March 2, 2018, and I have to say that this year already has
been unique. I don’t intend to go over
all the stuff that has happened in the past couple of months; suffice to say
it’s been a roller coaster ride that included my mother's passing, a torn
rotator cuff, back spasms, a quick turnaround and deadline for my next novel,
and publication of two short stories.
Plus, I wrote like a monkey on meth.
This is the life I wanted, the space I created for
myself. I retired from my other life in
2014. Now I consider myself a full-time writer,
if there is such a thing.
My next novel should be published in September, 2018. I finished it and sent it to Arte Público on February 28. Now I wait.
The publisher can reject my submission, so
the possibility exists that a new book will not come out this year. But let’s think positive, okay?
Many writers exist in the shadow of rejection; we
perpetually seek approval from editors, publishers and readers. We create in isolation, alone with our ideas,
characters, and grammar rules. We crave
silence, solitude, a womb away from interference. When we finish, we crave
attention, someone to look at our words and approve. But even when we get such approval, there
remains the uncertainty of the next review, or reader comment, or editor query.
Writers accept life on a tightrope of confidence because we
know there is nothing more satisfying than finding the perfect word, building
the exact sentence needed to push the story forward, or creating a paragraph
that says exactly what we wanted it to say. The right words are our Mona Lisa, our Hamlet, our Maybelline.
I just realized that I appear to speak for all
writers. Of course, I don’t. I’m talking about my own experiences, my own
life as a writer. However, if the shoe fits, let
me know.
The new book has a working title of The Golden Night of Havana: A Sherlock Homie Adventure. Gus Corral, from my previous noir novels Desperado
and My Bad, is the main character.
The action takes place in Denver and Cuba. The story has baseball references, murder, Cuban saints
and sinners, private eye angst, police redemption, murder, bad family dynamics, murder, and hot, raw
vivid sex.
Not really, that was just to see if you’re paying
attention.
Last year, I published Night in Tunisia, a short story
included in the anthology Blood
Business (Mario Acevedo and Joshua
Viola, eds., Hex Publishers, 2017.) The germ of an idea for this
story attached itself to me a while back.
Hex Publishers allowed that germ to germinate into a crime story with an off-beat. Speaking of
which: I’ll give an autographed book to
the first person who contacts me through my website and explains the title of the story.
Here’s a taste from Night
in Tunisia:
The ski-masked pair tore through the place with nervous
energy and iron focus. They took our
wallets, watches and weapons and smashed the face of anyone who stalled or
tried to run.
I donated fifty bucks, but that wasn’t enough. They lifted a silver bracelet my mother gave
me when I finished high school, fifteen years ago. She paid a day’s wages for
engraving: ORGULLOSO DE TI HIJO. I rarely wore it and now it was gone.
I wanted my bracelet back, and I was certain I knew who’d
taken it.
A few days ago, Polis
Books officially launched Culprits: The Heist Was Only the Beginning (Gary
Phillips and Richard Brewer,
eds., Polis Books, 2018.) My story in
this anthology is Snake Farm. Culprits is an exciting collection of
linked stories. I had a great time
writing a story that fit into the structure set up by Phillips and Brewer. Here’s what the publisher says about the
collection:
A crew of thieves. A heist worth millions. A
plan that goes off without a hitch. At least until the robbery is over...then
all bets are off.
And here’s a bit from Snake
Farm:
Tony kept up a steady
stream of small talk on the drive to the Kilroy Ice House. He went on about his plans for the truck,
about how Big Jim was an idiot, and what he thought they could do when it came
time to finally leave Kilroy.
Vivian listened with one
ear. Her mind was on the money and how soon she could run. All she had to do
was get out of town and across the state line. And dump Garza when some of the
dust settled.
Along Main Street, a
few yellow lights emphasized the emptiness. He turned onto a cross street in
the direction of the pale moon. They drove past old frame houses with thin
lawns or gravel front yards. The bushes were permanently bent from the
wind. Gray light shone through the
blinds or curtains that hung in most of the front windows. Looking at the town
made her tired. She’d been in Kilroy one day too long. She couldn’t shake the
nagging feeling that she had to run. Vacation was already over.
Later this month, Hex
Publishers will present yet another anthology:
Blood and Gasoline (Mario Acevedo and Joshua
Viola, eds., Hex Publishers, 2018.).
Hex is on a tear, producing several award-winning and popular
collections, novels, and graphic books in the short time it’s been in business.
You should know what to expect based on the
title: Blood and Gasoline.
My
contribution is Sitting Ducks:
We didn’t have to soar for me to feel like we’d taken
off. The job was finished, good bad or
otherwise I almost didn’t care. People
screamed and cried because we were there. Guns were pulled and used. Blood
flowed. Cops were on our asses or close to it.
Vivian and I made it. Eddie, not
so much. Most of it had been automatic
for me, no thinking necessary. We played
the hand we were dealt, as always. Now
we ran for it. This was the part I liked
-- needed, really. The quiet after a
storm, a smoke after sex.
Who was I kidding?
I liked it all.
Guess what I just now noticed -- the women characters in Snake Farm and Sitting Ducks are both named Vivian. How about that? Totally a coincidence.
I recommend any and all of these short-story collections. The editors are among the best in the business, and the various writers are top-notch. The stories from the anthologies that I've read have been all that anyone could want in crime fiction: unsentimental tales of the human condition, the good, bad and very ugly. Sometimes brutal and dark; sometimes justice prevails, often in a twisted unexpected way. And sometimes, justice is only in the eye of the beholder.
Come September, I hope you read The Golden Night of Havana. I'd appreciate it.
Later.
Manuel Ramos is the author of several novels, short stories, poems, and non-fiction books and articles. His collection of short stories, The Skull of Pancho Villa and Other Stories, was a finalist for the 2016 Colorado Book Award. My Bad: A Mile High Noir was published by Arte Público Press in 2016 and was a finalist for the Shamus Award in the Original Paperback category sponsored by the Private Eye Writers of America. He has completed work on his next Chicano Noir crime novel.
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