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MUSIC MONDAY: “Jesus Loves You, Brian Wilson” by Lost Dogs

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Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.

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A Graveyard for Heroes by Michael Michel: The Canvas is Bigger, but the Intensity Remains.

Cover of A Graveyard for Heroes by Michael MichelA Graveyard for Heroes

by Michael Michel

DETAILS:
Series: Dreams of Dust and Steel, #2
Publisher: Chainbreaker Books
Publication Date: June 11, 2025
Format: eARC
Length: 606 pg.
Read Date: May 24-30, 2025
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

Caveat Lector

I’ve yet to write a word of this post, but I’m going to tell you now that I’m going to end up spoiling some things from the first book—there’s just no way to talk about this book without it. I will try to keep them vague if I can’t avoid them, but they will be there.

But also, why are you reading this post if you haven’t read the first book? Read The Price of Power and I predict you’ll move on to the rest reflexively (as many of “the rest” are out when you finish, that is).

Still, be careful what you read from here.

What’s A Graveyard for Heroes About?

The first book was very focused—well, as much as you can be with 4 characters/storylines. You saw the impending (or not so impending) collapse of the nation/confederation in the background (to one degree or another) of three of the storylines, but the reader’s focus was rarely on that—it was these people getting to know them and their immediate circle. Through them you started to understand the world, its cultures, its history.

In the closing chapters of the book, the first visible domino of the collapse falls over.

In Graveyard, we keep our focus on these characters—but we also see the ongoing collapse, the ongoing treason (and the treason within that movement), and how it’s affecting not just the characters we got to know in The Price of Power, but also in others—faces and names new and old.

The story grows grander, our perspective enlarges—and assuming that the pre-Price status quo was as good as it could be, this civilization is in trouble from many sides.

*There are several reasons to believe the system could be better—as every system could be and every character we got to know recognized. But the stability, order, and painfully slow opportunities for reform were there.

The Missing Character?

Of the four characters/groups of characters that were the focus in the first book, one seemed to be almost missing. Not entirely, but so close that it’d be easy to miss.

Unless of course, their name/appearance has changed. I’ve spent a good amount of time thinking about this, and am pretty sure I’ve made up my mind about what I think. (at the same time, I’m ready for Michel to show me how I missed something).

Regardless, it’s fun to chew on.

Thephus

When we saw him last, his fate seemed uncertain. Frankly, I’m even less sure about what’s going on with him now. It’s as frustrating as it is satisfying to see Michel not giving us all the answers.

While I liked the guy—and felt bad for him—from the time we met him. My respect for him as a person has grown—he’s a well-conceived and complex character. Not just complex, he’s pretty confusing, too. Moreso to himself than anyone else. I wonder who will figure him out first—the reader or Thephus himself?

Just because his storyline bothers me and leaves me with more questions at the end of every one of his chapters doesn’t mean I think him any less. On the contrary, I think that sentence applies to every single chapter he’s been featured in since his introduction.

So much is going to make sense to us when we do get answers—and if all we’re doing now is piling up the questions, how much more satisfying will it be? Also, the part of this world that Thephus and those like him inhabit is more than intriguing.

So, what did I think about A Graveyard for Heroes?

This is me speculating here, as my precognition abilities are on the blink right now. But I’m guessing that you can make the case for Books 1 and 2 of Dreams of Dust and Steel serve as a massive prequel for an epic trilogy. To borrow a phrase from the back cover, “The pieces are set. The gameboard is chosen.” And now…things are going to really get going.

I can only imagine that as grim as things look here for our heroes…but also, our villains…by the end of book three, they’ll all wish that they were back in these events. But man…there’s not a lot of positive in this book—at least not plotwise.

There’s a whole lot of positive things to say about the writing, storytelling, and characters. So much so that I know I’ve left off things I’ve told myself “You gotta mention this.” For example, there’s a treat for people who miss Tyrion Lannister’s personality.

And just because I said prequel—I am not suggesting that these books are skippable. They’re not—you’d be robbing yourself of so much. There’s a character we meet in this book, for example, on the worst day of her life. She quickly became one of my favorites of the series. I reached out to Michel and was assured that we’d see her again—but based on what we saw here, there’s nothing inherent in her story that demands it. He could’ve closed the door on her and moved on—and it’d have been worth it just to wsee hat we got here. (I’d go into this deeper in a spoiler-rich conversation if anyone is interested).

