April 11, 1991

I didn’t choose to go to Radford University; Radford chose me.

After bombing out of high school and enlisting in the Navy, Radford was the only school in Virginia that would take me; but I received close, individual attention from my professors. Whether it was Lou Gallo inspiring me to write longer works of fiction by showing me the manuscript of his massive novel in progress, Jolanta Wawrzycka preparing me to present at an International James Joyce Symposium while I was still or an undergrad, or meeting writers like Tim O’Brien and Allen Ginsberg thanks to the efforts of Tim Poland, my education at Radford was first-class and an indispensable part of the lifelong learner I am today.

The past is a murky place but my memories of this campus are vivd and clear, and I’m so glad I was able to come back and reconnect with so many outstanding people. Tim gave me this photo yesterday, taken April 11, 1991, and yes that’s me on the far right, photo bombing out of the past.

Forest of Fortune at ENTROPY

Many thanks to Peter Tieryas for his generous take on Forest of Fortune at ENTROPY:

“…it’s a fast-paced read, hard to put down, as flashy and addictive as the casinos they describe. But like those casinos, it’s not just luck that makes the book so good. There’s a designer at the helm, managing every hand, every nuanced interaction.”

Forest of Fortune at Radford University

I’ll be signing copies of my novel, Forest of Fortune, at the Alumni Village tent on the Moffett Quad today from 2pm to 5pm. I’ll be joining other Radford University alum who have also written books. Come by and pick up a $100 poker chip to my make-believe casino that will get you arrested in real life if you try to cash in in.

The hardboiled universe of Richard Stark:

Donald Westlake, who died in 2008, was born in 1933 and struggled for many years as a short-story writer before becoming a prolific writer of short novels in many genres, mostly crime, though he did pen a few dozen soft-porn titles. During the course of his career, he wrote more than 100 books, using at least 15 different pen names. 

Westlake had a knack for writing tight plots, believable characters and fresh dialog—qualities valuable in any genre but particularly useful in crime novels that rely on plot-driven story mechanics and characters who are tight with their words and seldom make their true intentions known. 

VOTM in Nomadic Sojourns

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Many thanks to Christian Niedan at Nomadic Sojourns for this write up of the Vermin on the Mount event in Brooklyn last weekend.

Brooklyn-based author Jami Attenberg has long hosted sunset author readings in her South Williamsburg apartment. And she’s met many of those authors on the road while promoting her own work—highlighted by 2013 best-selling novel, The Middlesteins. Among them, Jim Ruland, whose “Vermin on the Mount” (VOTM) reading series recently paid a visit to Attenberg’s place.