Archive for April, 2009

Ms. Maxfield, While You Were Out

zm_stnachos_coverlg5 While I was in Oregon having (arguably) the worst two weeks evah, St. Nacho’s was honored with the Joyfully Reviewed Recommended Read! Oooh shiny!

               jr-rr-22

The reviewer, Sabella said some lovely things and you can read her review here.

St. Nacho’s is available from Loose Id in ebook format here.

And in Print from Amazon Here.

(And it goes without saying that you can always write down the ISBN number of a book from a Monolithic Internet Entity Bookstore and take it to your Friendly Local Independent Bookseller and ask them to special order it for you, thereby preserving All We Hold Dear.*)

*You know it’s late at night when I resort to Spurious Capitalization. If my daughter were awake I’d be covered in Red Pen.

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 23rd

Uncategorized

Hoist With My Own Petard

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Support Your Local Independent Booksellers!  

But before you do that, or after, get a load of this:

I now have four titles 

currently available for sale

HERE

(squee)

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 20th

Uncategorized

All Me All The Time

It’s official. If you aren’t sick of me yet it’s only a matter of time


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Physical Therapy is scheduled for release by Loose Id on May 12, 2009

Notturno (NSFW ;-) Cover Art HERE) is scheduled for release by MLR Press in June 2009, exact date TBA.

ePistols at Dawn, (no cover art yet, but you’ll be the first to see it here) is scheduled for release from Samhain Publishing on July 7, 2009.

AND St. Nacho’s will available in print at fine booksellers everywhere:

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 17th

Uncategorized

This Just In

zm_stnachos_coverlg-copyThanks to those of you who liked St. Nacho’s and were so kind about it Loose Id, my publisher, has decided to release the book in print. This is a tremendous thrill for me and I want to say thank you for your support.   

Soon it will be available from Internet booksellers, and of course you may also order it for purchase from your local independent bookseller, as it will be available to them through Ingrams or Baker & Taylor.  All you need is this:

Saint Nacho’s

ISBN: 978-1-59632-829-7
Author: Z.A. Maxfield  

used-bookstore

Please support your LOCAL INDEPENDENT BOOK SELLER!

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 15th

Uncategorized

Guest Blogging

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I’m guest blogging at Untreed Reads, here. I’m not sure anything I say requires a great deal of attention, but it is very nice (indeed) to be asked.

~ZAM~

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 14th

Uncategorized

My Homies Are Covering the Amazon Fail

liberty_leading_the_pplI know I sent a letter to my Yahoo Group, Zamaxfield’s Cyber Cafe about the Amazon practice of surreptitiously seeing to it that GLBT titles–not mine actually, but some very fine literary and scholarly titles–do not get on bestseller lists by removing their sales ranking.  I found this mildly disturbing seeing that they allow books like “The Anarchist’s Cookbook” to have a rank.  I would argue that the practice of manipulating data to maintain a bestseller list that is hand-picked to be free of any and all references to GLBT culture is more than insidious.  I would argue that if Bret Easton Ellis’s book American Psycho can be on the bestseller list, so can Nathaniel Frank’s Unfriendly Fire.  But I don’t have to. My homies at the L.A. Times have argued it for me. Here

You can make up your own minds, but as for me, I’d rather I choose the books I read than allow some droid at Amazon to do it. And until they resolve the Issue, Barnes and Noble is my bookstore. Amazon Prime be damned.

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 12th

Uncategorized

New Review for Sparky

zam_crossingborders_coverfr1I got a very nice new review for Crossing Borders at LiveJournal.  Cboy Junkie very kindly said:

I know a story is really working for me when I start reading at say about 9:00 pm and wild horses couldn’t drag me from the book. Well it was about 1:00 am this morning when I finished Crossing Borders. What can I say, I devoured this read and absolutely loved it. 

You can read the rest of the review here! 

And this seems like a perfectly fine opportunity to show off the book trailer that my daughter made for me (once again):

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqgiHRyoeaM[/youtube]

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 11th

Uncategorized

New Tag Line

I’ve been trying to think of a tag line for my work that speaks to me, and I’ve finally got it. You can see it, right up at the top of this page, on the header underneath my name.  

Love is the perfect wave.  

This isn’t those little nekkid statues we used to give our moms on Mother’s Day with their their saying of “Love is…” everything from a big hug to a warm kitty to a man with the perfect vasectomy scar.  

Nope. Nah uh.   

This is LOVE baby, and it feels like… mmmnh.  

