Archive for 2010

First iPhone app for Ink & Paper Group!

Published by Linda on 02 Jun 2010

Kid Beowulf iPhone appBowler Hat Comics announced  today that the eagerly awaited app for KID BEOWULF AND THE BLOOD-BOUND OATH, the  first book in the exciting Kid Beowulf series, is now available. Interested? Learn more here.

Morgan’s Pasture now available!

Published by Linda on 02 Jun 2010

Morgan's Pasture Three Muses Press is pleased to announce the release of its newest title, Morgan’s Pasture. Check out the details on the Three Muses website. Order your copy today, and enjoy a memorable, meaningful  coming-of-age story.

Near death experience, poetry, and quantum physics?

Published by Linda on 02 May 2010

IMG_1456cropRGBIn a recent Examiner.com interview, poet Ana Callan (Duet with Hummingbird, Three Muses Press) discusses how her near death experience “became this incredible gift. I got to see the love and the perfection of everything—no matter how it looks. There’s a harmony to all things. Everything is divinely inspired.” So how does quantum physics enter the discussion? Read the full interview to find out.

Enjoy Ana Callan’s presentation “The Gift of Aging,” as part of Multnomah County Library’s  monthly series, Perspectives on Positive Aging. Bring lunch and enjoy an inspiring hour with Ana.

Wednesday, May 5, noon to 1:00 p.m.
Central Library
U.S. Bank Room
801 SW 10th Ave.
Registration not required. This event is free and open to the public.

Stumptown: Start the Weekend Right!

Published by Jen on 23 Apr 2010

As we’ve already mentioned, this weekend (April 24 & 25) is the annual Stumptown Comics Fest, Portland’s very own showcase of creative greats in illustration from near and far. If you’re looking for something different and memorable to fill your two days off, there will be ALL kinds of colorful, dynamic, sometimes-book-sometimes-not entertainment. Here are the details:

PLACE: Lloyd Center Doubletree Hotel in Portland
TIME: 10 AM to 6 PM
OUR TABLE: #30 (Come buy a brand-spankin’ new copy of the newest Kid Beowulf title Song of Roland and have it signed—and illustrated!—by its creator, Alexis E. Fajardo, who will be here all weekend.)

And if you want to jump-start the festivities, here are several events going on tonight and throughout the weekend:

  • Song of Roland launch at Grendel’s Coffee House (729 E. Burnside), 5 to 6:30 PM
  • Stumptown Launch Party at Guapo Comics & Books (6350 SE Foster Rd.), 7 PM
  • D’Merde Salon Multi-media Event at The Know (2026 NE Alberta), 8 PM (Featuring Courtney Taylor Taylor, Hot Gun, The Moonshriners, Seantos McDonald, and more…)
  • Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School at the Bossanova Ballroom’s upstairs lounge (722 E. Burnside), 8 to 11 PM
  • To see more Stumptown events, click HERE

Stet Says…

Published by Jen on 09 Apr 2010

The following is food for thought in light of April and the 40th anniversary of Earth Day on April 22nd.

“In our way of life, in our government, with every decision we make, we always keep in mind the Seventh Generation to come. It’s our job to see that the people coming ahead, the generations still unborn, have a world no worse than ours—and hopefully better. When we walk upon the Mother Earth we always plant our feet carefully because we know the faces of our future generations are looking up at us from beneath the ground. We never forget them.”

~ Oren Lyons, Native American (Onondaga) Faithkeeper

Mr. Pink: A Dame Rocket Tribute

Published by Jen on 09 Apr 2010

We have shared the incommunicable experience of war.
We have felt, we still feel, the passion of life to its top….
In our youths, our hearts were touched with fire.

—Oliver Wendell Holmes

fire

In March, we at Dame Rocket Press were sad to hear of the death of Mr. Pink, an instrumental character (and true “Guy” Rocket) in our title Magic Gardens and the life of its author, Viva Las Vegas.

Here’s an excerpt about him from “Ring of Fire” in Magic Gardens:

For a while Mona, Pink, and I were inseparable. We were the Three Musketeers, broke as a joke but living for adventure and off of plunder and booty. I burned pretty hot on my own, but with these two pirates by my side we were an absolute conflagration.

