your holiday gift cards? The recommendations of the Advent Book Blog are wide-ranging and low-calorie! Find them HERE!]

Not sure if it’s my fondness for the first few episodes of WALKING DEAD or some reflection of my own advancing mortality, but this has been a year of post-mortae appreciation for me. I think my favourite DVD of the year was PONTYPOOL, with it’s claustrophobic, stuck-in-the-radio-station feel and its only-in-Canada source of zombie mayhem. But regardless of the cause, I thought I’d put a little twist in the traditional ‘Christmas Carol’ and ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ sensibility, and give you a review of the collection of postapocalyptic novels I read and enjoyed in 2010.

Early in the year I tackled UNDER THE DOME, Stephen King’s paean to the capriciousness of alien game-playing. In this tale, King slams a dome — invisible and somewhat gas-permeable — down on the small town of Chester’s Mill in Maine, and the resultant chaos is a contemporary American mix of ‘Lord of the Flies’ and ‘Mutiny on the Bounty’, with a taste of ‘Survivor’ thrown in for good measure. I’ve been an acolyte of Stephen King since I was a very small child, reading in the dark with my quaking back against the wall, and I’m the first to admit he’s run hot and cold over the years. This particular story is fairly serviceable, if a trifle bloated. However, in terms of characterization and believable terror, it’s certainly not on par with THE STAND, which is pretty much my gold standard in terms of postapocalyptic enjoyability.

I followed UNDER THE DOME with Cormac McCarthy’s THE ROAD. McCarthy is pretty much the antithesis of King on the ‘even a margin of faint hope for the future’ spectrum, and I found this book to be bleak almost beyond measure. The story of a man and his child facing a world gone wrong, it is a quest straight into the bowels of hell. If you like your postapocalyptic jaunts to be well seasoned with nihilism, this is the book for you. The prose is spare and clean, but there is — there can be — no lyricism in this horrific tale.

After a good omnibus or two of PG Wodehouse to cleanse THE ROAD’s blighted landscapes from my brain, I turned to Justin Cronin’s well-lauded THE PASSAGE. Set in a world over-run by a sort of viral breed of vampire-like creatures, it is apparently the first in a trilogy that pits mankind against these new super-creatures, strong, creative and evolving. It is an engaging story, with a good mix of characters and narrative voices.

SWAN SONG, by Robert McCammon, has been my final dip into the postapocalyptic pool this year, and yet it is the oldest original publication. Written and published in the height of the Reagan presidency, it was just re-issued in paperback by Gallery books late last year. This story resonates from a world where Star Wars diplomacy and nuclear proliferation go just about as wrong as is possible. The first ten or more chapters of this book are among the hardest reading I have ever done, but the sheer plausibility of the story, coupled with McCammon’s haunting skill with visual imagery make the book impossible to put down. In the end, though, it is the characters, [good, evil and otherwise] who draw the reader onward through the story as it races like a roller coaster toward that final, precipitous plunge. Where McCammon shines is his ability to seamlessly blend brutal realism with a sweet, almost ephemeral sense of hope; to craft, in the end, an intensely satisfying read.

Okay, there you have it. We now return you to candy canes and gingerbread. Happy Holidays!

 

More soon…

 

~kc

While it is still advent…

…at least in my part of the world, allow me to link to my recco of Jack Whyte’s story of Braveheart — William Wallace, which was one of my suggestions for the folks at the Advent Book Blog this year.  I actually sent them two this year, but they chose this one, so I’ll feature the other [along with a list of some of the range of post-apocolyptic reading I’ve been doing this year] in a special Christmas Day edition of the blog. And for those of you who find Santa has left a gift card for the bookstore under your tree, hie yourselves over and read the other suggestions on the Advent Book Blog — I know I’ve augmented my TBR list considerably after reading all the entries!

A friend [and fellow writer/blogger] Katrina Archer, tweeted earlier this week that the line-ups she’d seen at the bookstore this year belie the imminent demise of publishing…and I have to agree. Great to see so many people out there buying books — hooray! [*Altruism tinged with self-interest permeates the previous remark, of course…]

And for your Christmas Eve pleasure, here are the Silent Monks celebrating the Hallelujah chorus in the best way they know how!

 

More soon…

 

~kc

 

Ho-Ho-Holy Christmas Chaos…

…this has been quite a week. Managed to severely poison myself AND collect a story rejection on the very same day. The quintessential pre-Christmas double-whammy! Karmic payback for leaving my shopping to the last minute? Wait a minute…what happens if you mix karma with Christmas…?

Ah, well, existential and mix-tape religious musings aside, I wish the best of the season to you all. May your chocolate be hot and not bacteria-filled, may your email be filled with glad tidings and may you never grow a beard that looks as bad on you as this one!

Love to all! And, as usual…

 

More soon…

 

~kc

Another Canadian soldier lost…

…this week, when Corporal Steve Martin was killed just before his 25th birthday by an improvised explosive device in the Panjwaii District of Afghanistan. Martin was from a small town near Drummondville, Quebec, and is the first Canadian soldier to die since last August.

Corporal Martin becomes the one hundred and fifty-fourth Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan. To read the names of the others, see my Remembrance Day posts HERE.

 

~kc

A Lovely Review…

…of FACING FIRE by an old on-line friend of mine, Kate Coombs. Kate’s done pre-submission reads of many of my books in the past, but the first time she saw this one was after it was published. Kate reviews a tonne of books as The Book Aunt, and I so appreciate her taking the time to read FIRE, mostly because as an author, she really understands how to write a great review.

In part she says:

When writing time travel, an author has two basic choices. Should his characters interact with the people in the past or just observe them? Each approach has its strengths and weaknesses, of course. When a character from the present interacts with people in the past, it can make the storytelling more lively; however, it can also distort the history, especially if the focus remains on the time traveler and she affects the events in which she participates.

In the Window books, dyer has gone the other direction, creating characters from the present who mostly observe the past they visit. This keeps the history pure and in some sense mysterious, as Darby must put together what’s happening from the bits and pieces she sees and hears. She sometimes does research after she gets home so she can figure out the history she has observed. And really, isn’t that what we always end up doing when we study history that goes back more than one or two hundred years? This reminds me of reading Bill Bryson’s book about Shakespeare, in which he points out how little we really know, since very few records remain from the 1600s.

You can read the whole thing here. Thanks, Kate!

 

More soon…

 

~kc

Almost Solstice…

…one of my absolute favourite days of the year.

Not for the shortness of the day or the length of the night, but for the sheer potential of it — at long last, the earth’s orbit is working toward more sunlit hours.

Bliss.

And this year, an incredible event will mark the day. Not since 1545 — that was smack in the middle of King Henry VIII’s reign, people — has there been a lunar eclipse that coincides with Winter Solstice.

At least half the world will get a lovely clear view of fire in the sky. CBC.ca does a great job of explaining it HERE.

Lots going on in these last, frantic days of 2010, so keep your eyes tuned to the blog and all will be revealed. But for tonight? Let’s finish with a lovely depiction of Neil Gaiman’s Very Creepy Christmas Poem —

 

 

39 Degrees North: Christmas Card 2010 from 39 Degrees North on Vimeo.

 

More soon …

 

~kc

 

Update: And of course those of you who commented are right — my fingers typed 1554 but my brain read 1545, so Mary had succeeded her father to the throne of England. I’ll bet that blood-red moon cast fear into the hearts of any Protestants who lingered in the land!

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