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Posts Tagged ‘Lethe Press’

Feathers

April 3rd, 2009 vincentdiamond Comments off

“Feathers” a long short story I wrote a few years back has recently re-released through Lethe Press and is available exclusively from the fun folks at All Romance E-books. The story combines themes near and dear to my heart: animal rescue, horses, grieving, and manlove, all wrapped up in one heartfelt and juicy package. In honor of the hawk at the story’s center, I’m donating part of my proceeds from this story to the Audubon Birds of Prey Center in Maitland, Florida.

They do rescue and rehab of raptors: hawks, owls, falcons, eagles, and other hunting species. It’s an awesome place to visit and if you can spare some money, the birds and staff will be most appreciative!

February 16th, 2009 Administrator 2 comments

http://allromanceebooks.com/product-feathers-14825-145.html

“Feathers” a long short story I wrote a few years back has recently re-released through Lethe Press and is available exclusively from the fun folks at All Romance E-books. The story combines themes near and dear to my heart: animal rescue, horses, grieving, and manlove, all wrapped up in one heartfelt and juicy package. In honor of the hawk at the story’s center, I’m donating part of my proceeds from this story to the Audubon Birds of Prey Center in Maitland, Florida.

http://www.audubonofflorida.org/who_centers_CBOP.html

They do rescue and rehab of raptors: hawks, owls, falcons, eagles, and other hunting species. It’s an awesome place to visit and if you can spare some money, the birds and staff will be most appreciative!

School Days from Lethe Press postponed

February 11th, 2009 Administrator Comments off

Dear School Days submitting authors:
It’s been decided that the School Days anthology from Lethe Press will be pushed back to a much later publication date, probably in 2010. In fairness to the writers, I wanted to release any already submitted stories back to you and let you know that the project will be delayed.

What this means practically is that if you’ve already sent me a story, it’s your to re-submit elsewhere. And thank you for subbing. If you haven’t and were working on one, that can be put off. I do hope you’ll keep Lethe in mind for future works, and if your school/college story is still available later you’ll send it to us.

Steve and/or I will be in touch once the project is back on the Lethe schedule to update you. Thanks so much for considering sending a piece for the book; I appreciate your support and look forward to working with you in the future. My sincere apologies for the inconvenience; I understand what it’s like to have a story hanging and wanted to let you know asap.

Thanks again!

Best wishes,
Vincent

Free story up at Lethe Press

January 27th, 2009 Administrator Comments off

I just got word that Steve and the team at Lethe Press have set up a free story venue on the site: http://www.lethepressbooks.com. And they chose Rough Cut for excerpting! Woo hoo!

To check out “Slide into Desire” in all its luscious, smutty entirety, click on the site’s left hand column on A Free Gay Story and you can read the PDF version of the piece. They’ve also got work from Craig Laurance Gidney and his collection, Sea, Swallow Me, Lynne Jamneck and Catherine Lundoff, if you like lesbian stories.

So, if you’re in the mood for a romantically smutty yet-strangely-tasteful story (well, it is about a blowjob), click on the link and have at it. Feedback welcome, of course.

December 1st, 2008 Administrator 2 comments

I just found out that Rough Cut is now available at All Romance E-books (ARE) as a PDF. Folks who prefer reading onscreen can get it here. (It’s also in a Kindle edition but this is a more generic version.) Currently priced on sale at $5.60, e-books are an affodable alternative to hard copies.

Here ’tis:

http://allromanceebooks.com/product-roughcutvincentdiamondcollected-12681-144.html

And other Lethe titles are here:

http://allromanceebooks.com/storeSearch.html

Career status meme; come, join in our reindeer games!

December 1st, 2008 Administrator 2 comments

Since year-end is approaching, this might be a good time to do a little evaluation of the writing “career”. Hence, this Pro-writer career path meme via http://groundbyground.livejournal.com. Wanna play? Post the link to yours in comments; I’d love to read how you’re doing!

Current Status as of this morning: (includes non-Vincent, non-erotica, and mainstream writing)

Short Stories:
* Stag- Honorable Mention at WIP ‘08, currently sitting, needs to be submitted again
* Out of Joint- another Honorable Mention at the ‘07 WIP, currently subbed to Southern Review
* Sand and Tears- currently sitting, needs to be subbed again
* Off Balance- currently subbed at Sniplits for holiday issue
*Making the Jump- currently subbed at Sniplits for animal issue
*Something in Their Eyes- currently sitting, needs to be subbed again
* Bodily Fluids- David and Marcus story, unfinished
* Saying Goodbye- Marcus and Philips novella, unfinished

Novels:
* Rough Cut- completed short story collection, sold, Lethe Press.
* Tiger Daze- completed, previously agented, unsold. Could probably be revised and subbed to an e-press since New York didn’t want it.
* Tanner novel- Tanner is the character from several of my stories, including Stag, Out of Joint, A Cold Night’s Sleep, and Fire. He’s an ex-con struggling to find his way in the world outside of prison. Outlined, not written.

