3:AM Magazine published my surreal short story, Irony. It’s about a boy, a girl, and some weird stuff.
Click here to check it out.



While Chris played his tunes for us, I got to sit on stage and sign books.



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Event: Reading, Book Signing, and Jazz
Date: 05-18-2017
Location: Blue Cafe, 1301 Pierce St, Sioux City Iowa
Time: 5:00-9:00pm
No need to RSVP, but you may let us know if you plan to go through this Facebook Event.
Freelance writer and digital content manager Scott Mullins did an interview with me for the This is Writing website, a great resource for authors and readers alike.
About the interviewer: Scott Mullins is a writer, editor, aspiring novelist, and social media nerd. He works with online content in a wide range of styles—from technical articles, content marketing, and product write-ups to blogs and social media.
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Eco-Fiction.com is hosting an excerpt of my novel, Descriptions of Heaven.
One of the themes in Descriptions of Heaven is that of the environment and humanity’s relationship to it. There is a worldwide drought, and the New Bedford Lake, which is the main setting for the novel, is located in an area of the country that still gets rain regularly, though the main character, Robert, makes mentions of recent droughts even there.
Does Descriptions of Heaven focus on the environment? Well, yes. It in fact does. In many ways it is the point, asking us to wonder what is next for our world and how we grieve what we have lost and will lose. If you’ve read the book and missed this message, that’s okay. That’s why we have criticism: eco-criticism and eco-critical theory. Theory and critical reading are what help us to make sense of the books we read. Looking at Descriptions of Heaven through an eco-critical lens will help you see how the environment and ecological concerns express themselves through the story. Not noticing certain aspects or not reading a book from a particular angle is okay; it simply invites re-reading. And, to be honest, the environmental message is simply one valid way of approaching this short novel.
If it is true that this novel is ecologically-concerned but it’s possible to read this book without realizing it, then it must be asked: Is it a green read? Is it eco-fiction?
Eco-Fiction.com quotes criteria from Jim Dwyer’s book Where the Wild Things Are: A Field Guide to Eco-Fiction that I can only agree with.
I believe a close reading of Descriptions of Heaven will reveal that it does meet this criteria. If it is subtle in expressing this criteria, that is only because it is intended to be essential to the text, and as an essential thing it is not easily distinguished or abstracted from the rest (though it is possible).
How art has and is finding ways to tell the story of mankind in relation to its environment is essential to our own understanding of our individual selves in relation to the natural world in our own modern era. These green reads are a huge part of that body of art and therefore a huge part of our understanding of us in the world.

Author, award-winning musician/producer, internationally distributed filmmaker, college professor, photographer, public speaker, and private consultant Jeff Leisawitz has a unique Q&A with me up on his Not F*ing Around 7 Questions of Creativity web series.
About the interviewer: Jeff Leisawitz is the author of Not F*ing Around—The No Bullsh*t Guide for Getting Your Creative Dreams Off the Ground.
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