Deborah A. Wolf

Deborah A. Wolf was born in a barn and raised on wildlife refuges, which explains rather a lot. She has worked as an underwater photographer, Arabic linguist, and grumbling wage slave, but never wanted to be anything other than an author. Deborahโ€™s first trilogy, The Dragonโ€™s Legacy, has been acclaimed as outstanding literary fantasy and shortlisted for such notable honors as the Gemmell Award. This debut was followed by Split Feather, a contemporary work of speculative fiction which explores the wildest side of Alaska. Deborah currently lives in northern Michigan. She has four kids (three of whom are grown and all of whom are exceptional), an assortment of dogs and horses, and two cats, one of whom she suspects is possessed by a demon. Deborah is represented by Mark Gottlieb of Trident Media Group.

Her story, “Oderzhimost'”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


What kinds of stories do you write? Why?


Speculative fiction with a grimdark bent. Because that’s how I’m bent, I guess.


Which of your short stories is your favorite? Why?


I don’t have a favorite kid, and I don’t have a favorite story.


Besides yourself, which other contemporary authors would you recommend?


Anna Smith Spark, Anna Stephens, Michael Fletcher, Dyrk Ashton, Rob Hayes, and definitely Scott Oden. None of whom are members of a secret cabal of authors, honest.


Whatโ€™s the craziest thing thatโ€™s ever happened to you?


My dog and I found an Ice Age bison skull when I was a kid. That was pretty cool.


Whatโ€™s the craziest thing youโ€™ve ever done?


It involved Tannerite. Beyond that, I plead the Fifth. (Also, I regret NOTHING).


 Tell me about a time you almost died.


When I was nineteen or so, four of us hopped on three snowmachines and made an unplanned trip from McGrath to Takotna. On the way back, one of our drivers was drunk and took off, the second snowmachine broke down, and the three of us were stuck with one machine for the long trip back. It was seventy-something degrees below zero. Then our last machine broke down…

With duct tape and luck, the three of us made it back to McGrath at about 4 in the morning. My knees were frozen solid and my feet were pretty well frostbitten, but we all survived.

Bush Alaska can be a tough place. I’m fifty one years old now, and the only one of that group who is still alive.


Tell us something about you that very few people know.


I have an intense dislike of being hugged. Gross. It’s almost as bad as cole slaw.


What is your favorite speculative fiction genre? Why?


Nothing transports me like epic fantasy. Well-written epic fantasy is one of the chief delights in life.


If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?


The north shore of Maui.


What was your favorite subject in school? Why?

Reading/English/Language Arts, always and forever. I dedicated my first book (THE DRAGON’S LEGACY) in part to my high school English teacher Deane O’Dell. As to why… reading has always been my drug of choice. Writing is just reading in my head.


Whatโ€™s your favorite book? Why?


THE HOBBIT.

Because it’s the greatest book ever written, that’s why. Fight me.


If you could live in any time period, when would it be? Why?


I rather like the present time period, if we could just skip through from November 2016 till the day they lead a handcuffed Trump off to begin his prison sentence.


Story’s Soundtrack

Each of the stories in this volume evoked certain themes and emotions that can sometimes be approximated with music. The below video is the editor’s best interpretation of the feelings and themes that this author’s story evoked. Please note that this is only the editor’s interpretation. The author did not know this portion of the blog post existed until the editor published it.


Order Weird World War III Now


2020-10-06T00:00:00

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

Weird World War III Release Date

Brad R. Torgersen

Brad R. Torgersen is a multi-award-winning science fiction and fantasy writer whose book A Star-Wheeled Sky won the 2019 Dragon Award for Best Science Fiction Novel at the 33rd annual DragonCon fan convention in Atlanta, Georgia. A prolific short fiction author, Torgersen has published stories in numerous anthologies and magazines, including several Best of Year editions. Brad is named in Analog magazineโ€™s whoโ€™s who of top Analog authors, alongside venerable writers like Larry Niven, Lois McMaster Bujold, Orson Scott Card, and Robert A. Heinlein. Married for over twenty-five years, Brad is also a United States Army Reserve Chief Warrant Officerโ€”with multiple deployments to his creditโ€”and currently lives with his wife and daughter in the Mountain West, where they keep a small menagerie of dogs and cats.

His story, “All Quiet on the Phantom Front”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


What kinds of stories do you write? Why?


I tend to focus on stories which emphasize the everyman, who through determination and no small amount of courage and principle is able to forge a victoryโ€”despite the most overwhelming or dire predicaments.  Too much fiction these daysโ€”be it books, stories, screenplays, you name itโ€”seems to glory in the โ€œcomplicatedโ€ character.  Who is a morally ambiguous individual at best.  I rather favor the idea that ordinary people are capable of extraordinary things (including extraordinary displays of honor, decency, integrity, and morality) when push comes to shove.  I believe this is something we see in the world around us, and it will also be true in the future.  Regardless of how advanced our technology may be, or when we eventually voyage to other planets and other stars.