It’s good to be on fire. All ya gotta do is burn. Some people wait their entire lives and never get to experience it, so don’t go about doing it half-assed. Don’t worry about the inevitable burnout. Don’t worry about anything at all. Just burn, baby, burn.

Mr. Pink was a trusty block of good dry wood. He was whipsmart and misanthropic to the extreme, the perfect foil for Mona’s grandiosity and my naïveté. He was filled with sarcastic bons mots, had a cozy shoulder to cry on, and never let his life be upended by something so pedestrian as love. He was a solid block of good dry wood, very predictable and instrumental in a fire.

Here’s to you, Mr. Pink, and to all who knew and loved you. Thank you for the role you played in this world and in the life of our beloved Miss Viva. May we always think of you when building our own light in life and in the stars, too. You will surely be missed.

GREAT Three Muses News & Author Events

Published by Jen on 09 Apr 2010

Wally_200x267The good folks managing the Idaho Magazine Fiction Contest recently informed Morgan’s Pasture author Wallace J. Swenson that he has a “winning entry.” We here at Three Muses Press have long known he is a winner, but we are mighty curious about the results of this annual short story contest featuring Idaho writers. Readings and an award presentation will take place on April 10 (1 PM) at Barnes & Noble in Boise, Idaho. Good luck, Wally!

MORE GOOD NEWS: Poet Ana Callan (Duet with Hummingbird) has been invited to present “The Gift of Aging” as part of Multnomah County Library’s monthly series, Perspectives on Positive Aging. “What matters in a life? How does one savor life in the face of mortality and the challenges of these tumultuous times?” Bring lunch and enjoy an inspiring hour with Ana on May 5 from noon to 1:00 PM. Click here for more information.

BHC: Here, There Be Books!

Published by Jen on 09 Apr 2010

BO-SORKid Beowulf and the Song of Roland has arrived! Fresh from the printer, these books will be the hottest thing on the shelf come April 28, the official release date. If you can’t wait until then, be sure to head out to Stumptown Comics Fest on April 24 and 25 in Portland (Oregon), where copies of the book will be available early. Kid Beowulf creator, Alexis E. Fajardo, will also be on hand for autographs and sketches!

Writers Resource Fair

Published by Linda on 26 Feb 2010

multcolib_logo-blueJoin Ink & Paper Group in celebrating our region’s writers, readers, and small presses at the Multnomah County Library Writers Resource Fair this Sunday, February 28, from noon to 3:00 pm at Central Library in downtown Portland. We look forward to seeing you there! Want to share the love? Here’s the link to follow this event on the Bowler Hat Comics fan page on Facebook.

Attend this free fair to:

  • Celebrate the region’s lively literary scene.
  • Meet representatives of organizations offering support and opportunities for writers.
  • Attend the Small Press Book Sale.
  • Visit the Sterling Room for Writers and learn about this quiet space for writing and research.
  • Tour the John Wilson Special Collections from 1–3 p.m. Hand-printed broadsides by noted writers will be on display, in addition to an exhibition of materials drawn from the collection’s papers of poet David Lee.
  • Visit the Friends’ Library Store.
  • Enjoy refreshments.

Learn more about:

writing for fun and profit

For more information, call 503.988.5473.

Participating organizations:

* selling books

Back with (Hell’s) Bells On: Catching Up with Author m. m. garcia

Published by Jen on 26 Feb 2010

by guest writer Eric Blockland

hatemailThe birth of m. m. garcia’s Hate Mail (Dame Rocket Press, 2007) goes something like this: first, garcia impressed her instructors at a high school math and science program—or “nerd camp,” as she calls it. Then she was selected to attend NASA’s Space Camp, where she trained as an astronaut for a week to prepare for a simulated space flight. When her crew finally launched, she recalls, they all died “within seconds of departure.”

Undaunted, the instructors insisted the mission go on. By the time they returned to Earth, garcia and her crew died a total of twenty times (forgetting to turn the oxygen on seemed particularly unfortunate). “I concluded that I never wanted to go into space,” she says.  “Shortly after that, I started to lose interest in math and science, and started writing. So, I blame Space Camp for making me a writer.”