My point is, the book is full of things that like that—the overall plot and seeing what happens with the characters we already know are the big ticket items. But this world and how Michel is telling its story is so rich, so full of moments that will stay with you, that even if these first to novels are “merely” setting it up for the bigger stuff to come—you want to read them.

This is a fantasy novel, and like most of them, this features some very important fight scenes, as well as a few battle scenes. Frankly, I find the smaller combat scenes more satisfying—and I usually do, that’s probably more of a personal taste thing. The larger battle scenes were really well done, and were largely haunting. The one-on-one fights/small group vs. small group/one-on-small group fights were much more satisfying (and somewhat haunting, too). They had me in much more suspense than the others. I audibly reacted to the last one focusing on Ishoa—I think you could see that particular point in her arc coming (either in this book or not), but actually seeing it made me cheer and pump my fist.

I may have shouted at my ereader for what the last page held—especially once I realized it was the last page, and not simply the end of a chapter.

What I’m saying is that once Michel stopped setting up his dominoes and started the reactions, you’re going to care. You’re going to be reeling. You’re going to wonder—”just where is he taking this?” while not caring that much because the ride is so fun.

I don’t remember the last time I was this invested in a Fantasy series. I suggest you all hop on board.


4 1/2 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life by C. S. Lewis: A Portrait of a Reader/Thinker as a Young Man

Further Up and Further In A Year with C.S.Lewis


Cover of Surprised by Joy by C. S. LewisSurprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life

by C. S. Lewis

DETAILS:
 Publisher: Harcourt Brace & Company
Publication Date: 1984
Format: Paperback
Length: 238 pg.
Read Date: May 10-25, 2025
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

The reader who finds these three episodes of no interest need read this book no further, for in a sense the central story of my life is about nothing else. For those who are still disposed to proceed I will only underline the quality common to the three experiences; it is that of an unsatisfied desire which is itself more desirable than any other satisfaction. I call it Joy, which is here a technical term and must be sharply distinguished both from Happiness and from Pleasure. Joy (in my sense) has indeed one characteristic, and one only, in common with them; the fact that anyone who has experienced it will want it again. Apart from that, and considered only in its quality, it might almost equally well be called a particular kind of unhappiness or grief. But then it is a kind we want. I doubt whether anyone who has tasted it would ever, if both were in his power, exchange it for all the pleasures in the world. But then Joy is never in our power and pleasure often is.

What’s Surprised by Joy About?

This is a look at the early part of Lewis’ life—his childhood, education (in boarding schools primarily), his acceptance to Oxford—and taking time off to serve in WWI—then returning and his eventual conversion to Christianity.

As he puts it in the preface,

This book is written partly in answer to requests that I would tell how I passed from Atheism to Christianity and partly to correct one or two false notions that seem to have got about. How far the story matters to anyone but myself depends on the degree to which others have experienced what I call “joy.”…The book aims at telling the story of my conversion and is not a general autobiography.

He’s not striving to be exhaustive, but to tell us enough that we understand what he was going through and how his education/experiences helped shape his mind for converting.

Endless Books

I am a product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms, upstairs indoor silences, attics explored in solitude, distan; noises of gurgling cisterns and pipes, and the noise of wind under the tiles. Also, of endless books. My father bought all the books he read and never got rid of any of them. There were books in the study, books in the drawing room, books in the cloakroom, books (two deep) in the great bookcase on the landing, books in a bedroom, books piled as high as my shoulder in the cistern attic, books of all kinds reflecting every transient stage of my parents’ interest, books readable and unreadable, books suitable for a child and books most emphatically not. Nothing was forbidden me. In the seemingly endless rainy afternoons I took volume after volume from the shelves. I had always the same certainty of finding a book that was new to me as a man who walks into a field has of finding a new blade of grass.

Just about anyone who takes the time to read this post is going to resonate with that quotation. Possibly be envious of that kind of childhood.

