IHYS aka Frank A. Diaz presents “I got this shit in a discount bin.”

I love comics. That’s probably not hard to figure out considering Billy Purgatory and the kinda stuff that I post on here all the time – I guess you can call me a comic-geek or whatever, I’ve never been offended by the terminology. If you gotta drop me into a category as something, I’d rather it be that then names that my ex’s have for me or something like, “He really drinks a lot of Mt. Dew. He’s a Dewist.”

As much as I love comics, I do not even come close to the level of immense-fandomosity that Frank A. Diaz has achieved in his lifetime.

A fixture of the comics scene online and all-about town in his native Miami – Frank lives the dream. Being an amazing artist himself, nothing gets Frank as excited like great comic book art and artists. He’s all into story too, but it’s the art that really sparks up his Light-Brite.

For those of you who aren’t so into comics – there’s a place in every comic book store in America that aficionados like us love to mine like a bunch’a Dwarves singing Hi-Ho – the treasure chest which is The Discount Bin:

In anticipation of the upcoming Billy2, Billy Purgatory is .99 on Amazon – so, “You could got that shit in a discount bin!” Click!

Author Jesse James Freeman delivers a comic book for the ages in novel form with this wild, tongue-in-cheek, imaginative creation that will suspend your disbelief. Jump in if you’re looking to immerse yourself in a unique and original fantasy tale with a sick twist….Billy Purgatory dares you to join him.

11 Questions of Badassary w/ Author Bryan Hall

Bryan Hall is a fiction writer and member of the Horror Writer’s Association living happily in a one hundred year old farmhouse deep in the mountains of North Carolina with his wife and three children.

Bryan Hall #represent!

He spent the first nineteen years of his life writing and reading voraciously, until pausing for some befuddling reason to spend a decade drinking whiskey and beer, playing in various garage bands, and rock climbing, eventually conquering practically every worthwhile cliff in western North Carolina.

Although a bad back has greatly hindered his rock climbing, he still considers himself an aficionado of good beer and great whiskey, which seem to add fuel to his demented imagination.

Growing up in the Appalachias, he’s soaked up decades of fact and fiction from the area, bits and pieces of which usually weave their way into his writing whether he realizes it at the time or not.

Bryan Hall is a badass and he’s the author of the sci-fi horror novel Containment Room 7, collection Whispers from the Dark, and The Vagrant (Southern Hauntings Saga).

The latest tome of badassary!

You can find him online at www.bryanhallfiction.com, and you should do so because you know how to read and like books!

And now, 11 Questions of Badassary!

1.                                                                                                                                       Bryan Hall is a fiction writer living in a one hundred year old farmhouse deep in the mountains of North Carolina with his wife and three children.

What’s the deal with writers and haunted houses?  Do you find that ghosts are attracted to writers?

Heh.  I wish my place was haunted.  Sadly, old doesn’t equal haunted.  It just means falling the hell apart and in need of constant repair.  I’d love to live in a haunted house, though.  At least it would prove there’s an afterlife. 

Yeah, that’s the same thing they told me about this place.

Is it all the typing?  The staying up all night, haunted by the characters in your head rattling chains?

Those characters are fickle.  Around ten or eleven in the evening, they all shut up.  It’s great for sleeping, hell for writer’s block.

I really gotta stop Googling stuff drunk.

2.                                                                                                                                         Sci-fi and horror are two genres that one would think go together like chocolate and peanut butter, yet – it also seems like it’s harder to blend the two together than one might think.  Do you find this to be true?

It’s harder to blend them than most realize, I think.  And especially difficult to please all the readers.  Most tend to say there’s either too much or not enough of one or the other genres.  I actually don’t do a lot of sci-fi stuff – a few shorts here and there and the novel are about it.  It’s a lot of work.

Not necessarily Sci-Fi/Horror, but I didn’t figure anyone would catch the Green Slime reference.

If loving this is wrong, I don’t wanna be right.

What elements from each genre do you feel play well together?  Which ones, not so much?

The isolation element is the obvious one.  The remote settings that are possible in a sci-fi story make it a perfect fit for horror since it adds the element of hopelessness.  The technology angle is tricky.  Too advanced, and it can actually negate most of that hopelessness and risk. 

Eh, screw it.

3.                                                                                                                                      What’s the worst meal you’ve ever eaten?

When I was a teenager my family bought a pack of those frozen corn dogs.  I opened them up and threw a couple in the oven.  The sweet scent of MSG coated, artificially preserved batter wrapped weenies filled the house and got my stomach nice and excited for the deliciousness soon to come.  When they were done, I took them out, applied a liberal dose of mustard, and proceeded to take two or three hefty, hungry teenager sized bites.  When the funky, rancid, rubbery taste filled my mouth I knew something was wrong.  The batter on the outside was fine, but the hot dogs inside were shriveled up gray things that looked like bloated, mummified worms.  I vomited for at least fifteen minutes and it took me years to return to a corn dog.  Even now I peel off a bit of batter and make sure there’s no surprise waiting inside. 

At the edge of the Walmart parking lot nobody can hear you scream.

4.                                                                                                                                        What is the geekiest celebrity sighting you’ve ever had/or could potentially have (mine was comics/novelist Warren Ellis, I was afraid he was going to smack me in the face with his cane)?

I honestly don’t think I’ve ever had one.  I don’t get out much, and all my emails to Garth Ennis inviting him over for some Jameson’s go unanswered.  I think I met Nikita Koloff once.  But that may have been a nightmare I’m just remembering as reality. 