Age when I decided I wanted to be a writer: 8

Age when I wrote my first story: 8. About a werewolf, no shit.

Age when I got my hands on a typewriter: 13 – I took typing in high school. On a manual typewriter. Manual. Meaning, you had to watch your sentences and MANUALLY push the thing-y back to the left. Manually.

Age when I first submitted a short story to a magazine: 15-ish I think

Thickness of file of rejection slips prior to first story sale: I had maybe 8 stories rejected before I started selling. But, I’d been writing for over 10 years then, seriously studying craft and how-to so I kinda knew what I was doing. Kinda.

Age when I sold my first short story: 43

Age when I killed my first market: not sure what this means.

Approximate number of short stories/novelettes/novellas sold for copies (small press): 0

Approximate number of short stories/novelettes/novellas sold for cash money: 35+

Age when I wrote my first novel/book: 40. I consider my fanfiction collection/novel-y thing my first. It wasn’t publishable but it let me know that I was capable of taking on a novel-length project. 90,000 of Darth Maul alternate universe will do that to a person!

Age when I sold a first novel: Damn, not yet.

Novels written: 2 completed, one started

Awards won: None. Yet.

Age when a work was first shortlisted for an award: 46, though it was an anthology I was in shortlisted for the Lambda. Men of Mystery was a finalist for ‘07.

Age when I became a full-time writer: Still working on that; I earn my living editing and proofreading.

Age now: 48

Consider this a journal meme: if you write professionally, feel free to post your own equivalent of this list. (Obviously you’ll need to customize it to track your career path — but you get the idea.)

September 12th, 2008 Administrator 2 comments

From my publisher, Steve Berman’s, LJ. Another Lethe author is having great financial difficulties recently, and Steve wants to send him a check for advanced royalties on Craig Gidneys’s new book. More below:

My dear friend ethereal_lad is currently without health insurance and in need of some costly medication.

Lethe is releasing in Oct/Nov his short story collection, Sea, Swallow Me, and Other Stories. These are terrific fantastical tales.

Rather than just a royalty, I’d like to off a pre-pub sale that would give him the entire amount. Yes, I won’t even keep my costs and, since 10% of my profits were to be donated to the >Carl Brandon Society, if you purchase a copy of the book before publication, I’ll still make that pledge. So, $13 goes to Craig and $1.30 goes to Carl Brandon. Books will be sent out via media mail at my cost.

If you’ve already ordered a copy through Amazon, I want to thank you. But that won’t help Craig for months. Plus, I’ll make sure Craig autographs your copy before it is sent out.

I’d prefer payment be sent via check, but you could Paypal it if necessary to lethepress AT aol DOT com. The price is only $13 per book. Make checks to:

Lethe Press
118 Heritage Ave
Maple Shade, NJ 08052

Feel free to spread word of this offer. Thanks.

Call for subs: Gemini, Lethe Press

August 5th, 2008 Administrator Comments off

A very brief surfacing here from my editing projects. When I started counting up total pages for 8 different projects, I stopped when I hit 1300. Gulp. Too much to deal with in toto; I break it down into chunks and go from there.

Anyway, this hit my Inbox and I wanted to pass it on:

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
Editor Chip Capelli will be reading for a forthcoming Lethe Press gay men’s erotica anthology tentatively entitled Gemini: Twice A Man’s Pleasure.

Stories should be engaging first and foremost. As part of a new Zodiac-inspired line of gay erotica, all submissions must address a theme inspired by the specific sign: in this case, Gemini.

Appropriate subjects and themes would be: twins (fraternal or identical), brothers, mirrors, and pairings and couples. A sculptor creating a statue would also be apt as its one man regarding another. Be creative. Writers are encouraged to sprinkle throughout their story some of the associations (such as birthstones and purported psychological traits) attributed to Geminis.

Please depict acts of safer sex only – unless the story is obviously set before the AIDS crisis.

Word Count: Submissions should be no less than 2,000 words (yes, it’s a theme) and no longer than 6,000 words.

Payment: 2 cents a word, of course, to a maximum of $100, plus 2 copies of the book. Additionally, the publisher will choose one author, who in his opinion crafted the best story, to will receive a copy of all forthcoming volumes, 12 in all, in this series.

Submissions will be read from September 2, 2008 through January 2, 2009.
Gemini
PO Box 18070
Philadelphia PA 19147-0070

If you would like to have your submission returned, please send a self-addressed envelope with sufficient return postage. Electronic copies will be required for submissions accepted for publication. No electronic submissions will be accepted EXCEPT in the case of writers living outside of the United States.

Please query editor regarding reprinted stories.

Email queries and other communication may be made to ZodiacEditor@gmail.com.