That’s one thing that comes through in clarity through this book—he is the product of so many books. So much of his experiences are shaped by, illustrated by, and reflected in what he reads—particularly what he returns to.

Yes, there’s some creative work. Some dry education. A lot of emotional development (largely phrased in other terms). Even a little socialization outside of his father, brother, and instructors—but really not much outside of that until Oxford.

What’s there throughout it all? Books. Hard not to identify with a guy like that.

So, what did I think about Surprised by Joy?

I was at this time living, like so many Atheists or Antitheists, in a whirl of contradictions. I maintained that God did not exist. I was also very angry with God for not existing. I was equally angry with Him for creating a world.

Sure, it’s about his early years. But I think the emphasis was on the wrong bits. I know, it’s not my life, he knows what got him to the point he was trying to focus on better than I do. But if the book “aims at telling the story of my conversion,” I really don’t see it.

It happens so quickly, with little fanfare leading up to it—it reminded me of one of those books where you stop a sentence or two after something happens, “Wait, did X just die?” That’s an exaggeration in this case, but not by much.

More of his WWI experience, more about the wrestling with ideas in Oxford. More showing the kind of thinking he encourages others to do about their faith/lack thereof, would be a plus.

Is it a good look at Lewis’ early life? Yes. Does it contain some of his best turns of phrase? Yeah, I think so. Does it deliver on what he aimed to? I really don’t think so. I recommend it for someone who wants to know more about the man—just come in with the proper expectations.


3 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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Saturday Miscellany—6/14/25

A small list this week, with an accidental (but appreciated) focus. I clearly didn’t spend much time online this week.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet The Real Jay Gatsby: Did F. Scott Fitzgerald model his titular character after his real-life Princeton school-mate?—huh.
bullet S.A. Cosby’s newest book was released this week, and I’m enjoying all the interviews/features I’ve run across. For example:
bullet S.A. Cosby on “King of Ashes,” Crime Epics, and the Softer Side of Monsters—Kowlakowski’s interview/look at the book (I’m going to have a hard time not stealing from this when it comes time for me to post about the book)
bullet Southern Culture on the Skids: S.A. Cosby’s King of Ashes—that first sentence should give Cosby’s readers pause.
bullet S.A. Cosby’s New Thriller Blends Southern Noir with Family Drama
bullet The Ultimate Summer 2025 Reading List: Sun, Fun, Math, and Counting—I really enjoy LitHub’s Lists of Lists like this
bullet In civilized nations that do things like this, June is National Crime Reading month. In honor of that Raven Crime Reads (one of my favorite accounts to follow) is posting a recommendation a day in the genre. Follow this thread and you will find more good books to read than you can handle (or you can enjoy when your tasts match up with Raven’s well-developed palate)

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet The Conversation with Nadine Matheson Coffee Break with S.A. Cosby: King of Ashes—a fun chat about Cosby’s new book (and a little more)
bullet The Thriller Zone Why You Shouldn’t Miss Thomas Trang’s Debut: Dark Neon Dirt

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
bullet I Am Princess X by Cherie Priest (Kali Ciesemier, Illustrator)
bullet Paw and Order by Spencer Quinn
bullet The Fold by Peter Clines
bullet Premonitions by Jamie Schultz

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet A Graveyard For Heroes by Michael Michel—as my dialogue coach Trent would say, “It is so money, baby.” This is the second of five installments in the Dreams of Dust and Steel series that is likely to end up on my all-time favorites list.
bullet King of Ashes by S.A. Cosby—hey, did I mention that Cosby has a new book out? Southern Crime and Family drama come together and bring us something dark—and likely spectacular. Hopefully I get to start this bad boy today. If not, Monday can’t come soon enough.
bullet Death at the White Hart by Chris Chibnall—the writer/creator of Broadchurch‘s first novel looks like a great time. (if you’re into moody, dark, police procedurals)

Therapy is Expensive Books are Cheap You Choose!

BOOK SPOTLIGHT: The Lights of Shantinagar by Nidhi Arora

I’m very pleased today to welcome The Write Reads Ultimate Blog Tour Nidhi Arora’s The Lights of Shantinagar! If you take a look at the feed for https://twitter.com/WriteReadsTours over the next few days, you’ll see a lot of bloggers who did find the time to write interesting things about it (or, check out the banner below).

