Midhgardhur

Midhgardhur
Midhgardhur: The Fantasy World of Colin Anders Brodd
Showing posts with label Remember!. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Remember!. Show all posts

Thursday, November 8, 2018

FREE! - Read the Winning Story "Remember!" at SIA

Hello everyone,


     Recently, I was proud to announce that the short story "Remember!" from Tales From Midhgardhur on Channillo and found in Tales From Midhgardhur, Volume II was one of five winners of the Support Indie Authors 2018 "Scary Short Story Contest" - and now the text of the story is posted on their site HERE so you can read it for free! While you're there, you should check out my co-winners: "Reflections" by Phil Farina, "Premonition" by Kayla Krantz, "Spider, Spider" by Bea Cannon, and "The Black Queen" by Olga Werby.

Happy Reading! Skál!
~ Colin Anders Brodd

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Scary Short Story Contest WINNER - "Remember!"

Hello everyone,

WINNER!


     I am pleased to announce that the short story "Remember!" (which has appeared in Tales From Midhgardhur on Channillo and in Tales From Midhgardhur, Volume II) is one of the five winners of the 2018 Scary Short Story Contest from SIA (Support for Indie Authors)! I am very proud of this particular story, which was actually written as an experimental challenge (it is a rare 2nd person perspective story!), and glad to be able to say that the Tales From Midhgardhur are not just award-winning fiction, but contest-winning as well! "We LOVED this piece and are very excited to feature it on our website," wrote Ann Livi Andrews for SIA. 

Happy Reading! Skál!
~ Colin Anders Brodd 

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Word Count Wednesday . . . Remember!

Hello everyone,


     It is Word Count Wednesday once more! "Howl of the Ulfhedhnar" is finished and in editing; it is scheduled to post on Friday, 1/27/17 on Tales from Midhgardhur at Channillo.com. Berserkers and werewolves! That sounds like fun, right? "Howl of the Ulfhedhnar" weighs in at around 5430 words.

      Right now, most of my energy is going into "Remember!" Remember is going to be a very short piece (not my shortest - that honor goes to "Hjalti's First Holmganga," which is exactly 55 words, and probably one of the hardest things I've ever tried to write precisely because I was trying to keep it to exactly 55 words. No, "Remember!" is not that short, but it will probably only be 3 or 4 pages long when it is finished. "Remember!" is not challenging because of its length, however, but because of its perspective.

     "Remember!" is the first story I've written for Tales from Midhgardhur that is written entirely in the 2nd person. That is not as easy as it sounds. Most stories are written in either the 3rd person, in which the narrator tells you what he, she, it, or they did. Some are written in the 1st person, from the perspective of a character in the story - I tried that with Ormsbani, and it was great, but I found it crept into everything else I was writing at the same time! But 2nd person narratives - telling you what you are experiencing - are extremely rare.

     I got the inspiration to do a story like this from an old Weird Tales story called "The House of Ecstasy" by Ralph Milne Farley, published in April 1938. The conceit of that story (without revealing too much!) is that the reader is being told of something that he experienced and has been hypnotized to forget. The idea is that the reader is to internalize the story; the reader experienced that story, and the reader was hypnotized to forget, and only as he is reading "The House of Ecstasy" does he begin to "remember" what happened. As a writer, reading this story, I was fascinated. Oh, the story itself is a little hokey now, but it still works, for the most part. But the technique of a 2nd person narrative fascinated me. I made an immediate note in my commonplace book that I would like to try a 2nd person story, sometime.



     Well, it took a long time for me to get around to actually working on "Remember!" . . . I kept jotting down ideas, adding to the basic premise I came up with, but I wanted to think about this one a long time before I actually started composing anything. I admired Farley's technique, but it had flaws, especially for a 21st century reader, chief among them that the reader was assumed to be male. That assumption is made explicit several times throughout the story, and indeed, the plot hinges on the reader being a heterosexual male. In 1938, a writer for Weird Tales might have felt safe making that assumption about the prospective reader. But that is not an assumption that I would ever care to make (actually, I have some anecdotal evidence that supports the idea that the majority of my readers are female, though not overwhelmingly). But just think about the challenge, here - writing a 2nd person story, one in which you, the reader, are the protagonist, yet makes no assumptions about matters like the gender or sexuality of the protagonist. So, no love interest in this one, right?

     I'm experimenting; I admit that. That is part of what the Tales From Midhgardhur were meant to be - a way for me to experiment with many different kinds of writing, quite apart from the format of the novels that I write. And while I have no problem with taking inspiration wherever I may find it (my "Appendix N Revisited" project is an exploration of how my readings in Gary Gygax's Appendix N, which are the books that inspired Dungeons & Dragons, also have inspired me, over the years), but I have no interest in copying anyone. It would be boring and pointless to copy Farley's story. But Farley's story inspired me to do something different in the same person as he used, one I have never used before.

     I'm hoping to have "Remember!" finished and polished up in the next couple of days; I'll try to post it before the beginning of February if at all possible. Current Word Count: 2020.

Happy Reading! Skál!
~ Colin Anders Brodd

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Word Count Wednesday - Howls and Remembering, and a 5-Star Review

Hello everyone,


     With the holiday on Monday, my sense of time is a bit distorted, and it does not seem possible that it is already Wednesday. Yet here it is - a quick Word Count Wednesday recap:

     "Howl of the Ulfhedhnar" is coming along. I wrote quite a bit for it that simply did not work; I had to delete it and start over on that part. I traced most of the problem I was having to a line of dialogue early on in the story and re-wrote that' now it seems to be flowing, if only I could find more time to devote to it (I've spent a lot of time running my toddler to appointments lately!). Current word count: 3389.

     "Remember!" is the replacement for the story originally intended for December; I've actually started work on it (during a period when I was really stuck on the now-deleted section of "Howl of the Ulfhedhnar"). This one is going to be very tricky, though - I think it will be easy to write and painful to revise. I actually want to re-read a short story that helped inspire me on this one before I write much more, and I haven't got very far with it, yet - current word count: 150.

     Both of those stories are intended for publication in Tales From Midhgardhur on Channillo. And then I really do need a January story, as well, and it will be February before you know it . . . I guess I had better get to work.

     The first published collection of the Tales, Tales From Midhgardhur, Volume I, just received another 5-star review yesterday, this one came from David Roach, author of the really fantastic "Marauder" series of Viking fantasy books! Such a review from a fellow author, especially one who concentrates on the same kind of fantasy that I do, really means a lot to me! Here is the text of the review:

5 STARS

Dark, Gritty, and Dazzling. A must read for all fans of Norse Myth.
Mr. Brodd will dazzle and ensnare you in his vivid and dark Norse tales. The cover of this book does not in any way do his collection of short stories justice. Mr. Brodd takes the world of Norse mythology and catapults you into the deepest and darkest realms of mystery. His depiction of Norse gods is second to none bringing every detail to such vivid life you forget where you are in the moment. I particularly enjoyed that he did not shy away from some of the grotesque and bloody truths of Norse myth that so may seem to wash over. His detailed knowledge of Norse mythology lends a great deal of credibility to his stories and Mr. Brodd adds his own artistic touches to bring you into his world. I am not normally a fan of short stories and I could easily see Mr. Brodd turning each of them into a full fledged book (which I hope he does); however I was captivated by each one and each story stirred my emotions in very different ways. I am looking forward to reading his next book.

Happy Reading! Skál!
~ Colin Anders Brodd