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0Pw7vKtqpo[/youtube]

Meet Laird Hamilton.  

Passion is a paradox. Passion is a mystery. Passion is chaos. 

My passion? Is Love.

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 7th

Uncategorized

Delusional In the Pacific Northwest

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I admit it. Most of the time the key to my cheerful attitude and optimism with regard to my writing is partly due to a certain… well I hate to use the word delusional… part of my nature.  But yeah. Let’s use the ‘D’ word.  I’m a fairly ordinary person. My kids throw up on me. I huff and puff walking up hills. I’d rather have traveled than travel in general, but once I get on the road, I find that I’m reluctant to return, I always want to see what’s around the next bend. I want to help others when they’re sick or unhappy, but frankly don’t have a lot of skills for that sort of thing.  

What I do have, and it counts, is a certain willingness to try stuff.  I like to help out, and that makes a difference.  I carry a certifiable ability to make people laugh even when they’re in pain, which can help sometimes when nothing else does.  

Right now I’m in Oregon visiting my mother–who is quite sick–and I’m able to make her laugh and deflect family tension. I can do what needs to be done while doctors do what they need to do and caregivers…give care.  All of this explains why I have spent the morning in the Les Schwab Tire Center waiting for them to fix her car. They have free WiFi and I can pick up emails on my laptop.  

The delusional part is that I can sit here, in a small town tire dealership and still see myself as an internationally known author.  *Snort*. I can do that sort of self important shuffling of papers and flip through my book covers. I can pull up a websites where it shows me the places you can buy my books in Dubai and India and Australia.  I can see that people pirate my work in places where they can get in real trouble for reading it.  If there is only one person on another continent who reads me, that’s one more than I would have reached without writing anything.  And that’s cool. Maybe it’s not even as delusional as I like to think it is.  

Okay, so I’ve set up the scene. I’m sitting in the tire center. I’m drinking my diet Mountain Dew. There’s nothing but men, (and a hell of a lot of flannel) as far as the eye can see.  (There’s a man who works here who is so hot and has an amazing array of tattoos who probably will find his description in one of my books someday should he read them.)  And I pull up my mail and someone has sent me the kindest letter about how much they like the book Crossing Borders.  How he’s forwarded the letter to Loose Id as well, and let them know he thinks they’re lucky to have me in their stable.  (!!)

How KIND!  Thanks for all the support, folks, I seriously couldn’t do it without you!

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 6th

Uncategorized

Review for St. Nachos

zm_stnachos_coverlgToday at Jessewave’s blog spot Jenre, a guest reviewer, gave my book St. Nacho’s a great review and 4.75 stars out of 5.  What was very kind was that this was a book she chose to read even though she didn’t care for another book I wrote, and I am really grateful she gave me another chance, as an author, to strut my stuff.

She actually said:

One of the highlights of this book is ZA Maxfield’s lyrical, evocative prose. She has the ability to take emotion and describe it succinctly, packing in feeling in every line.

Oh my goodness, I have to say that’s a really nice thing.  You can read the rest of her very thoughtful and thought provoking review here.

One of the things my editors tease me about is the necessity for a certain amount of terrified author hand-holding that they have to do the night before a release, when they’re getting frantic emails from me that say things like “It’s going to be okay, right?” and “Even though it’s different, someone will like it, right?”

I admit I haven’t been doing this long enough–and I doubt I ever will get to that place–where I have enough confidence that I can carry a story line into new territory without the need for a little reassurance.  St. Nacho’s is a dark and sometimes EMO piece.  The main character is burdened by guilt and neurotically inarticulate.  It stood to reason, for me anyway, that the person who might be able to reach him best might be someone who didn’t try to communicate with him in the usual way.  BTW, I got a lovely note from someone who’d dated a deaf man who told me that it brought back fond memories of the struggle to make one’s self understood.  

physical-therapyPhysical Therapy, the sequel, is scheduled to be released in May. I thought I’d show the cover and share a little of the story here because it seems appropriate.  

When Jordan Jensen moves to St. Nacho’s he has one goal in mind.  Starting over.  He wants to reconnect with best friends Cooper and Shawn, yet is uncertain of his welcome.  He has the skills to get a job, but isn’t sure any prospective employer can get past the time he spent in jail for an alcohol-related death. He’s past the worst part of his life, but knows it will haunt him forever. Jordan plans a life of quiet service.  One thing he knows: finding love is entirely too much to ask.

