Chatting with James Brown | Part 1

On Episode 62 of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, I enjoyed an amazing conversation with critically acclaimed writerand my mentorJames Brown, author of The Los Angeles Diaries and This River

Episode 62: James Brown (PART ONE)

During PART 1 of my conversation with Brown we covered a series of topics, including:

  • Academic struggles in grade school 
  • The difference between an autobiography and a memoir 
  • The Los Angeles Diaries
  • Brown's appearance on CNN 
  • The criminal activities of Brown's mother 
  • How the past effects drug and alcohol abuse 
  • Michael Chabon, Brown's college classmate

Of The Los Angeles Diaries, here's what Publishers Weekly had to say:

"Brown's genius compels readers to sympathize with him in every instance. Juxtaposed with the shimmery unreality of Hollywood, these essays bitterly explore real life, an existence careening between great promise and utter devastation. Brown's revelations have no smugness or self-congratulation; they reek of remorse and desire, passion and futility. Brown flays open his own tortured skin looking for what blood beats beneath and why. The result is a grimly exquisite memoir that reads like a noir novel but grips unrelentingly like the hand of a homeless drunk begging for help."

Being an Indie Author

Shortly after I published my first novel, Inside the Outside, I wrote my first article for Self-Publishing Review"A Self-Publisher's Manifesto" (I published an extended version of that article on my website, which I re-titled "An Indie Author's Manifesto"). 

As I prepared to publish my second novel, The Vampire, the Hunter, and the GirlI found myself thinking a lot about what it means to be an indie author and how I feel about it. So, I decided to talk about it on my podcast in "Episode 60: Being an Indie Author."

Episode 60: Being an Indie Author

A few of the topics I covered:

  • The amazing opportunities indie publishing offers
  • Why I wrote "A Self-Publisher's Manifesto"
  • My first rejection letter from a literary agent
  • Indie Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing

Chatting with Emily Bleeker

On Episode 61 of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, I enjoyed a great chat with Emily Bleeker, author of the #1 bestselling novel Wreckage

Episode 61: Emily Bleeker

During my conversation with Bleeker we covered a series of topics, including:

  • Emily’s love or sci-fi (especially The X-Files)
  • The influence of our parents on our reading
  • Emily’s love for classic literature (especially Jane Eyre and Gone with the Wind)
  • Teaching creative writing to kids
  • Emily's cancer diagnosis at age 24 and how it inspired her to write her first novel
  • Literary agents and query letters
  • Publishing with Lake Union Publishing
  • The gratification of reader feedback
  • Working with various editors for each step of Wreckage
  • Finding time to write while raising four kids

Of Wreckage, here's what Bleeker's editor, Danielle Marshall, had to say:

"Here’s where my obsessive reading, sharing, reading, sharing cycle began: once they return home, Dave and Lillian fabricate a story about what happened on the island to protect both themselves and their families. Because the truth is...really dark. And when a hard-nosed cable news reporter won’t let the story die, their lies begin to fray around the edges, threatening to destroy everything they struggled so desperately to come home to. Bleeker’s debut has all the spectacle of our fanatical media culture: drama, suspense, secrets, and human interest. Similar to the pact Dave and Lillian made never to reveal what happened, I’ve made a pact with the author not to give anything away to you. But rest assured, I couldn’t stop telling everyone I knew about Wreckage—and I have a feeling you’ll be obsessed, too!"

FIRST CHAPTERS

The Vampire, the Hunter, and the Girl

Adam and Jesus (the vampire and the hunter) have an innate antagonism, which is only heightened once they discover they're competing for the affections of Olivia (the girl).



Product Details

  • Paperback: 300 pages
  • Publisher: Cannibal Press (March 23, 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 978-0985704322

A Meditation on Horror

Am I a horror writer?

Well, it's not a very straightward answer and I spent about an hour meditating on that question—and horror in generalon Episode 59 of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour (press PLAY below to listen for yourself).

Episode 59: A Meditation on Horror

Technically, the answer is yes.

Yes, I am a horror writer.

Technically.

But, do I consider myself a horror writer?

No.

