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Friday, December 30, 2011

Holiday's End and Sac-Con 2011 Re-Cap



The holiday storm is over. The air is still, the shops are empty. I feel a bit like that woman at the end of The Descent, clawing her way out of hell...

Okay, really, my holidays were not even close to being as bad as a cave of horrors (though Xmas shoppers can occasionally resemble a horde of blind, bloody-thirsty monsters). There was an epic drive up and down California, and some serious good times with my family amid a flurry of wrapping paper. I even got to reconnect with some old friends from high school that I hadn't seen in years. I truly got what I wanted for Xmas this year.


Amid all the festivities, I failed to notice my Sac-Con 2011 re-cap up at the Red Stylo Media website. If you're curious to see the world's cutest little Marcus Fenix (as well as see how the show went) give it a read!

I wish I could say 2011 was going to end on a mellow note, but there would be no fun in that. After nearly nine years of living in the same apartment, the husband (aka Professor Lefty) and I are upgrading to new digs. The next few days will be a rush of sorting, packing, tossing, and schlepping. New year, new home!


Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Sac-Con 2011


One last convention before the year comes to a close! I'll be at Sac-Con this weekend, reppin' Red Stylo Media as well as Everything I Needed to Know About Zombies I Learned From the Movies.


Sacramento, CA 
Sunday, December 11, 10am-5pm

Scottish Rite Center
6151 H Street
Sacramento, CA 95819

Come do some geeky X-mas shopping and pick up a copy of Poe Twisted if you haven't already! It's the perfect gift for that indie comic or horror literature lover in your life. 


Seems a bit appropriate that we end the year in Sacramento. It's the heart of California's gold country, which was the setting of Eldorado. Perhaps I'll see the ghost of the Rider and his horse in the hills...

Friday, November 11, 2011

Tips to Stay Creatively Focused



Creativity is a process. A really messy process. Even if your primary tool is a neat, clean laptop your mind can still be as chaotic as one of Jackson Pollock’s paintings.

Some days, I come to the keyboard with fingers itching with words, my characters already whispering to me. Others days, I’ll find something – anything at all -- to distract me from my writing: “Ooh, look! Filing to be done! Laundry that needs folding! A junk drawer to clean out! Maybe I should start on my taxes now…”
 
I know I’m not alone in doing this. But in those moments, I feel pretty damn alone. Like I’m the only writer who has ever avoided doing what they love most, just because it’s…well, too darn hard to harness all that chaotic energy into concrete words.

I’ve been working harder at focusing that energy, though. It’s been a challenge, but I feel like I’ve made some real strides forward. I’ve been churning out more pages, and on the whole I’ve felt so much more balanced and centered.  

I thought I’d share some of my findings. I’m no “creativity expert,” but I thought some of these suggestions might be helpful to other writers out there…if nothing else so you don’t feel like you’re the only one who suffers through these spells!

Tips to Stay Creatively Focused

1. Write only what you truly love. If it makes your heart sing, you will find the time to write it. If you don’t really want to tell the story, you’ll find a way to avoid doing it, no matter how “good” or “marketable” you think it could be.

2. Create a schedule for yourself. This is especially important if you work from home. Having a structure will help you create the mental space you need to sit down and create. “1-5pm is writing time. The laundry will still be there after 5pm.” If you have other obligations, carve out a little regular time for yourself, even if it’s only a few hours each week. You need that mental permission, or you’ll always find “more important” things to do.

3. Exercise regularly. I’m realizing that I write best on the days I’ve stuck to doing my daily Qi Gong stretches. It gets the blood flowing through the brain, and burns off some of the antsy energy that plagues you.

4. Don’t be afraid to do something else. Maybe the words just aren’t coming, but you’re still itching to create something. That’s okay. Sometimes working in a different medium can help you get unstuck. It shifts your thinking onto new paths, and can present new answers. Tear up some old magazines and make a collage of images that inspire you to think of your story. Bake something that one of your characters would like. Paint something in colors you find inspiring. It’s never a waste of time to create something.

5. Hang out with other creative types. It helps to talk to people who know what you’re going through. They’ll understand the frustration of creator’s block, and the elation of artistic break-throughs. I’m lucky to have a network of friends and family that ooze creativity from every pore, and after I hang out with them I come away enlivened and energized to tackle my own projects. If you don’t personally know creative folks, join a writer’s circle or forum online (there are numerous ones, some specifically geared towards different genres), or find a group through MeetUp.com.  

6. Believe that your writing is important. Sadly, it’s doubtful your short story will solve world hunger or fix the global economy or even make you enough money to pay your phone bill. But it will make you happy to write it. That is enough. Even if no one reads your story, your life will be better for you having taken the time to write it. When you’re happy, you carry that with you, and it touches others around you. Thus, your writing does help make the world a better place. 

And hey, if someone reads your story, you'll have brought a little something new into their lives. Whether that's a smile on their face or a chill down their spine, you'll have touched them, even for a moment. That’s what I hope for as a writer, and sometimes it's that thought that keeps my butt in my seat and my fingers on the keyboard. 

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Freeky Creek Film Festival, Oct. 27-29


Those lovable zombies strike again!

I'm excited to announce that Everything I Needed to Know About Zombies I Learned from the Movies has been selected as part of this year's Freeky Creek Film Festival!

Held Oct. 27-29 at the Sleepy Creek Vineyard in Fairmount, IL, this event "celebrates works that are freaky, creepy, or darkly funny under 20 minutes in length." Sounds like a perfect venue for my "zombies by the Bay."

I truly wish that I could attend in person. Watching short horror-comedy films at an autumn-tinged vineyard -- while sipping a nice glass of red -- sounds like a heavenly way to spend an October afternoon. If you do attend, have a glass for me!