Which of your short stories is your favorite? Why?


Iโ€™m going to echo the spoken word performance group Celestial Navigations and state that the best one, is the next one.  Iโ€™ve enjoyed all of the stories Iโ€™ve published, and am especially proud of those which have won readersโ€™ choice awards in magazines like Analog.  But each new story is a new adventure in discovery.  Because I am usually going to new places with new characters and exploring some facet of the human equation Iโ€™ve not necessarily explored before in that specific way, set against a canvas Iโ€™ve not necessarily explored before either.  So, I take great joy in this activity, and am always pleased with how the characters and their stories evolve organically beneath my fingertips as I type.


What authors have had the greatest influence on your writing? Why?


Of all the living authors who are still with us, award-winner and science fiction Grand Master Larry Niven is the one who has had the greatest single influence.  It was reading Larryโ€™s short fiction (when I was still a teenager, thirty years ago) that inspired me to try to write my own professional stories.  Up to that point Iโ€™d simply dabbled in fan fiction for franchises like Star Trek or Mad Max but it was while reading Larryโ€™s short fiction that I said to myself, โ€œI want to try to write this well, and publish myself!โ€  It took me a lot of work and a lot of practiceโ€”including a lot of heartache and failureโ€”before I finally broke in with my Writers of the Future winning story, ten years ago.


What is your favorite speculative fiction genre? Why?


I tend to favor the โ€œhardโ€ variety of science fiction, simply because Iโ€™ve always been fascinated by stories which try to imagine how humanity might actually voyage to the planets and the stars.  Versus the numerous examples of Earth-bound dystopias which have been ironically popular in our era of fantastic opportunity, wealth, and material comfort.  When I was child, movies and television series which depicted humanity journeying to other worlds, and conquering the literal final frontier of space, most captured my imagination.  Which is not to say I donโ€™t enjoy a very good fantasy story, such as Tolkienโ€™s Lord of the Rings saga.  Because I do.  But my interest inevitably returns to stories that are well-grounded in known physics, chemistry, biology, etc., while projecting the human adventure into environments whichโ€”while potentially quite hostileโ€”offer their own wonder and mystery, as well as challenges.  To include potentially magical realms.  I mentioned Larry Niven earlier.  On those occasions when I approach a fantasy project of my own I tend to go at it โ€œhardโ€ in that the mystical or otherwise magical component is rigorously bounded, with rules and structure such that itโ€™s an additional natural phenomenon, as much like gravity or electricity as anything else.


If you could live in any time period, when would it be? Why?


I donโ€™t have a particularly favorite period, mostly because each period has its plusses and its minuses.  I do consider myself to be a student of history, however, and am very concerned with how little many people in 21st century America seem to be paying attention to the lessons of history.  Especially when it comes to utopian activism.  Millions of Americans seem bound and determined to scuttle everything about our world which makes it clean, comfortable, and abundant, for the sake of some as-yet-to-be-realized fantastic vision of a โ€œfairโ€ society.  Whichโ€”if people understood their history at allโ€”is where all the greatest and most terrible human disasters of the 20th century began.  We make a fatal flaw when we sacrifice whatโ€™s good on the altar of trying to achieve perfection.  Otherwise?  History is replete with amazing people and amazing events, some of the astoundingly inspired, others dreadfully awful.  And all of it adds up to who we are now, in our time.  Both good and bad things.  Like I said, I wish more Americans especially in the 21st century paid attention to the lessons we should have learned from what happened in the 20th century especially.


Story’s Soundtrack

Each of the stories in this volume evoked certain themes and emotions that can sometimes be approximated with music. The below video is the editor’s best interpretation of the feelings and themes that this author’s story evoked. Please note that this is only the editor’s interpretation. The author did not know this portion of the blog post existed until the editor published it.


Order Weird World War III Now


2020-10-06T00:00:00

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

Weird World War III Release Date

Recent Weird World War III Events

Over the last several weeks, there’s been a few events in which Weird World War III was promoted and/or mentioned. You can check them out below.

Baen Virtual Road Show at Dragon Con 2020

I introduce the anthology at the 16:34-minute mark.

Writers Drinking Coffee Podcast

In early August, I was a guest of the Writers Drinking Coffee Podcast. You can listen to the episode here.

Lovecraft eZine: Interviews: Laird Barron, John Langan

Weird fiction master, John Langan, talks about his story, “Second Front”, in Weird World War III at the 1:56:44-minute mark.


2020-10-06T00:00:00

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

Weird World War III Release Date


Order Weird World War III Now

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