Irish Cream

May 11th, 2008 vincentdiamond Comments off

rough-cut.bmp

Lethe Press published Rough Cut: Vincent Diamond Collected in June, 2008. I’ve got a couple of new stories in the book and this excerpt is from “Irish Cream”.

Most mornings I’m here with Jerry Sputmeir and Steve the Sleeve. Steve did some time back in the day, and well, we just like using the names from the old days. Makes it kinda homey. None of us were made guys but we worked the game. Jerry was into the numbers up in Brooklyn, and Steve did some loan sharking in addition to his regular burglary gigs. Me? I’m not spillin’. Suffice to say that the horses and me, we go way back.

Anyway, this one morning, I’m on the rail. It’s mid-January, cold for Florida, about forty, and misty. The horses come onto the track at the west end, skittering around like hockey pucks, cantering sideways, all antsy. These days, exercise riders wear vests and helmets. Some wear gloves to grip the reins. A spooked thoroughbred can take off and hit forty miles an hour, so if one starts to run away with you, you’d better have gloves to help you haul his ass in.

Exercise riders still ride butt up though, just like the old days. Nice.

This gray jogs by, tossing his head, kicking up dirt, being feisty, ya know? And when I see the kid on him, it arrows right through me.

Liam.

The strawberry blonde of his hair. The cool green eyes. The muscular chest.

It wasn’t just that this kid looked like Liam, it was the way he sat the horse. Some exercise riders use brute strength that’s where they get those fabulous arms but some use finesse and sweet talk with their charges. That’s what this kid was doing. I saw him leaning over the gray’s withers, stroking the horse’s neck, even its chest. That took some doing with the way this horse antsed around.

What it took was great legs.

I closed my eyes and remembered Liam’s legs. Their strength tight around me, so tight I couldn’t move or breathe or think. And didn’t want to.

Liam’s legs

Back in the fifties, things was different, and not just at the track. Men wore hats and suits everyday, and the only guys wearing jeans were the boys mucking out stalls. You tipped your hat to women, you were polite, you took care of business without a lot of drama.

That also meant if you walked the other way around the track, you didn’t advertise it. Sure, there were queer guys back in the fifties; we just didn’t make a big deal about it. I never saw guys living together like they do nowadays, least not in the tri-state area. Not in my crowd. My guys learned not to make jokes about women with me, and by the time I was in my thirties and running my own crew, it wasn’t a matter of discussion. Not in my earshot.

I wasn’t even at the track when I met Liam. It was at Leprechaun Farms down to Ocala. I was visiting the trainer””on certain uh, collections business, let’s just say””and he was giving me the tour of the barns. Horses never really did much for me, beyond what they could earn for me at the betting windows, but even I knew these were special animals. They gleamed. They had the look of conditioned athletes: the bulging muscle, the thick veins just beneath their smooth pelts. Healthy as, well, horses. It was May and the barn had fans running in all four corners. It was still warm, though, and I sweated beneath my pinstriped suit. I fanned myself with my hat.

Jimmy, the trainer guy, was talking my ear off about bloodlines and race cards and numbers. After ten minutes of this, I kinda tuned him out. Some splashing and whinnying came from the north side of the barn so I edged over, just to see what I can see, ya know? And hoping to catch a breeze.

What I caught was an eyeful.

There was a stallion on the padded area with the hose set-up. Tied on both sides of his head but he tried to rear up, front legs pawing at the air. He bellowed and I’ve never heard a sound like that “deeper than a regular whinny” more of a groaning. The way people might groan in bed.

Contest: name my book!

November 9th, 2007 Administrator 22 comments

Well, it’s official: Lethe Press has accepted a short story collection of Vincent Diamond material!! (Note the tasteful use of only two exclamation points when actually I’d like to use a thousand). And any typos are solely because I am dancing dancing dancing as I write this.

Publisher/editor Steve Berman will be editing the collection. This is a man with a keen aesthetic about writing, and it’s a little intimidating to think about it (my little stories! under Steve’s pen!). But I also know he’s a generous and warm-hearted person, and any tweaks he’ll want to make will be for the good of the story and gently phrased.

Steve moderated several panels I attended at Gaylaxyicon, and I saw him speak at Saints & Sinners. His kind spirit shows through, whether he’s gracefully controlling a panel or dealing with insecure writers one-on-one. (And I imagine he’s just as kind with secure writers- heh).

So, a title. Part of me wants to riff off the diamond motif, something like Rough Cut (but not rough cut because that sounds too BDMS-ish), or Diamond in the Rough or some other play on words. Often, collections are named after one story in particular so we might end up going that way. If so, which story title is strongest do you think?

The contest part: suggest a name for the book and if you’re the first person to send it and we use that one, you’ll get a free, autographed copy from moi and my eternal gratitude. You can either comment here or email me: vincent at vincentdiamond dot com.

And now, I’m back to dancing dancing dancing!