Friday, December 21, 2012
Contest Update
Friday, November 30, 2012
Ragnarok-Valhalla Press' e-lit Journal Publishes First Issue
Ragnarok's inaugural issue is now for sale on the Valhalla Press Website. We believe readers will find a wide variety of entertaining stories. The issue contains a rich cross-section of fiction and non-fiction pieces culled from winning submissions to the Valhalla Press Literary Fiction and Creative Non-fiction Contest and contributions by Valhalla Press Writers, Albert Davenport, John Pistelli, and Adrienne Terrell Washington.
In assembling the issue, we attempted to provide a wide variety of perspectives on life as seen through the eyes of our writers. First Prize winner, Jan English Leary, presents a taut narrative of suburban life in "Mother's Helper". In "People Who Choose to Run", Second Prize winner, Mary Beth Ellis, portrays a group of twenty-somethings thrown together by cyberfate at a science fiction convention. The issue features works by new writers, Jay Antani, Jaime Derkenne, and Mark Levine as well as contributions from Ecstasy of Michaela author John Pistelli, a selection from Adrienne Washington's The Ultimate Party Girl and other (very) personal essays, and stories by veteran writers, Jennifer Peckinpaugh and Davey Jones.
The issue, our first endeavor of this kind, represents the distillation of several months work. We couldn't have done it without the support of all contest entrants and their positive feedback at every step of the process. Thank you. Ragnarok's inaugural issue represents another step in our attempt to build an online writing community. Enjoy!
Monday, October 29, 2012
Valhalla update
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Paid Reviews Not Welcome in Valhalla
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Contest News
Sunday, July 8, 2012
What to look for in a writing contest
Not every writing contest is the same and some are even unreputable. It's writer beware. Here are some indications that a contest is legitimate:
1. It offers a substantial prize for the winner, often including cash plus publication.
2. The entry fee, if there is one, is reasonable and in proportion to the potential prize.
3. The prize is real - that is, cold hard cash and not a coupon or anything else that can't be used in the real world.
4. It does not take a writer's rights to the work beyond what's reasonable (and in our view, ethical). For example, some contests claim all rights to any work that is submitted, even if it doesn't win the contest. This is wrong. If you don't win, the work should remain yours to sell or publish elsewhere.
5. The contest provides contact information and someone available to answer questions. Your questions are answered by a real person before you submit your work.
The Valhalla Press contest meets all these guidelines.
Our submission fee is modest and is paid through Paypal, a safe and convenient way that doesn't expose the writer to the risk of providing credit card or banking information to an unknown party.
Our prize is paid in cold, hard cash, right into the winner's Paypal account for use as he or she sees fit. There's nothing to buy and no preconditions. We also send the winner his choice of ereaders, at our expense even if the winner is outside the United States. The only exception is if the reader can't be imported into the winner's country. In that case, we will substitute an additional amount of cold, hard cash.
We do not take any rights from those who don't win. We only take first electronic publication right from the winners who will appear in our e-lit journal, Ragnarok.
We answer all questions promptly, via email. If you wish to talk to one of us via telephone, email us and we will send you our phone number. We primarily use email because we know many of our contestants are overseas and don't want to incur the cost of an international call. But the option is open.
Of course, you don't have to take our word for all this. Many writer's magazines publish guidelines on contests too (and run contests themselves.) For an unbiased view on why writers should enter contests like ours, check out this recent article in The Writer:
Use contests as a stepping stone by Hope Clark.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Contest Update
Thursday, July 5, 2012
New Title Coming: The Ecstasy of Michaela
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Announcing Ragnarok, the e-lit journal, Writing Contest
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Ray Bradbury Passes Away
The literary world has lost another giant with the passing of Ray Bradbury today at age 91. Bradbury evoked the terror of totalitarianism in Fahrenheit 451. With a title taken from the temperature at which paper burns, the novel tells the story of a fireman, Montag. But in this world firemen don't put out fires, they start them. Written in 1953, the images of Nazi book burning and Stalinist repression were fresh in his mind.
Cold War angst played a large part in Bradbury's work. In The Martian Chronicles human colonists on Mars witness Earth's nuclear apocalypse in the Martian sky. His other classics include Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Illustrated Man, The Halloween Tree and many others.
In some ways, Bradbury became a repository for American angst. He was descended from a witch tried at Salem, Massachusetts. His father lost his job during the depression, prompting a move to California. As a child, he had vivid nightmares that often became fodder for his stories. A child of the depression, he developed a relentless work ethic writing 1,000 words a day from the age of 14 until his health would no longer permit it. He wrote “Fahrenheit 451” at the UCLA library, on typewriters that rented for 10 cents a half hour. He said he carried a sack full of dimes to the library and completed the book in nine days, at a cost of $9.80.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Maurice Sendak is gone
Monday, April 30, 2012
Valhalla Press e-publishes the Ambermere Series
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Virginity Checks OK in US
Where's the outrage here in the US now that the United States Supreme Court has authorized what amounts to the same thing, except performed by deputy sheriffs and prison wardens. The court authorized strip searches for anyone arrested even on minor charges like traffic violations. Presumably angry protesters may face the same treatment.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/us/justices-approve-strip-searches-for-any-offense.html
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Behind "In the Shadow of Midnight"
The two bodies were Bob and Tina Stoddard. As the story of their lives and deaths unfolded, I was drawn to them as flawed, tragic, but sympathetic characters who lived in the shadow of the more celebrated goings-on on Monterey Square. Their attempts to enjoy the magical world that Jim Williams and the Savannah elite created always fell short. Their desire, Bob's in particular, to be a part of that Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil world ultimately destroyed them.
In the next few blogs, I will provide some back story to the tale In the Shadow of Midnight: Daedalus, a Tale of Savannah.
In the opening scene, where I describe the tourists rounding the corner, turning toward the river, and never seeing the vehicular apparatus of death deployed outside the Stoddard's apartment, it reminded me of Breugel's painting, The Fall of Icarus. The parallel between Daedalus and Bob Stoddard became too obvious to ignore.
I coupled the two stories to play on two gothic concepts: ancestral ghosts and the strange sort of predestination they appear to exert in some people's lives. The myths of Ovid are just as alive today as they were when written and when Breugel was painting a millennia and half later.