The Lights of Shantinagar by Nidhi Arora Tour Banner

Book Details:

Title: The Lights of Shantinagar
Genre: Contemporary, Family Saga
Age Category: Adult
Format: Paperback/Ebook
Length: 272 pages
Publication Date: June 5, 2025
Cover of The Lights of Shantinagar by Nidhi Arora

About the Book:

The Lights of Shantinagar is a warm and lively portrait of family life set in modern India where new philosophies are reshaping old traditions and one woman’s astute observations can change everything.

Aspiring quantum physicist Sumi is newly married and has moved into her husband’s family home. Here she observes that the beguilingly tranquil middle-class town of Shantinagar is not very different from her beloved quantum world: the happenings in one house are cryptically entangled with things next door, objects mysteriously disappear and unexpected interactions reveal surprising truths.

As the line between right and wrong begins to blur, new discoveries force the residents of Shantinagar to reflect on what they truly know about themselves and the ones they love. Meanwhile, Sumi must blend logic with love to make sense of her new circumstances.

Book Links:

Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

About the Author:

Nidhi AroraNidhi Arora’s stories and essays are featured in international journals and anthologies including Best New Singaporean Short Stories, Out of Print, The Hooghly Review, QLRS, Cha, and Popshot. She has self-published two books on Secure Attachment: A parent-child bonding series and edited a third. More at www.nidhi-arora.com.


My thanks to The Write Reads for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

REPOST: Quick Fire Fantasy Book Tag

I’m not going to finish the post today that I meant to put up yesterday. So…let’s look at this again (all but the third prompt are still valid). I’ve been thinking a lot about the Fantasy genre. Might as well keep the trend going…



I saw this over at Bookstooge’s Reviews on the Road, and it seemed like a fun way to revisit some Fantasy Favorites, and indulge in a bit of nostalgia while I was at it.

Play along, will ya?

Rules:

  • Thank the person who tagged you and link back to their post
  • Link to the creator’s blog (thebookwormdreamer.wordpress.com) in your post
  • Answer the prompts below – all fantasy books!
  • Tag 5 others to take part
  • Enjoy!

 

5 star book

The Lies of Locke LamoraThe Lies of Locke Lamora
I’ve read this at least 4 times and love it more each time. A Con Novel, a Heist Novel, a story of Found Family and vengence gone wrong (and, right, if you think that’s possible). I can’t get enough of Book I of the Gentleman Bastard Sequence. It’s fun, it’s suspenseful, good fight scenes, and characters you want to spend more time with.

Oh, and the fantasy world is pretty cool, too 🙂

(I have a very short post about it here)


Always going to recommend

The Chronicles of PrydainThe Chronicles of Prydain

The Chronicles of Narnia made me a Lewis fan. The Chronicls of Prydain turned me into a Fantasy fan (which is why I had to use the covers I owned as a kid). Yeah, it’s written for what we’d call today a Middle Grade audience, but when I listened to the audiobooks a year or two ago (or when I read them to my kids a decade ago), I thought it was just about as effective as you could hope. A little bit of fun, a dash of romance, a hero quest straight out of Campbell, a decent amount of magic (but not too much), a good mythic basis—and a oracular pig! It’s also probably the series that taught me that you’ll end up having emotional attachments to characters to the extent you may get teary about when they die and/or say good-bye to each other (and, yeah, did as an adult).

(my posts about the audiobook series)


Own it but haven’t read it yet

Bloody RoseBloody Rose

I tried to read this last year, and failed. I’m hoping to read it this year, and am likely to fail. I less-than-three’d Kings of the Wyld (in print and audio) so much, I don’t know why I haven’t made the time for the sequel.


Would read again

The Brothers ThreeThe Brothers Three

The first of The Blackwood Saga is everything I loved about portal fantasies as a kid—but it’s written for adults. Some good characters, a good amount of growth (especially in the later books in the series), good fight scenes and a pretty cool world to explore. This worked for me in ways I didn’t expect—and the sequels have done a good job building on this one. I’ve yet to read the newest in the series, but this one feels like a good comfort-read if I needed one.