Monday, October 3, 2011

A.P.E. Wrap-Up


We came, we saw, we rocked!

First off, a big "thank you" to everyone who stopped by our table at the Alternative Press Expo. We had such a great time chatting with folks that I almost wish A.P.E. happened every day. Thanks also to Red Stylo Media for making this possible, and also to our booth neighbors, the boisterous crew of 6th Circle Comic, for making our first con experience so much fun.

If you're visiting Bloody Good Stories for the first time, a hearty "welcome" to you! I have lots of things in store for this blog, including:
  • A production diary as I take my second short film, Inner Critic, from script to screen.
  • Reviews of books, comics, and films I consider "bloody good" (and I have lots from A.P.E.)
  • A dash of micro-fiction
So, please stop back soon! There is much bloody good fun to be had.


Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Alternative Press Expo 2011

So I may not officially have a table, but I will most definitely be attending the 2011 Alternative Press Expo in San Francisco!

The Poe Twisted Anthology will be represented by myself and "Zombie Cruise" writer Marta Tanrikulu.

I'm pretty damn excited, since this is the first time I'll have an actual comic project to share at one of these things (though, of course, I will have copies of Everything I Needed to Know About Zombies I Learned from the Movies on hand). I'll also be participating in the Comic Creator Connection on Saturday, so it's going to be quite a big event for me!

While you're at APE, be sure to stop by booth #710 to check out the most metal webcomic on the internet today, 6th Circle Comic!


It's got tattoos, heavy metal, nerdery, and the continued rivalry between a gorilla and a demon. What more could you ask for? Throw the horns at artist Xander Kent and writer Jackson McBrayer and tell 'em I sent ya!


Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Hot off the presses: The Poe Twisted Anthology!


There really is no feeling in the world quite like holding a copy of a book you've contributed to, especially when it's a book as awesome as the Poe Twisted Anthology.


Edited by Enrica Jang, The Poe Twisted Anthology includes the following comic short stories:

Absolution
Writer Jason Ciaramella (2011 Eisner Award nominee for The Cape) and artist Enrique Savory, Jr., team up in this sad tale of a grieving father driven mad by one of his son’s Christmas toys. A tribute to Poe’s classic poem, “the Raven.”

Dead Man’s Hand
College card-shark, Toby, thinks it’s just another frat-house Poker night. The stakes are high and Toby is all in when a devilish coed mysteriously appears and calls his bluff. Story and art by Phillip Jacobson.

Eldorado
The sun sets on a three-hundred year quest for fabled riches and gold in this zombie Western, titled after the poem of the same name. Written by film director Sherezada Windham-Kent (Everything I Needed to Know About Zombies I Learned From the Movies, 2009) with art by animator/comics artist, Alex Cormack.

Zombie Cruise
Marta Tanrikulu, with art by Mark Mullaney. Trouble—and plague—brew on the high seas in this bio-medical thriller, a twist on Poe’s short story, “The Oblong Box.”

The Tell Tale Cat
Beat cops Lansdowne and Harrington collar more than they bargained for in this noire police adventure, written and drawn by Alex Cormack. The story is parody of events in Poe’s “The Black Cat” and “The Tell Tale Heart.”

The After Party
By Kyle Richey, art by Ben Frazier. Wesley Prince has credit cards, his father’s mansion all to himself, and enough drugs to kill a few hundred fellow classmates in this twisted spinoff of the phantasmagoric classic “Masque of the Red Death.”

The System of Doctor Canne and Professor Bulle
By Mark Mullaney. Have someone special for dinner in this story of a free-range asylum, a sequel to Poe’s tale of insanity run amok, “The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether.” 

POE TWISTED also includes a special collection of original comic vignettes:

• Artist Dirk Strangely (Graveyard Girl, Dirk Strangely’s Completely Inappropriate for Children Children’s Book) is inspired by the figure of Poe himself in two series of Gorey-esque portraits.

• Painter Andrew Jerz brings Poe spoofs to the big screen with a mini-collection of grindhouse movie posters: Lenore, Amonstrillado, and Careful Coffins for the Concerned Cataleptic.

• Illustrator Jason Strutz’s ironic print gallery re-imagines “The Tell Tale Heart,” “The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall” and “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.”

***
To Order from Red Stylo Media:





Monday, August 15, 2011

"Eldorado" now available from Red Stylo Media



I am incredibly proud to announce the release of my first-ever comic book story, "Eldorado." 

From the press release:

The digital release of "Eldorado," written by Sherezada Windham-Kent with art by Alex Cormack, is available now! 
The sun sets on a 300-year quest for fabled gold and glory in this Zombie Western comic by film director, Sherezada Windham-Kent, and Alex Cormack. Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe's poem, "Eldorado". 
The digital version is packed with EXCLUSIVE bonus content, including alternate covers and messages from the artists. This content will ONLY be available in the digital edition! 
Download will be $1.99 in the RSM store and on DriveThruComics.com (soon also to be released on Graphic.ly and iVerse.) Read more about this and all of the stories in the POE TWISTED Anthology at www.TwistedPoe.com, published by RED STYLO MEDIA! 

Feeling a little giddy right now!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Turning the Page


Welcome to my new blog! It seemed about time for me to expand.

Though I thoroughly enjoy the crafty and culinary shenanigans on my original Hand/Eye/Mind/Mouth blog, it's become increasingly obvious that one blog is not enough to contain all of what I want to say. Not to mention, I seem to have two separate audiences. I guess crafting and zombies draw somewhat different crowds, eh?

So, while Hand/Eye/Mind/Mouth will remain a chronicle of my crafty ventures, this blog will highlight my ever-increasing adventures in screenwriting, filmmaking, and fiction writing.

I have some very exciting announcements to make soon, but this post is mostly to stake the claim. Stick around, why dontcha?