Garth Ennis has been writing a lot of Punisher and working out.

5.                                                                                                                                         You stand in front of two doors. One leads to your past and will allow you to change the outcome of one personal event. The other leads to your future (ten years from now) and while you’ll be able to see how your life has turned out you can’t change the outcome. Which door do you go through?

That’s an easy one.  The past.  Racing headlong towards a future that you can’t change wouldn’t just be scary as hell, it would be kind of boring.  The past?  There’s plenty of stuff to pick from to change back there.  Not quite in my life, but in the lives of some people who were very close to me.  As long as my Mom didn’t meet me and think I was hot or anything, I’d choose the past door every time.

The Time/Space Continuum might not have been the only thing screwed up.

6.                                                                                                                                         Your best friend calls. You are tasked to make a trip to the Home Depot to pick up tarp.  Exact specifications are provided, including the color.  Do you immediately think the worst and contact the authorities, or do you play along?

Play along, man.  If for no other reason than to find out why the hell the color of it matters.

FYI, it was for this.

7.                                                                                                                                         You are given the opportunity to make one universal law for yourself – a creed which you will follow until the end of time – and you can also make a universal law for the rest of humanity which they will also follow until the end of time.  What are these new laws?  They cannot be the same law, and they must be polar opposites of one another?

My initial instinct leads me to say: Humanity-wise it would just be to stop proliferating nonsense and to actually learn about a subject before they begin to scream to the heavens about it being fact.  I love knowledge, and the amount of misinformation on everything from herbal supplements to Bigfoot is amazing and frustrating to me.  But that means that the polar opposite of that would require me to constantly accept everything I read or hear as fact and then proudly proclaim it to be such every chance I get.  With that in mind…I’ll just say my creed will be to sleep in on Sunday.  Everyone else has to get up early and get stuff done.  Yeah.  I like that idea.

Ripped like Bigfoot? GNC, bitches!

8.                                                                                                                                           Do you listen to music when you write/edit? What are some must have’s on your current playlist?

Can’t do it unless it’s instrumental stuff or something I’ve heard so much that it’s ingrained in my subconscious.  I listen to the NIN album “Ghosts” a lot since it’s instrumental, or anything from the Drive by Truckers or the Gaslight Anthem since I’ve heard them so much they’re not distracting.  But usually it’s just the sweet, supple sounds of silence.

9.                                                                                                                                        Most embarrassing moment?

I don’t shame easily.  But I remember one time in elementary school showing up to school with toothpaste crusted on my lips.  It was right about the time that boys start learning about sexy time hijinks, so you can imagine the jokes made at my expense thanks to that nice, white crust in the corners of my mouth.  Even that was funny, though.  I guess I don’t get that embarrassed. 

Something similar happened to Dr. Phil. That’s why he yells all the time.

10.                                                                                                                                         With the market being so flooded with entertainment choices – especially in the ebook game – what do you feel audiences are truly looking for in a good story?  What are some of the things you feel set your stories apart from other stories in the sci-fi and horror genres?

I wish I knew what they were looking for, man.  I think it really just comes down to a good entertaining read in the end.  If you write a story that entertains and makes them forget the stress of their lives for a while, I think they like it.  As for what sets mine apart, I try to write multilayered stuff that will stay with you after you read it.  I hope my stories are entertaining, but at the same time I strive to write things that have subtle nuances beneath the surface.  I don’t know if I always succeed, but some people seem to think so.

11.                                                                                                                                     What you got coming up?  What upcoming project are you most looking forward to tackling?

Coming up will be the next books in the Southern Hauntings Saga from Angelic Knight Press.  “The Vagrant” is already out and has gotten great reviews, and the next book (and the official start of the Saga) is titled “The Girl” and will be out soon.  It’s a southern gothic ghost series about a man who has the ability to see ghosts.  He travels the south, essentially being hired by various clients looking to use his talents.  But he’s also running from a past that he can barely even remember.  I’m looking forward to driving further down the winding road that the series is taking, and I’m also working on an unrelated novel dealing with schizophrenia, ghosts, demons, and the breakdown of families.  I’m really excited about finishing it up, although it’s been the toughest thing I’ve ever written.

We’d like to thank Bryan Hall for stopping by and Stacey Turner of Angelic Knight Press for  putting us in touch and letting us know about Bryan’s fantastic books!

Click!

Now, an attention-whoring break:

Billy Purgatory is Jesse James Freeman’s first novel. He’s also studied psychology and film and scripted comics. When he’s not writing books, Jesse James trains falcons to kill Leprechaun Robots, and will continue to do so until the world is relatively safe.

Jesse James recently contributed 4 essays to the book Write for the Fight: A Collection of Seasonal Essays, co-authored by Tess Hardwick (Riversong) and Tracey Hansen. All author proceeds will be donated to charities engaged in the fight against breast cancer.

Jesse James is currently working on Billy Purgatory and the Curse of the Satanic Five, MythCop, Vehemently Jones, Blood-Love, R. Cane, and Witches vs Robots.

Click!

Still Alien Abducted + Writers I Admire + Billy Purgatory FREE on Kindle

Greetings brothers and sisters of Planet Earth!  The Mozrian Saucer Armada pulled into a club on the not-so outer-ring of Saturn.  I thought the rave on Pluto last night would have shut these guys and green girls down – but if there’s anything I can report with any certainty to all of you who are scared that aliens are gonna blow you up – it’s that aliens are way too distracted getting their club on to worry about a full-scale invasion.