(my post about this one)


In another world

The Warlock in Spite of HimselfThe Warlock in Spite of Himself

(I probably would’ve gone with Brooks’ The Magic Kingdom for Sale, but Bookstooge beat me to it in his post).

I honestly remember very little about this novel, despite having read it several times. But the last time was probably in 1990-91. I was able to find a couple of the later novels in the series, too—just not enough for me at the time (I probably could now—yay, Internet). Still, somehow this is what sprang to mind when I thought of a fantasy on another world. A cool combination of SF and fantasy, as I recall.


Back on Earth

The Hum and the ShiverThe Hum and the Shiver

(and the rest of the series, too, but this is good enough—as good as many series hope to be in itself)

A magical people with amazing musical talent in the Smoky Mountains, dealing with modernization, an Iraqi war vet, and a feud going back generations. I’m not a believer in magic, but Bledsoe makes me want to with these books—this is the best of a great series, and thinking about it now has got me thinking it might be time for read #4 of this one.


As for the tagging . . . nah, I’ll just leave this open to all my readers, I’d love to see what you all would put here. (W&S Book Club, here’s another chance to talk about The Dragonlance Chronicles—you’re welcome)

WWW Wednesday—June 11, 2025

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This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Seems easy enough, right? Let’s take a peek at this week’s answers:

What are you currently reading?

Cover of How to Dodge a Cannonball by Dennard Dayle Cover of The Undead Fox of Deadwood Forest by Marisa Calin
How to Dodge a Cannonball
by Dennard Dayle
The Undead Fox of Deadwood Forest
by Marisa Calin, read by Aubrey Hartman

I’m not sure what to say about Dayle’s book yet–it’s a satire set in the Civil War about a white teen in an all-black squad in an almost-all-black regiment. I’m very impressed, but am still trying to figure out just where it’s going before I firm up my impressions.

Calin’s book was being promoted by a local bookstore, and looked like just the needed level of lightness.

What did you recently finish reading?

Cover of The Amazing Twin Chicken Freedom Fighters by Zephaniah Sole Cover of Lies Sleeping by Ben Aaronovitch
The Amazing Twin Chicken Freedom Fighters
by Zephaniah Sole
Lies Sleeping
by Ben Aaronovitch, read by Kobna Holdbrook-Smith

Sole’s book is either brilliant, the ravings of a mad man, or both. I’m leaning toward the latter. My goal is to expand on that soon.

This is my 3rd time through Lies Sleeping, and I picked up so much this time that I think I missed before (or just plum forgot). And, it’s a rollicking great time.

What do you think you’ll read next?

Cover of King of Ashes by S.A. Cosby Cover of Money, Lies, and God by Katherine Stewart
King of Ashes
by S.A. Cosby
Money, Lies, and God: Inside the Movement to Destroy American Democracy
by Katherine Stewart, read by Patricia Rodriguez

Family drama, a crime story, and S.A. Cosby…King of Ashes sounds like a grim but fantastic time.

I heard an interview with Stewart this morning, so when I was browsing the Library’s offerings and saw this book, I figured I might as well give it a whirl. Would like to hear a bit more about what lead her to some of her conclusions.

Tell me about your recent reads!

PUB DAY SPOTLIGHT: A Graveyard for Heroes by Michael Michel

I’m excited to help Michael Michel spread the word about today’s publication of the second book in his Dreams of Dust and Steel series, A Graveyard for Heroes. Fantasy reader friends and foes (assuming I have one or two) are going to want to get this right away and move it to the top of your TBRs. I’d go on about that, but this post isn’t about that. Let me just give you the facts about this book, and I’ll rave later–hopefully tomorrow (assuming I can figure out how to stop without telling you everything that happens).

Book Details:

Title: A Graveyard for Heroes by Michael Michel
Series: Dreams of Dust and Steel, #2
Format: Hardcover/Kindle/Paperback
Length: 606 pg.
Publisher: Chainbreaker Books
US Publication Date: June 11, 2025
Cover of A Graveyard for Heroes by Michael Michel

About the Book:

Loss. Redemption. Grief…and the dangers of belief.

Treachery looms across the land.

