Author Interview with Can Wiggins

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: Mmm. At the risk of incurring the wrath of The Worst Cat in The World, I would choose a Hellhound. I have a project started up and a hellhound figures into it. Cerberus? Why not ...

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: I have two distinct sounds, one being jazz (all sorts) for the more noir bent while film and TV scores are my other bag of tricks which include SF, Fantasy, Horror. I also listen to classical music. Always have, probably always will. I don’t/can’t listen to rock while I’m writing.

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
A: I have a small desk I share with Edgar Allan Poe (I’m not kidding) in a corner of my living room, a window on either side. I can look out and see flowers, birds, deer, and the occasional gremlin.

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: This is a tough one as I’m quite visual and make art as well. A favorite artist is Gustav Klimt (all that gold and geometric design). His “Judith” (carrying the head of Holofernes!) is a definite yes for me as is “Athene” and “Hygeia” – strong women who took matters into their own hands for everyone’s betterment. Frida Kahlo, Leonora Carrington are my favourite surrealists, esp Carrington’s sculptures. And William Blake was a visionary, simply put. “Nebuchadnezzar”? Get out of town… what a horrorshow. But to be honest, I often get more inspiration from a phrase or line of dialogue in a movie or book, and often, something someone says in passing will hit me as “that would make a good story”, etc. Words have power.

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Writing is not and never has been a hobby. I’ve always written with an eye towards being published, and/or to entertain readers and listeners. I do work but my dream day job? I would be an editor at a publishing company. Doesn’t have to be one of The Big Four but I think that would be right up my alley. I’ve always had work as a proofreader/editor, often at a newspaper, a law firm, or a design firm. It sounds tedious but it really isn’t. The job is to not only correct typos but to clarify and make the original work/writer “read” even better than they already do.

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I try to make time every day for writing, which can be tough. My goal is at least 500 words a day but if I’m in the zone, I go until I run out of steam, and I’ve popped out a couple of thousand words in a first go. I write between breakfast and early afternoon, but I often write after the rest of the house has gone to bed and I can work completely uninterrupted.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: Oh, I’m terrible. I tell everyone, haha. Then I jump on another story.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: Outside life. That’s a good one. I like a little boob tube plus I garden and listen to music. I try to visit friends. I read a LOT. I have a very supportive partner who is a great cook, as well as a good beta reader.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: Allow me to do this in one: “Now I’ll really raise hell.”

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: There’s a series I’ve been on for a while that I’m hoping to wrap up this year. Let’s leave it at that.

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
A: I have a Weird West tale that also could be considered an off the chain SF/Weird story.

Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?
A: Sweet Betsey from P.I.K.E. The titular character from this story is a tough bird and a smartass which is what she needs to be in her line of work. Sadly, a lot of people do not know/remember the Old West ballad “Sweet Betsy from Pike”, which is a shame. That gal had adventures! I can’t think of anyone who could continue the character. NOT because I don’t think they could, I just don’t think anyone else would want to be saddled with a postapocalyptic P.I. who has to drag people back into their own timeline or else…

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: I’m mainly on Facebook as Can Wiggins. I’m working on more of a presence with an author’s page or Substack or whatever. If anyone can help me, let me know! I keep threatening to name it “Miss Wiggins Can Be Difficult” which is how my doctor once described me to an intern. 

Bio: Can Wiggins never met a monster she didn’t like … except one. She’s been published by Planet X Publications, Oxygen Man Books, Alien Sun Press, shoggoth.net and the Atlanta HWA anthology, Georgia Gothic. Her cowritten screenplay “Eidolon” is a modern take on “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and starts filming summer 2024. A member of HWA as well as The Outer Dark community, she’s been a regular contributor to Weird Fiction Quarterly since its 2022 inaugural issue. She lives in Athens.

Author Interview with Roxanne Bland

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: A ky’un. They’re house pets, like miniature Komodo dragons, and vicious. Little savages.

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: That depends on what I’m writing. For edgier works, it’s usually something like heavy metal, or other types of music with a driving beat. For those that aren’t so edgy, softer orchestral works, like Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
A: Well, I wouldn’t say it’s special. At least I don’t think of it as a special space. It’s just my office. But it’s a single room with a door, and when I’m in there writing, the world could blow up and I wouldn’t notice as long as the electricity and internet stayed on. If they don’t, yeah. The world is gonna have problems with me.