There's a reason Space-Aliens abducted Randy Quaid.

It’s seriously like you dropped a Kardashian into a shoe store and told her there was a free E! Channel Wedding Coupon hiding in one of the boxes of Jimmy Choo’s – the party is kicking until someone is stumbling out with a new financee and a fancy pair of strappy heels.

Now's your chance, dude - her Fiiii - Ance left her!

So anyway, club life in the outer cosmos doesn’t look like it’s stoppin’ anytime soon.  Meanwhile, while I’m out here trying to get alien girls to notice me – which is a whole set of problems beyond getting regular girls to notice me – back on Earth a lot of people have downloaded their FREE Kindle copy of Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird.  People seem to really be into the idea of checking out what Billy Purgatory is all about + they seem to like getting stuff free too – it’s my pleasure to provide both of these things to anyone who wants them.

Billy Purgatory cover art by the amazing Thomas Boatwright!

A writer who I follow on Twitter by the name of Tim Queeney – who wrote some really cool books that I like, George In London & The SHIVA Compression + runs a really funny site called Height of Eye, was nice enough to read Billy Purgatory and write up a review.  I guess I’m never really prepared fully for people to like the book enough to write a review, much less say stuff like this:

The first few pages of Billy Purgatory seal the deal. You quickly realize that this is no ordinary skatekid, vampire, monster, devil bird book. Billy Purgatory is a phantasmagorical thrill ride into a world of teenage love, blood dripping undead and one of the most outrageously entertaining birth scenes ever written. More than merely a humorous, stylish foray into the horror genre, however, this book also resonates with themes of love, loss and acceptance of the way that life can hold us back, even break us. The last thing you might expect about so entertaining and imaginative a book like this is how touching and ultimately true it is. If there is something about Billy Purgatory that might not work for some readers, it might be the book’s episodic/dreamlike structure that doesn’t move like a standard linear plot. But that shouldn’t stop anyone from grabbing a copy of Billy and going for a wild ride!

The fact he’s a fellow author who I respect and am a fan of just makes it all better.

Billy Purgatory is still bouncing around the Top Ten on Kindle’s Contemporary Fantasy list (#6 last time I checked) and it’s still FREE and I’d love for you to get yourself a copy and I’d love even more to hear what you think about it.  When I get back to Earth, I’m probably gonna charge money for it (if I’m not too hung over from all these future drinks to remember to change the price).

Click for Time Zombie Transportation!

Author Jesse James Freeman delivers a comic book for the ages in novel form with this wild, tongue-in-cheek, imaginative creation that will suspend your disbelief. Jump in if you’re looking to immerse yourself in a unique and original fantasy tale with a sick twist….Billy dares you to join him.

Other Earth-Badassary News that I heard about today (via Space-Twitter)…

Author R.B. Wood has re-launched his outstanding novel The Prodigal’s Foole today!

Check out this smoking hot cover – it’s sweeter than space-love!

Patricia Tallman, from Babylon 5 gave him an even sweeter cover blurb:  “GREAT RIDE! Loved reading it.  Couldn’t put it down!”

Classy hot space lady! Patricia Tallman, you're doing it right *sigh*

The Prodigal's Foole is FREE for a limited time for you to grab up too! Click!

A man can run from his past … but not his future.

Symon Bryson lives in self-imposed exile until Monsignor DuBarry goes missing and not even the most adept of the magic practitioners can determine the reason for the abduction. The clues lie buried in the past amidst epic battles and horrific losses but reliving that failed mission uncovers fresh challenges and fearsome threats that reunite his old team.

Symon must deal with his own hidden demons and confront the menace that threatens the delicate balance of power. When the darkest of all evils lures Symon into springing a long-planned trap, an unsuspecting world will confront the unthinkable.

When all that stands between Heaven and Hell is magic, more than faith will be tested.

Check out Tim Queeney too!

Click on George!

“George in London is funny and a touch irreverent, a fun voyage which, if it didn’t happen, we should wish it did. Tim Queeney captures the spirit of the young Washington and surrounds him with a cast of compelling characters, foremost among them the indomitable Darius Attucks. And if the personal history is made up, the social history is spot on. The customs, speech and eighteenth century settings are rendered with well-researched accuracy. For readers who might like their history leavened with humor, this book is for you.”

-James L. Nelson, author of the books, “George Washington’s Secret Navy: How the American Revolution Went to Sea” (McGraw Hill); “George Washington’s Great Gamble: And the Sea Battle That Won the American Revolution” (Ragged Mountain Press) and “With Fire and Sword: The Battle of Bunker Hill and the Beginning of the American Revolution” (Thomas Dunne Books).

Click the Missile!

The ultimate doomsday weapon: The top secret SHIVA Compression virus can automatically launch all U.S. nuclear missiles. Once released onto the nation’s communications networks, SHIVA cannot be turned off.

Air Force Lieutenant Perry Helion stumbles across a twisted cult that seeks to use SHIVA to produce an orgy of destruction. Perry and his team have only a few days to somehow stop the SHIVA virus from burrowing into the launch computers at every Minuteman missile base and sending the nuclear warheads arcing skyward to an all-consuming firestorm.

Walter Penko’s “The Onion Psychiatrist” [Graphic Novel]

Walter Penko produces an indie comic out of his garage in Sylvania, Illinois – it’s called The Onion Psychiatrist. Just as the title states, it’s about an onion that is also a psychiatrist.

