Tag Archives: forest of fortune

The Forest of Fortune book trailer is here! The trailer, directed by Santa Fe filmmaker Jason DeBoer, features blurbs by Patrick deWitt, Fiona Maazel, Scott O’Connor, Teresa Svoboda and Jerry Stahl, and music by Texas garage rockers Mind Spiders. The song “Haunted Casino” was written exclusively for Forest of Fortune.

“The Haunted Casino” was my working title for the book and while that sounds like a Nancy Drew mystery I used it because I never wanted to forget that the characters trapped inside of Thunderclap Casino were all haunted by one thing or another in ways that baffled them entirely.

I’ve been a fan of Mind Spiders since 2011 when they released their first album on Dirtnap Records so I’m thrilled to be able to work with Mark Ryan on this project. (You should buy all of their records now, especially this one.) They’re also featured on the cover of Razorcake #80. Incidentally, the name Mind Spiders comes from the science fiction short story “The Mind Spider” by Fritz Leiber. 

Enjoy and please share! 

Forest of Fortune in the L.A. Times

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It was such a thrill seeing this review of Forest of Fortune in today’s Los Angeles Times. Even though I’d read the review when it went online last week, this just felt different. It helps that it’s full of amazing quotes like this one:

Things are rotten in the state of Thunderclap. Or at least they are rotten for the people who wash up at the remote, desert Indian casino somewhere in the mountains inland of San Diego in Jim Ruland’s masterpiece of desperation, delusion and misdeeds, “Forest of Fortune.”

Self-Interview at TNB

This is kind of weird, but if you played text-based computer games as a kid (Zork anyone?) then you’ll get the references. It’s basically Edward Gorey’s  ”the unspeakable horror of the literary life” told through the lens of an Infocom game. 

You are at a desk. There is typewriter and a ream of paper.
Write novel.

You have written a novel. You have used seven years of life force.
Write memoir. 

Are you sure about that?
Write memoir. 

You have written a memoir. You have no dignity points left.

Interview at Great Writers Steal

At Great Writers Steal, Ken Nichols follows up his review of Forest of Fortune with this interview in which he investigates the creative choices I made while writing the novel. But even in questions of craft and narrative structure, things get personal…

Forest of Fortune is both a place within the casino and a fantasy. When I worked at an Indian casino, the names of the various establishments were a source of great amusement. For instance, we actually had a Dreamcatcher Lounge, as hokey as that sounds. My employment coincided with the recession, so I felt bound to the place. I wanted to leave, but felt like I couldn’t afford to quit. This feeling intensified when I went into recovery for alcoholism. I wanted to find a healthier place to build a new life for myself, but I was stuck at the casino. I felt trapped there. It was a feeling that was shared by many of my coworkers and this feeling is a big part of the book. Of course, it was only a feeling. I could have left anytime, but I didn’t. I stayed way too long.

Forest of Fortune in The Nervous Breakdown

The Nervous Breakdown has an except of Forest of Fortune. This section tells the story of how Pemberton going on a job interview that ends with a coke party in the Hollywood Hills (hate it when that happens). It’s one of the more risqué sections of the book and was inspired by an article I read in New Music Express way back in the ’90s about an infamous rock star. Kudos if you can guess who it is…

They went up to the Hills in Ricky’s limited edition Lexus. They lived in Koreatown, Kiki explained, but were mansion-sitting for a friend in the porn industry. The house looked like a wedding cake made out of birdcages. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls, fire pit in the parlor, infinity pool on the patio. The guest bedroom bathroom was a tribute to the 1970s. Pemberton wondered how many adult films had been shot here.

Forest of Fortune at Great Writers Steal

Ken Nichols poses the question “What can we steal from Jim Ruland’s Forest of Fortune?” and presents this intriguing answer:

Forest of Fortune is a novel that defies easy categorization and does so in the best of ways. The book is certainly “literary,” whatever that means. Mr. Ruland has also packed in elements of the supernatural thriller; the titular casino game, for instance, seemed to echo the evil games of chance in the Twilight Zone episodes “The Fever”and “Nick of Time.”  The book also confronts a vast canvas; it’s not just the story of three people who have a location in common. Taken as a whole, Forest of Fortune is a somewhat sprawling depiction of a place that is at once sad and joyful, a place where the hopeless cater to the hopeful and most visitors don’t notice the irony that they have traveled to the middle of nowhere to surround themselves with bright, flashing lights and contrived excitement. 

Forest of Fortune in Booklist

“So here’s an interesting trio of characters: Pemberton, a down-and-out copywriter hired to write radio ads for a casino located on an Indian reservation in Southern California; Alice, an employee of the casino, who wonders if her new epilepsy medication is causing her to have visions; and Lupita, one of the casino’s regular customers, who’s baffled by what appears to be a slot machine that won’t let you stop playing until you’ve lost everything. The author introduces us to his cast in alternating chapters, letting us get to know them (Pemberton was thrown out of his own home by his fiancée; Lupita’s best friend did time for killing her husband) before he begins to join up their stories, pointing them all in the same direction: toward the evil presence that appears to be haunting the casino. The book is not quite a supernatural thriller, more like a stylishly written contemporary noir with some seriously weird overtones. Ruland’s character design is impeccable; these are very real people, each with his or her personal issues to sort out and pretty much the unlikeliest heroes you’ll meet for the next while. This one deserves a look.

Forest of Fortune in The Collagist

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You can read a new excerpt of Forest of Fortune in the latest issue of The Collagist. The excerpt features three sections. The first draws from the framing device that provides the novel with its historical context.

They spirited us away to the mountains, costumed in the skins of animals. They powdered our flesh until we resembled the ghosts we were fated to become. The men were savage, the women cruel. Their ways were not our ways. I understood before Ysabella there was no going back to the life we knew before. The pain we’d endured at the orphanage was nothing compared to this. Each night we prayed for our rescue, and every day our suffering continued. We were captives, trophies of war.

The second section comes from Lupita, a gambler who is haunted by the circumstances surrounding her husband’s death:

On the morning she got the news that Alejandro had been killed by friendly fire at a military checkpoint, a hawk alighted on the picnic table in her backyard, a jackrabbit twitching in its talons. Lupita watched in horror as the hawk tore the thing to pieces. To be in love is to be tormented: You’re either the rabbit or the hawk. She moved back to San Diego the next week.

And finally there’s Alice, an Indian who works at Thunderclap Casino. 

From the platform Alice could see the entire Forest of Fortune. It was all so astonishingly ugly. Everywhere she looked she saw wires and trestles and supports for signage. The slot machines were big, garish boxes, their candles protruding like nipples and caked with grime. How disappointing it was to see things as they really were.

Many thanks to all the editors at The Collagist, Gabriel Blackwell in particular, for publishing my work in their sharp and smart-looking magazine.