Posts Tagged ‘Death’

HUNGER Crossroads Tour and signing today

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

Before anything else, a moment for me to squee: I received six RAGE advance reading copies yesterday. **SQUEE!!!!!!**

Ahem.

Okay, back to blogging…

Today’s Crossroads Tour stop at Just Your Typical Book Blog is a little different — it’s not an interview, but rather a guest post in which I answer Amber’s question, “If I were sucked into one of my books, which book would it be, and what kind of reaction or hopes would I have.” The post is called “Let’s Talk About Death,” and in it, I get into how influenced I’ve been by books and comic books when it came to the character of Death — including Neil Gaiman, Piers Anthony and Terry Pratchett. Thanks so much, Amber!

After you read the post, head on over to the Crossroads Tour main page for today’s question. One day to go!

And hey, another HUNGER review, over at Teen Book Review Blog.

Finally, I’m signing copies of HUNGER today at The Little Book House in Stuyvesant Plaza, in Albany NY, from 2 – 3 pm. If you’re local, I hope to see you there! I can show you a shiny RAGE ARC. :)



Gonna Make A Playlist

Friday, March 12th, 2010

My cousin died this week. She’d had cancer, both years ago and then again more recently, and this time, there was no escaping the final outcome. I went to her funeral yesterday, and I listened to the rabbi talk about my cousin, and heard her son deliver a powerful eulogy. He said that my cousin was defined by pain and pride — one was etched into every fiber of her being, and the other was how she fiercely took pleasure from the accomplishments of her loved ones. Her son is a college student, but as he spoke about his mom, and helped his grandmother stand strong in the face of burying a child, it hit me that he had been forced to grow up much too soon.

Parents shouldn’t have to bury their kids.

Kids shouldn’t have to juggle college classes around their mother’s funeral.

~

ME: Sometimes, life seems horribly unfair.

DEATH: Life isn’t unfair. Life simply is. It’s people who go about trying to pigeonhole the vastness of life into some preconceived notion. You should stop that.

ME: Pfft. Easy for you to say. You’re Death. You don’t have just a handful of years to try to make sense out of everything.

DEATH: You think being eternal means you can actually make sense out of things? T’y'ah. As if.

ME: So if there’s no right answer — if some things never make sense, like someone dying too soon — then…why are we here?

DEATH: That’s easy. You’re here to live, for as long as you’re alive.

ME: That’s it?

DEATH: That’s it. What you do with your life is your choice. Sure, some things will be outside of your control. Disease, for example. I mean, yeah, you can do things that make it more likely you’re going to get sick, but whether or not you actually get sick, well, that’s not your call. It’s not how long you live, but how well.

ME: Sometimes, things still seem horribly unfair.

DEATH: Again, you’re trying to shoehorn life into neat categories. Fair, unfair, deserved, lucky. What have you. That’s not what it’s about. Life is about living. Everything else is just how you label it. And as a wise person once said, labels are for soup cans.

ME: Huh. Maybe. Still, I’m feeling lousy about it.

DEATH: You know what helps?

ME: What?

DEATH: Listening to some fabulous music.

~

This would have been a different conversation if it had been Pestilence instead of Death. For one thing, Pestilence doesn’t appreciate good music.

So now I’m making a Life Can Be Lousy But At Least I Have Good Music playlist. I’m open to suggestions.



So What’s This Post Mortem Thing?

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

By now, some of you may be wondering what the heck the Post Mortem part of my website is all about. (Or maybe not. But for the sake of this blog post, and my fragile ego, I’m going to act as if I’ve been bombarded with questions about Post Mortem.)

Simply put, Post Mortem is a fake talk-radio show. And Death is the host.

Now, I have to be clear: this isn’t Neil Gaiman’s Death (although she is incredibly fabulous), and this isn’t Terry Pratchett’s Death (with or without all caps when he speaks). This is my Death. (Which, taken out of context, sounds incredibly weird and perhaps a little creepy.) Specifically, this is the character Death, who will appear in my upcoming novel HUNGER.

For more about Death and his role in HUNGER…well, you’ll have to be patient. (A year, folks. One year. We can do it!)

As for Post Mortem, here’s the deal: Death — cuddly, fun-loving guy that he is — has decided to interview the characters of other authors. The other authors’ characters, bless them, have happily agreed to come on over and answer some questions and talk about things…including what it’s like working with their authors.

Yeah, I’m pretty psyched about it too.

Some of the authors whose characters will be guests on Post Mortem? Heather Brewer. Rachel Caine. Mari Mancusi. Michelle Rowen.

So stay tuned.



 

 

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