The premise of the book is that people come in to talk about their fears, their lives, their phobias – and the onion psychiatrist sits quietly listening. Invariably, just as his patients will start to feel better about their problems, the drifting lines that Penko draws to indicate the odor of the onion psychiatrist will reach the patient’s nose and they will begin tearing up and crying uncontrollably.

The onion psychiatrist only listens, Penko never employs talk bubbles with the character. The silent dialogue from the onion psychiatrist is handled by the swirling odor-lines eminating from his spherical frame. In this way, the onion is a silent observor of life’s happenings, trapped within some self imposed solitary confinement and unable to effectively interact with those people who desperately need him the most.

His patients are shown panel by panel pouring out their souls about life’s tragic circumstances while the onion sits there, quietly, stewing in his own stench. It’s as if this stench is actually a pervading anti-noise that cuts the patients down panel per panel, until they can no longer keep their composure, and in an explosive mess of tears and Kleenex, they let it all go.

Onion Psychiatrist is a tale of life in our time.  Detached from the closeness of other humans and retreating further and further into stinky personal hells. The book employs this metaphor as its core theme – the pushing away from society until the stink of it all breaks us down and exposes the fragile souls within the armor we wear day to day. As tears are purged and emotions well to the surface we are all, inevitably, gasping for clean air.

Penko himself is one who has been gasping his entire life – reaching out, but not really knowing how or who to reach to. Comics were never his life’s ambition, and even now as a sort of cult figure in the indie comics world, he seems uneasy with the whole affair. He began Onion Psychiatrist after he was laid off from the computer manufacturing industry (The Intellivision crash of ’83).

He could only find odd jobs to sustain himself and his family (eleven cats, all named Whiskers). He began his comics career after becoming obsessed with the newspaper staple The Family Circus, but also credits Hi and Lois as a huge inspiration. Never into the idea of superheroes, he decided that if he was going to venture into the comics world he’d have to create something real and that spoke to people just like me.

Penko took the plunge, investing in materials and given the luxury of free time to work on the book after a successful appearance on the game show The Price is Right allowed him to win a Showcase Showdown. Selling off his prizes for cash (a new dishwasher, a grandfather clock, and a Chevy Cavalier), …

…he purchased art supplies and began working on what would become Onion Psychiatrist. Disheveled and walking around his house in a dirty bathrobe, he drank nothing but Sanka and obsessively chewed nicotine gum for inspiration.

His compulsions paid off eventually.

Even now with his cult status and his awards he still doesn’t feel he’s arrived. Something seems to still naw at him – as if he’s the subject of his own comic. The book, he admits, has been cathartic for him.  He ventures out more, joining a square dancing class recently as well as participating in war re-enactments of the US occupation of Grenada.

“I guess…” as he ends our talk through his locked screen door, “I guess I just haven’t smelt that stank yet – that stinked.  You know? I guess I ain’t got a good enough snitched of my own stink, that which comes from my own onion. It ain’t made them teardrops flow.”

As the front door proper closed, I heard the rhythmn of many locks snapping into place and I left there feeling I had learned something about the human condition. I hummed a tune, as I lazily made my way to the next house on the block, still trying to give away all those copies of Watchtower that weighed me down so – but with a little more spring in my step.

* * * * *

I am not the genius that Walter Penko is, and I have never written a comic about Sanka or Onions, but…

Billy Purgatory happens to be the most badass skateboarder and sweet talker any broad can meet–even at the age of ten. He is also the target of supernatural forces he can’t understand, and doesn’t want to.

Billy just can’t seem to avoid all things Monster. Growing up, he encounters Devil Birds, gypsies, Time Zombies and vampires (and not the kind you want to bring home to your Pop, either). He tries to convince himself they’re not real by joining the army, fixes cars and even goes to Vegas. But whenever Billy thinks he’s put it all behind him, a monster shows up, and it’s usually in the form of the beautiful Anastasia…

Click for Time Zombie Transportation to Amazon!

Billy Purgatory is Jesse James Freeman’s first novel. He’s also studied psychology and film and scripted comics. When he’s not writing books, Jesse James trains falcons to kill Leprechaun Robots, and will continue to do so until the world is relatively safe.

Guy Davis does Billy Purgatory pin-up / Moses Jaen makes it rain!

Guy Davis is an artist and badass.  His work in the comic book world is the stuff of legends: an American comic book artist primarily known for his work on Sandman Mystery Theatre and various Hellboy-related comics. He has also done work for various White Wolf, Inc. books as well has his own series, Nevermen and The Marquis. *(wiki)

My friend Moses Jaen, an artist of equal badassary, talked Mr. Davis into doing a Billy Purgatory pin-up page which is sweeter than a Paula Deen Triple-Sugar-Buttah-Cake with a Guinness-float-BBQ-flavor-ice-cream-chaser!

You’ve seen fire, now see THE RAIN

Billy Purgatory art by Guy Davis

Guy Davis and I shared some emails, as I wanted to have his blessing to post this on my site – I can report that he is gracious, a gentleman, and a scholar – as anyone who had anything to do with the fucking B.P.R.D. would have to be!

Moses Jaen has helped me every step of the way, back when Billy Purgatory was just a crazy comic idea.  Here is the first Billy sketch Moses ever did, and a page from the comic we produced and peddled a few years back at San Diego Comic-Con.

Billy Purgatory and the Curse of the Satanic Five art by Moses Jaen

Page from the original Billy Purgatory comic from Blinky's Zine pencils by Moses Jaen

Thank you Guy Davis and thank you Moses Jaen for making nerd-dreams a reality!