With scores to settle, the lowborn shake rust from their knives and trade allegiances for a promise of blood while the highborn rally their armies.

Namarr’s future rests on a blade’s edge, and the heroes who might save it can no longer hide.

Meanwhile, across the sea, Scothea has already succumbed to revolution.

Fanatics led by the Arrow of Light wrest the throne from an ancient line of kings. Now, their sights are set on a Third Crusade against Namarr. For most, it will be their last.

The pieces are set. The gameboard is chosen.

For those unwilling to play, there’s only one peaceful place left…

The inside of a grave.

The second installment in the Dreams of Dust and Steel series continues with the plight of characters both loved and hated. Perfect for fans of A Game of Thrones, The Age of Madness, The Five Warrior Angels, The Broken Empire, and Ash and Sand.

 

 


Dreams of Dust and Steel has the gritty feel of a western, the sweeping scope of the fantasy classics, and brings a fresh new voice to the genre.

In this world, pain can be turned into magic powers, and the price of success can often be worse than failure. Rooted in spirituality as much as it is steeped in bloody violence, this is Game of Thrones meets X-Men.

If you want a character-driven epic rife with scheming politicians, psychedelic horrors, savage knights, and chilling cult leaders, this is one of five books in a series sure to leave you with all the emotional baggage you desire.

Book Links:

Amazon ~ Bookshop.org

About the Author

Michael MichelMichael Michel lives in Bend, Oregon with the love of his life and their two children. When he isn’t obsessively writing, editing, or doing publishing work, he can be found exercising, coaching leaders in the corporate world, and dancing his butt off at amazing festivals like Burning Man. His favorite shows are Dark, The Wire, Arcane, and Norsemen. He loves nature and deep conversations. Few things bring him more joy than a couple of hours playing table tennis.

Website ~ Twitter ~ Instagram ~ Goodreads

Top 5 Tuesday – Top 5 series I wished were shorter

Top 5 Tuesday banner
This week’s topic is, “Top 5 series I wished were shorter. Speaking of George (or even any Wheel of Time fans), is there a series that you wish was shorter than it is. Maybe it’s by one book — maybe it’s by eleven. You tell us!!”

As this the second in a similar series of Top 5 Tuesday topics, I figured I’d keep this one to a video, too. Let me know what you think.

Joel and the MST3K Bots asking What Do You Think, Sirs?

LITERARY LOCALS: A Q&A About Writing in Idaho with Samuel Smith, AKA Joe IDAHO

Literary Locals logo
When I received Smith’s initial round of answers, I replied: “Oo De Lally! You really picked the right nom de plume, didn’t you?” And I still feel that way. Beyond the name, this feels like the most Idaho-y of all of the Q&As I’ve done for this series in the last 2.5 years.

I had the pleasure of meeting Smith and his wife, Kristin, at the Nampa Library Book Faire this Spring and really wish we’d had longer to chat, I got the feeling that they had a bunch of stories (mostly true) to tell, and I’d love to hear them. But for now, I’ll make due with this.


Before we get into things, why don’t you give the reader a brief introduction to you and your work.
My name is Samuel Smith, and I write under the pen name Joe IDAHO. Before I became an author, I was a traveling archaeologist, a shovelbum. I traveled around the West from job to job for about ten years. Living in motels and tents and chasing the next dig or the next survey got old, so I became a high school English teacher with plans to continue archaeology during summer breaks. After teaching for five years, my daughter was born, and I became a stay-at-home dad.

I’ve always enjoyed writing stories. During the Pandemic and lockdown, I finished some stories I’d been working on. My wife read them and encouraged me to publish. I got into self publishing and have been working on improving my books ever since.

My Joe IDAHO books are a series of standalone stories with the state of Idaho, its history, politics, and culture as the underlying setting and theme. You can find my Joe IDAHO stories at joeidaho.com.

