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ASYLUM: a collection of short fiction (NIWA Anthologies Book 5) Kindle Edition
What does asylum mean to you?
In the 2015 anthology collection from the Northwest Independent Writers Association, seventeen authors explore the obvious and hidden meanings of this theme—from a werewolf on a mission and self-sacrifice in a post-apocalyptic world, to shadowy wizardry, a questing knight, and a gentle prison for geniuses.
Featuring stories by:
Jeffrey Cook • William Cook • Pamela Cowan • Jonathan Ems • Ginger Dawn Harman • Connie J. Jasperson • Madison Keller • Cody Newton • E.M. Prazeman • Katherine Perkins • Dey Rivers • Walt Socha • D.L. Solum • Laurel Standley • Rebecca Stefoff • Jennifer Willis • Matthew Wilson
The Northwest Independent Writers Association (NIWA) supports indie and hybrid authors and promotes professional standards in independent writing, publishing, and marketing. Learn more at NIWAwriters.net.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateNovember 17, 2015
- File size416 KB
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About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B0186J4RGO
- Publisher : Northwest Independent Writers Associaton
- Publication date : November 17, 2015
- Language : English
- File size : 416 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 321 pages
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 5 of 14 : NIWA Anthologies
- Best Sellers Rank: #49,036 in Short Stories Anthologies
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Connie J. Jasperson lives in Olympia, Washington. A vegan, she and her husband share five children and a love of good food and great music. She is active in local writing groups, an editor, and a book reviewer. She is an active member of the both the Northwest Independent Writers Association and Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and is a founding member of Myrddin Publishing Group. Music and food dominate her waking moments. When not writing or blogging she can be found reading avidly.
Jennifer Willis loves tales of magickal mayhem, unlikely adventure, and playful intrigue.
An admitted sci-fi nerd and urban fantasy fan, she is the author of the Rune Witch urban fantasy series and the MARS science fiction romance series. When she’s not hiking, knitting, baking, star-gazing, or reading like a fiend, she spends her time bringing enchantment to the world. She is the writer behind the (sadly discontinued) Northwest Love Stories feature in The Oregonian and has a byline in the British Fantasy Award-winning Women Destroy Science Fiction from Lightspeed, which was named one of NPR’s best books in 2014.
She lives in Oregon with her dude, their dog, an unruly quartet of cats, and possibly a family of raccoons residing under the house.
For more information:
Jennifer-Willis.com
I have been writing since 2013 with nine novels and more than a dozen published short stories out so far. Some of my books were published as Madison Keller before I changed my name in Ian.
I love table top gaming. Currently I'm playing a very flamboyant bard who also owns a tailor shop, because in real life I love making fancy costumes and plush animals.
You can find out more at http://madisonkeller.net or find me on twitter @MaddieKellerr
Get a free book when you sign up for my newsletter at http://madisonkeller.net/newsletter
Author Jeffrey Cook lives in Maple Valley, Washington, with his wife and three large dogs. He was born in Boulder, Colorado, but has lived all over the United States. He's contributed to a number of role-playing game books for Deep7 Press out of Seattle, Washington, but the Dawn of Steam series are his first novels. When not reading, researching or writing, Jeffrey enjoys role-playing games and watching football.
William Cook is a native of central Connecticut and grew up in the small town of Southington, midway between New Haven and Hartford. He has also lived in upstate New York, in and around Albany, and in Riverside, Rhode Island, on the shores of Narragansett Bay. In 1989 he moved to the Pacific Northwest.
His education began in a Catholic seminary in Connecticut and continued in another seminary in New York, for a total of eight years of study. He left the seminary with a Bachelor's Degree in Philosophy, specializing in Existential Phenomenology (try saying that three times!). After doing his time for the draft board as a conscientious objector working as a hospital orderly, he attended the State University of New York at Albany, where he got a Master's Degree in Social Work. He then worked as a mental health therapist for 37 years before retiring in 2011.
In 2014, he released his first novel, "Songs for the Journey Home," which draws upon some of his experiences in the seminary. He sees it as a saga of spiritual discovery.
His first collection of short fiction, "The Pieta in Ordinary Time and Other Stories," was published in March, 2016. "Catch of the Day," another collection of short stories, was published in February, 2018. "Before Our House Fell into the Ocean: Stories of Love and Death" was released in September of 2021.