Moses Jaen is an artist and sculptor who lives in NYC. You should check out his portfolio by clicking this ass-knocking Godzilla sculpture he did!

Click for Time Zombie Transportation to Amazon!

Billy Purgatory happens to be the most badass skateboarder and sweet talker any broad can meet–even at the age of ten. He is also the target of supernatural forces he can’t understand, and doesn’t want to.

Billy just can’t seem to avoid all things Monster. Growing up, he encounters Devil Birds, gypsies, Time Zombies and vampires (and not the kind you want to bring home to your Pop, either). He tries to convince himself they’re not real by joining the army, fixes cars and even goes to Vegas. But whenever Billy thinks he’s put it all behind him, a monster shows up, and it’s usually in the form of the beautiful Anastasia…

Billy Purgatory is Jesse James Freeman’s first novel. He’s also studied psychology and film and scripted comics. When he’s not writing books, Jesse James trains falcons to kill Leprechaun Robots, and will continue to do so until the world is relatively safe.

Jesse James recently contributed 4 essays to the book Write for the Fight: A Collection of Seasonal Essays, co-authored by Tess Hardwick (Riversong) and Tracey Hansen. All author proceeds will be donated to charities engaged in the fight against breast cancer. The book is currently a Nook First exclusive.

Ask Dr. Badassary / and Gaea’s Chosen: Event Horizon

People have been sending in their medical questions to me – at first I wasn’t sure why.  True, I am a renaissance badass – kind of a da Vinci Vitruvian dude meets Evel Knievel – but I wasn’t sure how any of that Dr. Quinn medicine business was gonna mix in.  People normally ask me stuff about “what do I do if I get my leg caught in a Bigfoot trap?” or “if I was on fire and killing zombies how many rounds could I get off before the flames overtake me and I’d have to jump into a tub of Robitussin?”

So the more I thought about all that kinda stuff – I realized that FIRST AID might be important with the end of the world coming up soon and all – and that immanent attack by the aliens from V (old school V because that shit is real – new V is fake and made up like Taylor Swift).

"I'm in, just don't take EVERYTHING off."

Outer-space is a complicated place – especially when love is involved!  Take for example: Gaea’s Chosen: Event Horizon by Cara Michaels, a book that’s full of all kinds of space-badassary and cool future-swords and meta-humans and a hot protagonist (what?  Gemma Bryant sounds like a hottie-ass-kicker and I have no filter when it comes to hotness-ass-kickery) – and for the ladies there’s Marcus Gilpin and a cat-eyed-meta dude (if you’re into that kinda stuff).

This is the second installment of Cara’s space-serial, part one being Gaea’s Chosen: The Mayday Directive, and I like how this is all coming together.  The first episode was more Gemma’s story, and you weren’t so sure about Dr. Marcus Gilpin – he’s a kind of pissed-off space-dude who isn’t so sure he made the right decision coming on this journey into outer-space.  This second episode gives you a little flashback info on Marcus and his lost love, Tegan – and now I feel like I know what this guy is all about and I instantly was sympathetic to his plight – in space nobody can hear your romantic-angst so you’re forced to step it up or you get your heart tossed out an airlock.  You know, it’s not all love-in-spaaaaaaccce – but that part of it definitely makes the characters real, believable, and gives you that much more reason to care about them when the crazy-cosmos-action cranks into overdrive!

Check it!

Dr. Marcus Gilpin left Earth with the woman he loved, but the very science he put his faith in promised her to another man…

Six months after waking in unknown parts of the galaxy, Marcus Gilpin is still recovering from a mauling that nearly killed him. His love gone, his ship lost—a crew of twenty now numbers only five, and he should have been among the dead.

He’s not entirely certain death wouldn’t be a relief—until he learns Gaea’s Ark isn’t alone, and a distress call reveals an unbelievable truth: The love he’d thought lost forever is still very much alive, and she’ll need his help to stay that way.

Gaea’s Chosen: Selected to settle a new world twenty light years from home…only things didn’t quite go as planned.

In matters of medicine, 13 is everyone's lucky number.

Meanwhile, back on Earth suddenly Ask Dr. Badassary!

Tim:  could you discuss the priapistic mechanism in the female? With examples and 8 x 10 glossies?

Tim, it all starts like this.

Quill Shiv:  If my ankle is broken and my hands barely work anymore, does this mean I get a gov’t issued hot assistant/nurse? Oh, wait…that’s not a medical question… Um…I’m ailing..and I can’t decide which would help more: 4 or 5 helpers around the house?

Quill Shiv, according to what I saw on C-SPAN this morning you're eligible for one of these.

January Jones Assistant Anonymous:  Is there value in eating placenta?

I don't know, the going rate is cheaper than my ebook plus it comes with BBQ chips - sounds like value to me!

Sex in the City cast Anonymous:  Hey Doc, my third superfluous nipple aches–is that normal?

No, it's not normal - but I'm not saying it's wrong.

#dancedancedancemachine:  Where do babies come from?

#dancedancedancemachine, this is where babies come from. Yes, I'm saying it's very wrong.

@Cinderella:  I have lesions on my…er…face. Yeah. Or maybe they’re kind of wart like.

@Cinderella, totally cure-able. Stay away from those creams they sell at CVS that are for other parts of the body - the normally 'happy' parts.

Vehemently Jones Anonymous:  Female priapism is called clitorism. I’m sure you can figure out the rest. But…clitorism. What kind of word is that? It makes it sound like having a clitoris is an ‘ism’, a disease. Wow. I don’t think I have typed the word clitoris so much!!

