Location change for La Crosse reading this weekend!

Please take note that we’ve changed the location for the reading this Saturday, March 19th in La Crosse, WI:

The reading & related merrymaking will be held from 5pm-7pm at:

People’s Food Co-op
Community Class Room, Second Floor
315 5th Ave S.
La Crosse, WI

http://www.peoplesfoodcoop.com/

I will read from my novel, The Silence of Trees. Cover artist Madeline C. Matz will also be on hand to sign and talk about the process of developing the cover. Q&A and signing to follow.

There will be also be snacks, free tarot readings, and a special musical guest!

Thank you for your understanding. We’re very sorry for any inconvenience!(Feel free to RSVP on our Facebook event page)

Hope to see you there!

And don’t forget about the derby! We’ll be there on Sunday cheering on MVM!

Words and wheels weekend in Wisconsin

Next Saturday, March 19th, I will be in La Crosse for a reading and my first roller derby bout (watching, not playing).

If you’re around La Crosse, Wisconsin, come to my reading at Pearl Street Books in La Crosse. We’ll be joined by the cover artist,  for my novel, The Silence of Trees: Madeline Carol Matz! There will be snacks (courtesy of the Co-op and the lovely Maura Henn), as well as free tarot readings by Kirsta Skaff, Sanshin music, and maybe a few surprises. We’ll see. 😉

After the reading, we’ll see where the Wisconsin winds carry us. There may be more revelry.

On Sunday, March 20, we will be watching Maura and the feisty ladies of Mississippi Valley Mayhem as they introduce the two Intra-league teams of MVM!  I’m a derby virgin, and very excited to watch these ladies in action!

More information is on their site.

Hope that some of you can make it. If you’re on facebook, there’s an event page..

Tonight I have my first official book club visit. The members just finished The Silence of Trees and will be discussing it. I’ll be sure to post pictures. If you have a bookclub and would like me to come and talk about TSOT, send me a note.

Many more exciting things in the works: Philadelphia in April, Madison in May! More to come.

Thank you to everyone who has been buying The Silence of Trees and leaving reviews on various sites: amazon, goodreads, facebook, etc. I’m so grateful for your thoughtful comments and help in spreading the word!

Because of the fantastic response to The Silence of Trees for $.99 on kindle, the sale has been extended (buy here)! Spread the word, you can read kindle books on your phones and laptops if you don’t have a kindle. It’s very exciting!

Magic and the Literary Continuum

When I was in grammar school, I discovered science fiction and fantasy. It was a natural obsession for me, since I loved all things fanciful and magical as a child. I used to save up earnings from babysitting and summer jobs to buy paperbacks from the used bookstore at the end of the block on the street where I grew up.

I already loved Bradbury and Tolkien and read everything I could find by Zelazny and Arthur C. Clarke, but the used book store was where I bought my own copies of The Lord of the Rings trilogy and where I discovered Douglas Adams, Heinlein, Le Guin, de Lint, and so many others. I would then carry their paperbacks everywhere, immersed in their worlds.

I devoured Charles de Lint’s Yarrow in junior high, during a time when real life was lonely and seemed hard to bear. Cat, the heroine of Yarrow, enters the Otherworld through her dreams. The story resonated with me on so many levels, and the writing swept me up and inspired me. After that, I read everything by Charles de Lint that I could get my hands on, and I felt at home in so many of his books.

This week, Charles de Lint reviewed my novel, The Silence of Trees, for the March/April issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. The review begins:

“Before starting this book, I wasn’t familiar with either Valya Dudycz Lupescu or Chicago’s Wolfsword Press. But I’m happy to have that corrected, because I want to read more of Lupescu’s work…” You can read the rest here.

I thought back to my twelve-year-old self sitting on a swing in the backyard of our Chicago bungalow, reading Yarrow and dwelling so completely in Cat’s dreamworld. Reading Charles de Lint’s review is one of those moments I’ll treasure, like handing Neil Gaiman (whose storytelling I have loved since college) a copy of The Silence of Trees. There’s something so wonderful about being able to share one’s published work with a literary hero. After having lived in their stories, I get to invite them into mine.

In her “Gaga Palmer Madonna” song, Amanda Palmer sings that she’s part of the “music continuum.” I like that image. We are connected to those who came before us and to those who will come after. We are shaped by the books we read, and whether our parts are small or large, when we share our stories with the world, we become a part of a “literary continuum.”

As I write those words, I have this almost comic book image in my head of beloved authors standing behind me and the fuzzy silhouettes of those not yet published in front of me.

🙂

Do you see yourself as a part of some continuum: literary, musical, artistic, philosophical, mechanical, etc?