It becomes a tricky dance with nuance, I think, because at this point in my young career as a novelist, I’ve only published one novelInside the Outside, which is without question a horror novel. So, technically that makes me a horror writer. But, that said, I don't think of myself as a horror writer. Anyway, you can listen to me wrestle with that idea on Episode 59.


But, that's not all you'll hear on Episode 59. You'll also hear an interview that my buddy Tim Chizmar conducted with horror icon Tony Todd.

Tim's interview was on behalf of Icons of Fright. In the interview, Tony Todd is promoting his latest film, Vanish, which also stars Danny Trejo.

Big thanks to Icons of Fright Editor-in-Chief Jerry Smith, Tim Chizmar, and the Official Comic Book Expert of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour Anthony Ray Bench for sharing that audio with me and letting me share it with my podcast listeners.

2015 Academy Awards

The 87th Academy Awards ceremony has come and gone. It's been about two weeks or so since it ended and, well, I still think about it. 

Not that the awards had a profound impact on my life, but I look forward to them every year. I love watching the nominated movies and wondering aloudusually with Chanelwho's gonna win, who's gonna lose, how's the host gonna do, who's gonna have a moment that lives forever in the pantheon of Oscar lore. But, before we got answers to those questions, there was something else.

Before Birdman won the most Oscars of the night and Boyhood walked away with only one, before The Grand Budapest Hotel was placated with a series of minor awards and American Sniper was virtually ignored, before Common and John Legend stole the night with a brilliant performance honoring Selma and The Imitation Game screenwriter Graham Moore gave a speech that reinvigorated my faith in humanity, before J.K. Simmons officially accepted the award for Whiplash we all knew he would win and Eddie Redmayne appeared more surprised than anybody that he won for The Theory of Everything...

...before all of that, there were the podcasts. 

Chanel and I did a series of podcasts leading up to and following the 2015 Academy Awards. For your convenience and pleasure, I've gathered them all below.

Enjoy.


Episode 54: Pre-Oscars Buzz

After an awkward and inappropriate opening three minutes, Chanel and I talk about the eight Oscar-nominated films we'll be watching at the 2015 Best Picture Showcase.

Episode 54: Pre-Oscars Buzz

Episode 55: Best Picture Showcase | PART 1

Chanel and I attended Day 1 of AMC's Best Picture Showcase where we watched The Grand Budapest HotelWhiplashBirdman, and Selma. We share our thoughts and crack a few jokes along the way.

day-1.jpg
Episode 55: Best Picture Showcase | PART 1

Episode 56: Best Picture Showcase | PART 2

Chanel and I attended Day 2 of AMC's Best Picture Showcase where we watched BoyhoodThe Theory of EverythingThe Imitation Gameand American Sniper

Episode 56: Best Picture Showcase | PART 2

Episode 57: 2015 Academy Awards

Chanel and I tell you all about how much we loved the 2015 Academy Awards...or how much we hated them. There's only one way to find out. (HINT: Press Play)

Episode 57: 2015 Academy Awards

Chatting with D.M. Pulley

On Episode 58 of The Martin Lastrapes Show Podcast Hour, I enjoyed a wonderful conversation with D.M. Pulley, author of the #1 bestselling novel The Dead Key

Episode 58: D.M. Pulley

During my conversation with Pulley we covered a series of topics, including:

  • Moving to Cleveland to study engineering
  • The tension of having a job that doesn't satisfy your creativity
  • Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five
  • The value of reading comic books
  • Figuring out how to write a novel
  • Trying to create likable characters
  • Struggling to get The Dead Key published
  • Winning the 2014 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award

Of The Dead Key, here's what Publishers Weekly had to say:

"This superb novel tells the story of two heroines separated by 20 years: 1978’s Beatrice Baker and 1998’s Iris Latch, both of whom become perilously embroiled in the behind-the-scenes dirty dealings at the First Bank of Cleveland...Readers, along with the main characters, will be sucked into the secrets the bank holds and will remain guessing until the end. Fast paced, faultlessly written, and engaging, this is a page turner with a very surprising and plausible twist. There are not enough superlatives to describe this engrossing novel."