Dear Anonymous, I don't know what you're talking about and have never heard of any of that. But here are some pictures of other things that don't exist...

If you have more questions for Dr. Badassary, hit me up on Twitter or Facebook!

Make it rain and get your space on…

Click to get your ass tossed across the universe!

Cara Michaels is a dreamer of legendary proportions (just ask her about the alien pirate spaceship invasion). Her imagination is her playground and nothing is quite so much fun for her as building new characters and new worlds with at least an edge of the fantastic. She’s writing whenever the opportunity presents itself and can typically be found tinkering with half a dozen projects. Occasionally all at once.

She calls Florida ‘home’ when she’s not busy swearing about giant bugs and humidity. She has one super-cool fiancé who doesn’t (usually) mind the hours spent writing, editing, writing some more, and editing a lot more, one son with aspirations of becoming either a great wizard or an artist, and three cats who enjoy sleeping on her works in progress.

Badass Sci-Fi Author Cara Michaels!

Follow Cara Michaels on Twitter!

And if you’re curious about what sort of mental problems I might have that makes me blog in this fashion…

Click for Time Zombie Transportation!

Billy Purgatory is Jesse James Freeman’s first novel. He’s also studied psychology and film and scripted comics. When he’s not writing books, Jesse James trains falcons to kill Leprechaun Robots, and will continue to do so until the world is relatively safe.

***Jesse James Freeman is not ACTUALLY a doctor, and since a brief walk-on stint (ended by set-security) on General Hospital he doesn’t even play one on TV.  You should not listen to anything he says and consult a real doctor if there is something wrong with you – in fact, you should never listen to ANYTHING that Jesse James Freeman ever tells you because he is a liar – a confident liar – but ultimately, a liar.

Billy Purgatory “Strips” by Joe Schmidt!

I had this idea early on that Billy Purgatory could be an open-universe – I have my take on things and that’s what ended up Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird and what will end up in Billy Purgatory and the Curse of the Satanic Five.  But what if other people took the character in different directions – what would that look like?

Magic isn't just Victoria's Secret!

Joe Schmidt is a friend and a cartoonist – he’s been playing in the BillyVerse on his blog, Welcome to the Terror Dome!  I dig his take and thought it’d be cool to feature his Billy WorldView here:

Thank’s Joe – you are definitely a #rainmaker!

And if novels that make sweet love to your Kindle are your thing…

Billy Purgatory happens to be the most badass skateboarder and sweet talker any broad can meet–even at the age of ten. He is also the target of supernatural forces he can’t understand, and doesn’t want to.

Billy just can’t seem to avoid all things Monster. Growing up, he encounters Devil Birds, gypsies, Time Zombies and vampires (and not the kind you want to bring home to your Pop, either). He tries to convince himself they’re not real by joining the army, fixes cars and even goes to Vegas. But whenever Billy thinks he’s put it all behind him, a monster shows up, and it’s usually in the form of the beautiful Anastasia…

Click the picture for Time Zombie transportation to Amazon!

I found this book to be endlessly imaginative. The combination of wit and humor Mr. Freeman gave to his main character, Billy Purgatory, was age-appropriate and clever. I’m impressed with just how engaging the plot was, considering this work falls into the Young Adult category. It’s quite a feat to write a story that young folks and adults can enjoy together. Freeman has done just that. Recommend.

* * * * *

1. It is far from a stale regurgitation – The themes in the story maybe be common, the elements may be a repetition of those in many books in the same genre – i.e. vampires, zombies – the author takes the typical and makes it extraordinary, a unusual and refreshing approach. The plot is certainly enjoyable and even has you on the edge of your seat from time to time -

2. The hero, Billy, is atypical if anything – The main character (Billy Purgatory), whom we are introduced to at the tender age of 10, is a atypical if not unique hero. Sure he falls for a girl out of the blue but – but it’s not from across the playground through the bars of a jungle gym… he falls for her in the midst of a harry situation that would have any adult shivering in their boots. The story meanders along Billy’s life as he goes from a 10 yr old ready to take the world on to an adult seeking redemption.

3. The stage is beautifully crafted – From the scenery to the secondary characters, to the humor and wit clearly evident the author, Jesse James (Freeman) has certainly made a splash with this debut novel. The intricate details draw you in and have you invested in the story before you even realize it.

4. It’s doesn’t talk down – So many books for young adults these days don’t give kids enough credit – they baby kids with watered down themes and trite characters. Billy Purgatory as a story gives the young reader a certain level of respect; it realizes that there are certain things the young reader likes (even comes to expect) and delivers them in such a matter that it never strays to far to the left of being appropriate.

5. It’s Generational – This book has everything from ancient gods, to monsters, vampires and time zombies; the author made a clear and decently executed attempt to craft a story that can be well loved by adults and children alike.

* * * * *

I was hooked on this book based on the description alone! And once I actually started reading it, well it was all over from there! Forget sleep, forget eating, I even thought about staying home and skipping work! Which would have been bad so of course I didn’t do it! But you get the point ;)

I am not ashamed to admit I totally have a crush on Billy Purgatory. The kid is bad ass, plain and simple. He is a skateboarder and that’s always a plus. He’s charming in a bratty sort of way. And he has this scar running down his face, which sort of makes you think Billy’s into something dangerous.

Which of course, he IS!