On the first day of his new job, Jordan meets Ken Ashton. Ken has every reason to hate Jordan for his past and only one to seek him out.  For some reason he can’t explain, Ken needs Jordan’s touch. Ken finds healing within Jordan’s warmth and strength and Jordan discovers he wants to give Ken everything he needs. Without entirely understanding it, Ken and Jordan develop a powerful emotional and erotic connection, but Ken must help Jordan find the faith to trust it. Unexpected help comes from the people of Santo Ignacio–and the town itself–where Physical Therapy can be a path toward spiritual healing and love.


The windshield wipers on my old Honda slapped in time to the music on the radio, such an eerie coincidence I changed radio stations, going to one after another, finally settling on a Jazz radio station playing a soft blues piece. As the droplets merged they formed rivulets, gathered each other, and ran in slashes down the glass beneath the inadequate light. Slowing to a crawl alongside the black skeleton of a wooden pier, I stopped the car and got out, hardly aware that the rain came down and lashed at my clothing.

The pier was long, dark, and deserted. Its pilings groaned against the rushing water as it flowed and swirled around them. It seemed to me that the pier was standing uncertainly, like a dog watching in horror as water sucks and pulls at the sand beneath its paws when a wave recedes. I often froze as I felt my own feet being sucked out from under me in those days.

 For the first time in almost a year, my hands itched for a cigarette; I could feel it there between my fingers like a phantom limb. I started off walking, the battered structure drawing me closer by the sheer enormity of its desolation.

From where I stood by the pier, I could see the waterfront businesses in tiny Santo Ignacio. The lights were out now, at this hour of the morning. I’d made my decision to come to Santo Ignacio late that afternoon, impulsively throwing everything I owned into a few boxes and bags. I’d said goodbye to my roommate and driven off. I’d always known I’d end up here. I just never knew when I’d finally decide it was time to come.

I had arrived at almost eleven p.m. and checked into my dreary motel room, falling onto the bed and into a deep sleep almost immediately. I’d slept for a little over two hours but then woke up fully refreshed, eager to get a look at this tiny seaside town.

It was close to three in the morning, and I was the only living thing stirring for miles. I crunched across the sand in hiking boots, just a little ways, until I could make out the unlit sign for Nacho’s Bar, where my friend Cooper worked. It gave me a sense of satisfaction to see it, not that I’d return during the day when it was inhabited. I just… it felt good knowing it was there; the place that Cooper told me about. I was glad to know it really existed. That I’d found it.

My cell phone burned in my pocket. I couldn’t call Cooper because Cooper was happy and healthy. Cooper had moved on with his life and his new lover Shawn. It wouldn’t be easy to tell Cooper I was here in town because there was so much about me that he wouldn’t understand.

First, and most important, I wasn’t here to get him back. I would hardly be able to convince Cooper of that fact, though, and didn’t care to try. I hadn’t left a trail of truth in my wake at the best of times and Cooper had seen me at my worst. When Cooper found out I was in Santo Ignacio, he would believe I was here for him. That I wasn’t over him, that I was still blaming him for the accident in our past, that I wasn’t better at all. That I hadn’t thrown the switch on my life that would make it possible for me to move beyond him.

But I had done just that.

Proving that I’d changed would require a tincture of time and patience. I’d come to Santo Ignacio in the hopes of finding what Cooper found here–not love– although Cooper had surely found that. For me it felt as though love was too much to ask. I’d been given my share and expected that was as much as I would ever be allotted. Maybe I wanted to find peace. Maybe I had come to Santo Ignacio to put down roots in a place where I knew I had friends. Maybe I finally wanted to give something away instead of taking it.

I turned away from Nacho’s Bar, and left my cell phone in my pocket. Santo Ignacio was a very small town. Sooner or later, Cooper would find out that I was in it. Maybe it would be far enough into the future that he wouldn’t see me as a threat. Maybe not.

Folding myself into the front seat of my Civic, I gave a last cursory look around. Clouds moved quickly past a wet-looking three-quarter moon. Rain was still falling down, spattering the car and dripping into my hair as I pulled the door shut. Just the little walk I’d taken down the strand left me soaked to the skin. I returned to the hotel and peeled off layer after layer of wet clothing. It hadn’t been a waste of time to go out and look around. St. Nacho’s existed very much as Cooper described it.

I felt faint stirrings of hope for the first time in years.

St. Nacho’s is available for purchase here.  Physical Therapy is due out from Loose Id in early May.

 

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Z.A. Maxfield

April 2nd

Uncategorized
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