In the City of my Childhood

In the city of my childhood, great elms keep watch over blocks upon blocks of 100-year-old Victorian houses. Those houses would qualify as mansions, if not for the core neighbourhoods they inhabit.

The narrow, crooked streets of the Market area are defined by four- and five-story buildings with massive limestone pillars and elaborate cornices in red and tan brick. The historic painted banners on their sides proclaim the businesses which built them early in the last century.

I stand in an antique house on a street where spray-painted tags ride the back walls of garages with impunity. The tall windows, wide sills, the creak of a true antique oak floor instead of some modern imitation. This is the city as I knew it long ago. It is as it was in my grandparents’ time: a melting-pot of the world, falling down and yet still standing.

We are a motley fellowship around our hostess’s table. We have come here from the Congo, from Chicago, from English and aboriginal Canada, from the Russian Mennonite migrations, from Uzbekistan. Continue reading

Literary Ninjas: International Intrigue

Grace Bridges is a true and faithful friend. As an author, publisher and mentor of SF novelists through her small press’s critique exchange method of examining submissions, she is also an experienced Literary Ninja.

Upon seeing the Great Editorial Snookering in progress, Grace got in touch with me, agreeing that my dear ol’ pal and writing partner, the incorrigible Marc Schooley, needs a little messin’ with. (Full dirt on that guy here.)

What could we do to deal with this freight train of unorthodox and suspect wagering?

We could send his words off on a different track. Conveniently, Grace needed a topic for an upcoming group blog post with an international angle. So Grace put the hot iron to Marc’s feet on the World War II European aspects of his latest novel, Konig’s Fire.

Please visit the International Christian Fiction Writers for a Ninja Interview.

You might also find you want to keep returning to hear more about the exciting realm of world fiction and the multicultural mosaic of authors who write it.

Where else can you find Grace?