Thank you, Space Camp.

Now in its third year in print, Hate Mail is getting a face-lift, and I took the opportunity to interview m. m. garcia on her writing, her simulated death, and her mail. It seems an apt preface to note that, despite the bristling observation, “The greeting card industry knows you’re a chickenshit,” garcia has yet to receive any hate mail. “I’d really like to get one in the mail though,” she says. “That would be cool.” (Readers take note.)

For those who noticed a glimmer of that blunt, lovable, acerbic candor reminiscent of Holden Caulfield from Catcher in the Rye, you’re in good company. “I would say Salinger was the single biggest influence as far as helping me find my voice,” says garcia. She also notes Sherman Alexie’s influence on her writing: “I had the chance to hear him read from The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian, and he made the comment to the audience that he hates it when writers try to tell you what a tree looks like, as if you didn’t already know. I couldn’t agree more. I realize some description is necessary, but I hate to get in the way of my reader’s imagination.”

I asked the garcia, whose book is filled with adages such as “Embrace your anger” and “Everyone has a nemesis,” about her relationship to Hate Mail. “I’m still proud of it and love to hear from random readers who say they’ve enjoyed it,” she says. “Like most things in my life it’s mostly love peppered with a bit of hate at times,” which is as good a reminder as any that garcia’s aspersions-filled writing is not without compassion. In her story, “D is for Discrimination,” she confesses that she’s working long hours at a school with little pay: “The teachers I bonded with were the ones who seemed to genuinely love their students. Like me, they lived for the little breakthroughs and shrugged off their defeats.”

The soul of Hate Mail can be traced to garcia’s relationship with her friend Jen Magill, who recently passed away after a long battle with cancer. After the book’s publication, garcia followed a lifelong dream and moved from Portland to London, a decision complicated by Jen’s diagnosis. Garcia describes her move this way:

Jen had already been diagnosed with terminal cancer, so from the beginning it was a difficult decision. Jen and I talked about it back then and I told her that one thing I had taken away from her experience with cancer was the notion that you have to live your life while you can, and do all the things you really want to while you still have the chance. In the weeks before I moved, I spent nearly every day with Jen, and I suppose I naively thought this would make it easier to be so far away from her.

It wasn’t easier. In fact, almost from the time my plane landed at Heathrow, I was pretty emotionally wrecked at the thought that I might be missing my last chance to be with my best friend.

Returning to The Dalles, garcia did have the chance, and has spent much of the past year at Jen’s side. “She was super laid back,” garcia remembers, “…she was very snarky, witty, and downright hilarious…. I think that subconsciously as I was writing, I was channeling all those characteristics. When I published the book it was natural that I dedicate it to her.”

For those of you waiting for garcia’s next book, there’s hope. “There is another major project in the works as well,” she says, “but it’s a bit too soon for me to talk about that.” While she remains close-lipped about what we might see in the future, she’s certainly not given up championing the wronged, and passed along this account of peddling Hate Mail and homemade Love-/Hate-frosted cupcakes at the Portland Zine Symposium.

“I’m a terrible sales person,” she says, and when a potential buyer approached her display, garcia let her glance through the book uninterrupted. “Then a few minutes later she walked by again, lingered, and then paused to pick up a copy…. Then she said, ‘Well, I think I’ll spend my money on something a little less hateful.’” Apparently garcia occasionally needs a Hate Mail card to say what she means, too. “My mouth said, ‘Suit yourself,’” she remembers, “but my brain said, ‘Really? You’re going to get snarky with someone who wrote a book called Hate Mail? Either you’re really hardcore, or you’re not that bright.’ Come to think of it, I should make a card for that.”

Readers might find that card in the near future on garcia’s new website, an in-the-works project to refurbish Hate Mail and add some fresh (and free) e-cards. “I’m still writing,” she promises.  Check the Dame Rocket Press website for updates, and in the meantime, try garcia’s comics collaboration with her partner, Steve, at doodism.com.

Eric Blockland is a 2006 graduate of Oberlin College (BA in English) who recently moved to Portland from Vermont to pursue a career in writing and book publishing. He’s currently working as the publishing assistant at Dame Rocket Press and can be contacted at eblokland@gmail.com.

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