From vampires to Time zombies, Goddesses and legends, this book literally has it all. And to figure out why he seems to be stuck smack-dab in the middle of monster central, Billy must travel the world in search of someone he thought lost forever in order to find the answers to his past.

I am on the edge of my seat waiting for the next installment of the Billy Purgatory series. Keep an eye out, folks. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Billy hit the big screen someday!

Leprechaun-Robot Awareness Day is Uponeth Ye!!!

Will YOU be prepared?  Re-setting your clock ain’t gonna cut it when the green beer hits the grate!

"They will steal your souls. They will enslave the undead husks left behind."

 

Click for Time Zombie transportation to Amazon!

The Tess Hardwick’s “Riversong” / Jesse James’ “Billy Purgatory” Conspiracy!

I have gathered you all here today to talk about my new novel, the epic love story of our age, Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird. There has never been (I quizzed some chicks hanging out in the Romance section of Barnes & Noble) a tale which so richly embodies what it means to be hopelessly in love. If you’re looking for shirtless pirate dudes that look like that guy who sells that fake butter on TV, you have come to the right place.

This should be an internet rule: DO NOT Google 'shirtless pirate dudes'

Billy Purgatory is, I dare say, the new template for romantical fiction. I know tons about this subject, being in touch with my feminine side and all that nonsense, and it will be my pleasure to show you just exactly what an expert I am and prove my point.

Why is this not a relationship status choice on Facebook?

I am friends with tons of writers, but the ones who I really feel a connection with are those who are in the heart-string-pulling business. My sisters and I are in the trenches every day, sipping lattes and typing away on our laptops with the Hello Kitty stickers, trying to bring some class and culture to the general readership population of the world. It’s not only our goal, but our immense joy, to push on your little cold-dead-heart.

You tell him, sister!

That heart of yours: The very emotionally destitute organ that got all stomped on the last time you trusted someone’s profile pictures were current on Match.com.  That heart that believed the phrase, “It was just a barista, they aren’t real people.”, or, “How can I be fully invested in our relationship when my guild is taking such a beating in World of Warcraft? That just wouldn’t be fair to you.”

Love is a tough business, especially for a rainmaker. I have taken my knocks to the head from the whack-a-romance hammer. People like to categorize me and my writing into these really unfair boxes – they say I’m not in touch with my feelings and that I don’t understand what it means to share stuff, and – like – talk to other human beings about adult topics. I am here to express to you that I have feelings, and they are legitimate. I am not some reality-TV automaton attention-whore who makes it all about me. I want to share secret love poem what-have-you’s with that special someone.

Don’t try and put Baby in a corner! I will not let you box me in.  Just because I like barbecue, and motorcycle explosions, and gunfire, it doesn’t make me at all distant to your inner monologue of candy-cane hopes and dreams, or crying, or beautiful sunsets.

In life, and in literature, it’s time for love outside the box!  Okay, that just didn’t sound right…

That'll teach that dude to smack-talk Downton Abbey.

Anyway.

Nobody has taught me more about girl-type books than author Tess Hardwick.

I didn't have a Tess comic book panel to put here. I did consider Gwen Stacy, though.

She wrote a book called Riversong, and when I told her I was going to read it she said, “It’s a girl book.”  What did that mean exactly? It had girls in it? I like girls just fine. So, I read it and I figured out that what she meant was it had to do with ‘girl problems’. This was unfamiliar territory for me at first, I’d never read anything like it, aside from Wonder Woman comics – and those have an entirely different kind of girl problem – it usually involves Wonder Woman getting kidnapped and tied up. It really makes me think that actual women don’t have anything to do with the creative process of Wonder Woman.

No, Wonder Woman is not kidnapped and tied up in that barn. What is wrong with you people?

What surprised me, were all the parallels I was able to draw between Billy Purgatory and Riversong. The VP at Booktrope, Katherine Sears, explained to me that Riversong was actually something called ‘women’s contemporary fiction’. I asked her what Billy Purgatory was considered and she told me that she had to get off the phone and go to a meeting.

Suddenly, we're at Billy Purgatory and we're back to comics images. Notice the lack of tears this time.

Genre classification should not be sexist – genres should stay out of women’s utereses. So, if Tess can do it – so can I. I have pulled some excerpts from Riversong to illustrate my point. I didn’t ask permission to print any of them, but I have my lawyer on speed-dial.

Riversong is about a woman named Lee whose life becomes unhinged when she finds out that her husband took some money from the mob to start up their tech company and live their fancy life in Seattle. Billy Purgatory is about a boy whose life becomes unhinged because he talks to a giant drunken rooster in his backyard and finds out that his Pop has been lying to him about why his Mom ran off and left them. Mobsters are cool and so are giant drunken Devil Birds – so that’s EXHIBIT A.

Where did all the hot chicks in love go? Why is Quincy M.E. there?

In Riversong, Lee is forced to go on the classic Campbell Hero’s Adventure of self-discovery and learn about herself. In Billy Purgatory, said protagonist is also forced to go on a quest and kinda learns nothing about himself. This does not negate EXHIBIT B in any way, because while Billy remains partially confused throughout the entirety of the book, he loves barbecue potato chips and Tess’s Lee Tucker starts a restuarant in her home town. I feel we’re both going with the tried and true Rachael Ray trope of homestyle comforts in the midst of epic tragedy. So, score one for me again!

Hiding behind that jar of Prego is a love beast ready to be unchained.