Many of his short stories first saw print in the yearly anthologies published by the Northwest Independent Writers Association. "The Last Refuge" was released in the 2015 Anthology, "Asylum." Another, "The Paleographer," appeared in "Artifact," published in November, 2016. "The Affect Bridge" was included in "Bridges" in 2017. "The Girl on the Boardwalk" made its appearance in "Carnival," released in November, 2018. "Bad Seed" was his entry into "Doorways," which was published in November of 2019. "The Sword" is in "Escape" (2020); "The List" is in "Forbidden" (2021); "This Vale of Tears" is in "Guests" (2022); "Clancy on the Ledge" is in "Harbinger" (2023). "Chrysalis" will be in the 2024 anthology.
His novel, "Seal of Secrets," was released in December, 2016. It begins The Driftwood Mysteries, a series of suspense/thrillers set on the Oregon coast. The second installment of these murder mysteries is "Eye of Newt," a short story which made its first appearance in "Catch of the Day," and is now available as a stand-alone mini-book. The third is "Woman in the Waves," a novel published in November of 2018. The fourth is the novel "Dungeness and Dragons," released in April 2020. The fifth is the short story "Paper," which was first published in the collection, "Before Our House Fell into the Ocean: Stories of Love and Death," in September of 2021. It is now a mini-book. The sixth and final installment in the series is the novel, "Gallery of Gangsters," released in August of 2022.
Cook feels his life has been extraordinarily blessed. He can now spend his time writing for pleasure and providing babysitting time for his grandchildren. (At last count, there were 15 grandchildren and three great grandchildren!) His wife Sharon has retired from her job as a flight attendant and is an artist who displays her paintings and collages at Currents Gallery in McMinnville, Oregon, and the Lori Austin Galleries in Santa Rosa and Sebastopol, California.
Walt’s novels are set in the Medieval world and explore what happens when the knowledge of guns, germs, and steel are introduced into pre-European-contact civilizations.
Walt lives in Portland, Oregon with his artist wife Gretha and two cats (named Schiz and Zoid). When not writing, he plays jazz piano, perform labor sacrifices to the food chain goddess (in the vegetable garden), and cleans litter boxes.
walt@waltsocha.com
www.waltsocha.com
D.L. Solum - The author of the Series : Persephone a Tale of Darker Seattle. I currently live in Seattle but will always be from Butte, Montana. I'm a collector of odd friends and odder hobbies, including – armoured medieval combat, hiking and computer games.
I also help manage the South Seattle Fiction Writers Online group.
This latest obsession with writing Epic-Urban Fantasy is made possible via the encouragement, patience, and tolerance of my wife, Kate.
Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2015A really excellent anthology and exploration of the different meanings of asylum... there is something here for everyone... from fantasy to horror, the stories had me staying up late. Well done!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2016All of these stories were good with a wide range of genres including fantasy, science fiction, paranormal, and dystopian. I liked some better than others, but the reasons why were personal taste, not the quality of the stories. Two stories stood out for me which I'll highlight as examples. Coincidentally they're the last two stories in the anthology. Maybe I'm suffering from some form of recency bias.
Travail by E.M Prazeman is not the kind of story I'd normally gravitate toward. It's the story of Sir Brian Buldwen, a knight living in the kind of primitive medieval world you'd expect. It felt slow in the beginning, mainly because the author was establishing the story world and it isn't the kind of world that appeals to me. But I realized about a quarter of the way into the story that I was fully sucked in. I cared about Sir Brian and wanted him to succeed. I was amused by his jester friend, Pick. From the point I was hooked, I stayed that way. Part of it might be that the language used was modern without a barrage of phony (or maybe not) olde English words to keep reminding the reader we're operating in a different time.
The other story that stuck with me was The Last Refuge, a post-apocalyptic or dystopian story by William J. Cook. This story strikes close to home in our current political environment in the US as we follow Hamza, the Muslim main character, as he comes to terms with losing his family, a wife and daughter, and then discovers that his own survival is questionable. Luckily, just as in times past, even when it seems like the entire world has become evil, there are some who choose to do the right thing.
**Originally written for "Books and Pals" book blog. May have received a free review copy. **