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: Interesting question, because I honestly can’t say that any work of art has inspired a story, even though I’m an art collector. I’ve never looked at my pieces that way. I admire them for their beauty and the emotions they evoke in me. Maybe I’ll try it!

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Having had a day job for over 30 years and recently transitioning to full-time writing, I can’t imagine having a day job again. I can’t even imagine what I’d do. I suppose I could say a day job that doesn’t require heavy thinking.

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I don’t have a schedule. Might be a good idea for me to create one. I’m usually on my computer doing various things, and when an idea strikes me, I just pull up the manuscript and write. Now that I think about it, yeah, a schedule is a good idea. As for word count, I have no idea. I stopped doing that ages ago. Giving myself a set number makes me anxious, like it’s some kind of test, and if I don’t make the count, I get demerits. And honestly, I don’t pay attention to word count, period. It takes as many words as it takes to tell the story. My books usually top out in the 100,000 range. But if the story tells itself in 80,000, that’s what it’ll be.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: I don’t. There’s a sense of satisfaction, of course. But I don’t celebrate, like having a glass of wine or taking in a movie. I suppose I celebrate by maybe taking a nap, reading another author’s work, and then starting the next project.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: Outside life? What’s that? Really, I’m more than a bit of a recluse. I can interact with people if a have to, and even come off as well-balanced and sane. But I don’t want to. I simply prefer being alone.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: Roxanne Bland was a fugitive from reality. In death, reality believes it has caught up to her, but it hasn’t. Roxanne is far beyond reality’s clutches now.

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: The Underground, because it was my first book. I was sure I could write a novel, but hadn’t a clue how to go about it until my first editor took me under his wing. I learn something new every time I write a book, but this one’s special because it was the vehicle that took me into a whole new world. And you know what? I think I’ll stay.

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?”
A: At present, I’m writing Liberation, the 3rd book in The Underground series, which dadgummit, I’m going to publish by the end of this year! (I said that last year, too). After that, it’ll be Homeward, the 4th and last book in that series. I’m not through with that universe, but I’m eyeing taking a break from it and work on other projects that are now titles of a folder with nothing in them.

Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?
A: Honestly, I don’t have a favorite. I can see myself hanging out with any one or all of them. As for another author, I don’t think I would. My characters are facets of my personality, and unless the author could get into my head, I don’t think they could do it justice. And I do not recommend said author getting into my head. It’s a dangerous neighborhood in there.

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: Lots of places.

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100029694768624

    Twitter: https://x.com/AuthorBland

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/roxanne-bland-61b354273/

    Instagram: roxanneblandauthor1

    ROXANNE BLAND has been a fugitive from reality for as long as she can remember. Defying the laws of physics at every turn, she is now No. 1 on the Albert Einstein Bureau of Enforcement’s Most Wanted list. The Underground Series is the fictional memoir of her life on the lam (so far).

    Review of Den of the Wererats by Terry Miller

    Review of Den of the Wererats by Terry Miller

    by Nora B. Peevy

    Devin is a pizza boy down on his luck and Kelly Tate is the unluckiest girl at closing time. Both are turned by the den of wererats led by their maniacal leader, Jonathan and both are betrayed by the den, learning quickly that the only wererat you can trust is yourself or possibly, The Mother. But can you really trust The Mother? Terry Miller’s Den of the Wererats is a fun, fast-paced rat brawl with more teeth than Mrs. Frisby and The Rats of Nimh.

    If you’re looking for high fantasy with a backstory about the origin of the wererats, this book is not for you. If you’re looking for a grand romance with a happy ending, where a wererat gets the girl and the sparkly vampire loses. Sorry. There are no sparkly vampires in this book, only lean, horny, bloodthirsty wererats. If you’re looking for heads rolling and blood flowing, then you’ve picked up the right title. If you like were animals with giant teeth, claws, tails, and plots about betrayal, then this one’s for you. There is nothing noble about a wererat. They don’t smell that good either, they drink a lot like your favorite uncle likes to swear and they share their women too.

    This book is better than a frat party on steroids and worth your time. Skip the frat party and you won’t miss anything you can’t do at home. If you skip Terry Miller’s Den of the Wererats you miss an epic sex death scene and more savagery. (This you can’t do anywhere without getting arrested. I highly advise against it.) If you’re bored and alone on a Saturday or just pissed off at your boss — trust me. Go out and buy Terry Miller’s Den of the Wererats. You won’t regret it. But make sure you grab a drink so you don’t feel left out because those weres will drink you under the table and they have a vicious appetite for cheese, so make sure to lock up the cheddar.