Lee meets this guy who’s a Fireman/Musician (I know, it writes itself) and falls madly in love – yet, she’s cautious and gunshy because she’s been hurt before and isn’t sure who she is, or, even worse, who to trust.  Allow me to examplificate using Tess Hardwick’s own words:

He smiled but there was something in his eyes and how he wanted to kiss him then, to feel his body next to her. He pulled the ponytail holder from her hair, and she felt him breathe her in and out, the scent of his breath chocolate.
“Does your hair smell like strawberries because of it’s color?”

-Riversong

Billy Purgatory meets Anastasia, who is a vampire/sociopath that repeatedly tries, at best, to bite him, and at worst, to kill him. Billy isn’t sure if he should trust her either, because, although she’s really hot, she might not be the best choice for a compassionate and fullfilling relationship:

Long black hair swayed about her back to his approach. She moved in this really great way, like the top part of her body wasn’t attached to the lower. She was the Goth-kid at belly dancing class,and as her hair swung from one side to another, Billy got the flash of gold hoop earrings, which might have been the most out of place fashion enhancement he had ever seen a cold-blooded killer wear.

She downed the beer and threw the now empty bottle at the barred doors of the Tiki bar. A shriek left her lips and mated with the breaking glass to form one continuous frightful war cry.  Grown men screamed in terror from the other side of the barred door. Anastasia was having a good time, and she laughed at their fright.

She looked good. Billy knew he really shouldn’t be staring at her ass. He was rubbing his neck as he watched her, he realized that he
had stopped and his full attention was on her. Billy pulled it together and jerked his hand from his neck like he’d just touched a hot stove.
This action came fast enough so it ended before she looked back and saw him. Ana had been just about to swing the crowbar at the doors of the bar.
“Billy Purgatory.” Her face lit up even more. “Want a beer?

-Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird
EXHIBIT C: emotionally-unavailable ties it all together.

Anastasia: doesn't bring milk-shakes to the yard

And meanwhile, in Riversong, to further complicate her love life, Lee just happens to be pregnant with her dead ex-husband’s baby (I know where you think I’m going with this – it’s not zombies this time). Billy Purgatory, while not pregnant, has to be born – and this happens in a nifty little flashback I came up with because I watched too much LOST.

Please, grab your Jiffy-Pop and compare and contrast with me:

The doctor, hair disheveled, was between Lee’s legs. “Just one more push and we’ve got a baby.”
Lee flopped back onto the hospital bed, looking first at Tommy and then Ellen. She’d pushed for two hours and she was beyond fatigue, almost delirious. “I can’t do it. I’m too tired.”
Tommy’s voice was in her ear. “Just one more push and you get to see the baby.”

-Riversong

VS…

“What’s all the commotion?” asked the Doctor. He checked his arm and realized he’d forgotten to put on his wristwatch.
“End times, Doctor!” Humphrey screamed and sounded like
one of his little sisters when he used to scare them on Halloween.
Karma had never met the big teddy-bear of a man in any situation where it was rooting for Humphrey. “Dead moved out of the graveyard.”
Emelia drew the sword as the doctor readjusted his ass on the stool. Doc Mitchum didn’t seem at all fazed by the prospect of the end of days, or didn’t hear, or was too pre-occupied by the idea of having a sandwich if this baby could ever be squirmed out.
“One more big push. Really try this time. I know it’s hard for your generation to get excited about anything without rock music blaring.”
The doctor watched little Billy Purgatory making his entrance into the world: mother and son were really trying, as if they were as anxious as the Doc to move on to the next act.
“Come on out, bucket-head,” Doc Mitchum coaxed in his googoo voice. “You got a worthless hippie’s life to lead.

-Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird

In conclusion, what have we learned (beyond the fact that I’m a romance/girl-book genius!)?

A)  Finally giving yourself completely over to love and staring into the eyes of the fireman/musician that you’ve come to care for deeply while working through the pain, and magic, of childbirth – comforted in it all by the realization that you have finally completed your quest to build the perfect life for yourself and those you love.  That is love right there. That is high romance!

Alright Ladies, you read the whole post almost so I Google'd 'Fireman Musician' for ya. You're welcome.

B)  Unsheathing your stolen, dark magically enhanced, +5 sword of undead slaying while giving birth to the skateboarder who is probably (not) going to save the planet from the forces of evil – EXHIBIT D: it just don’t get any more women’s contemporary fiction than that.

Read an amazing book of essays and help in the fight against breast cancer!

Write for the Fight: A Collection of Seasonal Essays  (all author proceeds for this book donated to the fight!)  Tess Hardwick & Tracey Hansen along with 11 other writers…

Click on the picture to be magically transported to B&N and help in the fight!

Riversong by Tess Hardwick:  When Lee Tucker’s husband commits suicide, he leaves her pregnant and one million dollars in debt to a loan shark. Out of options, she escapes to her deceased mother’s dilapidated house located in a small Oregon town that, like her, is financially ruined, heartbroken and in desperate need of a fresh start. Lee’s resilience leads to a plan for a destination restaurant named Riversong, to new chances for passion and love, and to danger from her dead husband’s debt as her business blooms.

Click for Riversong for Nook!

Jesse James Freeman wrote Billy Purgatory: I am the Devil Bird.  It’s a stupid book about guy stuff that has vampires and Time Zombies and Sword Witches and skateboards in it.  The cool part about it is all the romance, mystery, and exotic intrigue involved as intelligent female characters try their best to interact with Billy and drag any emotion out of him they can get.  He, like all men, just doesn’t know how to express his feelings and is completely undeserving of their love.

Click to Billy Purgatory for Nook!