Tag Archives: forest of fortune

Vermin + VLAK

The Vermin on the Mount + VLAK European tour is in the books! So many people to thank but I’ll start with my three traveling companions Louis Armand, David Vichnar and Thor Garcia and my partner in all things Nuvia Crisol Ruland. I’ve posted pics from last night’s extraordinary event on the Vermin on the Mount site where you can also view photos from the other stops on the tour. I’m going to post a longer write-up when I get back to California, but for now I’m off to Northern Ireland for a few days rest in one of my favorite places on earth.

Talking Paper Interview Series

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Many thanks to Christian Niedan for featuring me in his Talking Paper Interview Series at Nomadic Press. I don’t know how he did it, but he dug up a link to my first reading series in North Hollywood in the early ‘90s. I also talk about the origins of Vermin on the Mount and go into a bit more detail about the collaboration with VLAK Magazine: Contemporary Poetics & the Arts and the Prague Microfestival which unofficially kicks off tonight with a reading in Berlin.

The Writer as Merchant

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Many thanks to Jonny Diamond at The Lit Hub for publishing my essay “The Writer as Merchant,” which touches on things that I’ve been thinking about and observed as a debut novelist and host of Vermin on the Mount: intersection of art and commerce. I’m also indebted to Juliet Escoria and Chelsea Hodson who spoke with me about their own experiences for the piece. A sample:

Today, when a storyteller completes a new narrative, she doesn’t head down to the town square or village pub and look for people to tell it to, she has other people do that for her. For many storytellers, this is a relief because selling is a skill like any other and some are good at it while others are not. Most would prefer to be engaged in telling stories not selling them. But this ambition became an expectation so that those who did sell their own stories were seen as a lesser class of storyteller, that “real” storytellers were above that.

To this I say, bullshit.

I know what you’re thinking: I’m not selling my book out of a sack on the subway, the boardwalk or Bev-Mo parking lot.

This isn’t about that. This essay is about art, independence and eliminating the middleman—or at least asking him to step aside and take a breather from time to time.

Read the rest of the essay

Underground Soundtrack

Many thanks to Roz Morris for featuring me this week on the Underground Soundtrack, which explores the music that accompanied the creation of a novel. In my case, Forest of Fortune came out of the ambient droning of slot machines, the frenzy of punk rock, and chaos of an unexpected death. 

When the anger passed and the sadness moved in I turned to Dillinger Four’s Civil War, the saddest punk rock record I’ve ever heard. The songs are suffused with melancholy that I drank up like the cheap vodka I drank on the long drive to and from the Indian reservation every day.

Read the rest of the soundtrack. If you’ve never seen Jay Reatard play Blood Visions live, check this out. This also seem like a good place to link to “The Haunted Casino” which the Mind Spiders wrote and performed for the Forest of Fortune book trailer

The Life Sentence

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I was interviewed by Steph Cha, author of the Juniper Song series set in Los Angeles, at The Life Sentence, a new website dedicated to crime and mystery writing. We talk about casino life, addition, ghost writing and, of course, bloofing: 

Steph: When I went to your Skylight Books reading, you read a passage that involved a practice called bloofing. Do you have any opinions on bloofing in literature? Also, you have a young daughter. Has she read your book?
Jim: Bloofing, or the practice of getting cocaine blown up one’s ass, has been a part of rock legend for decades. In 1992 I read an interview in New Music Express with Faith No More’s Roddy Bottom who reported that his ex-girlfriend Courtney Love enjoyed it. For the previous generation of rock fans, it was Stevie Nicks who purportedly loved to ride the white horse (literally). If nothing else, I take comfort in knowing that Forest of Fortune is at the front of bloofing lit. (It’s certainly a better “how to” than this.) And, no, my daughter hasn’t read it, nor is she ever allowed to, at least not until Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, or Katniss Everdeen get in on the action.

Read the rest of the interview.

European Tour

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Vermin on the Mount is teaming up with VLAK Magazine and the Prague Microfest for a series of unforgettable readings in Berlin, Brno, Prague and London:

05/15     Berlin, Germany     7pm
Vermin on the Mount & VLAK
with Thor Garcia, Catherine Hales, Jim Ruland, Jeroen Nieuwland, Louis Armand & David Vichnar
Normal Bar
Forsterstrasse 46
10999 Kreuzberg

05/16     Brno, Czech Republic     7pm
Vermin on the Mount & VLAK
with Thor Garcia, Olga Pek, Louis Armand, Jim Ruland & David Vichnar
Sklenena Louka (Glass Meadow)
Kounicova 23, 602 00 Brno

05/17    Prague, Czech Republic     7pm
Vermin on the Mount & VLAK
Prague Micro Festival with Louis Armand, Morgan Childs, Sophia Disgrace, Phil Shoenfelt, Jim Ruland, Thor Garcia, Ken Nash + music
Cafe NoD
Dlouha 33, Prague

05/23     London, England     7pm
Vermin on the Mount & VLAK
with Thor Garcia, Richard Makin, Jim Ruland, Louis Armand & David Vichnar
Top Office Machines
133-135 Bethnal Green Road
London, E2 7DG

05/24     London, England
Vermin on the Mount & VLAK
with Lou Rowan, Stewart Home, Ulli Freer, Jim Ruland, Louis Armand & David Vichnar
Power Lunches Arts Cafe
446 Kingsland Road
Hackney, E8 4AE

Everyone Together Alone

Wendy C. Ortiz interviewed me about Vermin on the Mount, Forest of Fortune and a host of other topics. Wendy has been running Rhapsodomancy for eleven years and it was fascinating talking with her about the ups and downs of running a reading series. We also discussed Forest of Fortune, the loneliness of casinos and cats. A sample:

Do you see yourself doing the series five years from now? If so, where would you like it to go next?

Absolutely. I don’t want it to “go” anywhere. Even if it’s just me and some writers in a bomb shelter and 10 million mutant cockroaches at the door, I’ll keep doing it. I refuse to quit. I want to keep it irregular and irreverent. I’ll keep making posters and T-shirts, but instead of scheduling events more frequently with more established writers, I’d like to make things more spontaneous and more unpredictable. More artful. More, dare I say it, dangerous. Less AWP, more Burning Man. I feel a manifesto coming on …

Read the rest of the interview

Everyone Together Alone

Wendy C. Ortiz interviewed me about Vermin on the Mount, Forest of Fortune and a host of other topics. Wendy has been running Rhapsodomancy for eleven years and it was fascinating talking with her about the ups and downs of running a reading series. We also discussed Forest of Fortune, the loneliness of casinos and cats. A sample:

Do you see yourself doing the series five years from now? If so, where would you like it to go next?

Absolutely. I don’t want it to “go” anywhere. Even if it’s just me and some writers in a bomb shelter and 10 million mutant cockroaches at the door, I’ll keep doing it. I refuse to quit. I want to keep it irregular and irreverent. I’ll keep making posters and T-shirts, but instead of scheduling events more frequently with more established writers, I’d like to make things more spontaneous and more unpredictable. More artful. More, dare I say it, dangerous. Less AWP, more Burning Man. I feel a manifesto coming on …

Read the rest of the interview