To help my readers get an idea get a little idea about the books you produce, could you share the title of your Teddy Roosevelt book? If you want to give a pitch, too—go ahead. But that title alone probably serves as a pitch.
Teddy Roosevelt’s Goblin: A Bigfoot Story is based on several stories, either by Teddy Roosevelt or about him. When I was in high school, my English teacher was trying to get me to read. They knew I was into Teddy Roosevelt and hunting, so they got me a copy of Roosevelt’s book, The Wilderness Hunter. In that book, Roosevelt recounts a story told to him out on the frontier by an old mountain man. The old mountain told Roosevelt a chilling account of being attacked by a creature, a goblin he called it, on what is now the Montana-Idaho border that could only be described as Bigfoot. I combined this story with accounts of Roosevelt on the frontier and a trip Roosevelt took to hunt reindeer in North Idaho. My story imagines what would happen if Roosevelt encountered the goblin he’d heard about while hunting in the Idaho wilderness.

Also, I love the term “shovelbum,” and am going to spend the next few weeks looking for opportunities to use it. (given the dearth of opportunities for me to talk about archaeology, it’ll probably only be because I talk about you or “I learned this fun new term…”)

What brought you to Idaho in the first place? What is it about Idaho that keeps you here?
Those are great questions, H.C. I’ve lived in Idaho since I was eight years old. When the family pig farm in Wyoming failed, we moved here. It was the late 1980s. My parents were trying to do an all organic, free range model of pig farming that was probably a little too ahead of its time. We couldn’t compete with mega corp industrial pig farms. So we sold the pigs when my dad found work as a bricklayer on the Mountain Home Air Force Base. He kept finding steady work on the base, so we stayed.

What keeps me in Idaho is its archaeology, history, and stories. As a kid, I fell in love with Idaho’s outdoors. Searching for artifacts, learning about Idaho’s past and how it shapes the stories Idaho tells became very important to me. I was lucky enough to spend much of my career as an archaeologist in Idaho.

Are you tied into some sort of local author/bookish group/culture? If so, tell us about it and how it helps you as an author. If you’re not, is there a reason for it?
Yes, I am involved in the local author community, and being part of that culture has been incredibly helpful to me as an author. I’m part of a local writers’ group called MMMWriters. The three M’s stand for Murder, Mystery, and Mayhem, but they’re open to authors of other genres. This group meets in person on the second Tuesday of every month and on the third Thursday via zoom. MMMWriters has really helped me with marketing, how to find an editor, proofreader, agent, and book fairs. They are a very active and supportive group of writers from across the state.

What kind of events in the area do you attend—either to sell/promote your books or to network with authors? Are there any outside of this area that you hit regularly and wish we had something like it here?
I’m just getting started with book promotion. So far, I’ve just been attending local book fairs and engaging with people on social media. I sell my books on Amazon and plan to get them on the other online retailers soon. I also plan on creating audiobook versions and a bookstore on my website. Book signings at local bookstores are also something I’d like to try.

What’s the breakdown of your audience—do you have a strong local base, or are your readers from other parts of the world?
A lot of the people who’ve bought my books have told me they were Idaho locals or interested in Idaho history. Online I’ve sold books to people from Canada and the UK, a few in Australia. Again, the theme seems to be people with an interest in learning more about the state.

What was it like getting that first UK or Australia sale? Was it exciting, ho-hum, or something else?
It was interesting and exciting to know that people outside the US picked up the book. I wondered how they came across it. It seemed, at least from what I could gather from their Amazon reviews that they had some connection to Idaho and Bigfoot, Bigfoot being the strongest of the two. I learned that both countries, the UK and Australia, have their own versions of Bigfoot, the Woodwose and Yowie respectively.

Do you think there are particular challenges or advantages to being a writer in the Treasure Valley? (possibly both)
I believe being a writer in the Treasure Valley comes with many advantages. The area boasts a vibrant and supportive writing community that actively brings authors together. At every book fair I’ve attended, fellow writers have reached out to welcome me and invite me to join their groups. The atmosphere has been overwhelmingly positive, with a strong spirit of encouragement and collaboration. As someone new to publishing and promotion, this support has been an invaluable advantage.

Do you bring Idaho (or some sort of Idaho-sensibility, assuming one exists) to your work? Whether or not anyone else sees it, can you look at some aspect of your writing and think “That’s Idaho” or “I would do ____ differently if I was a Kentuckian or from Illinois?”
Those are also important questions. To me, there is definitely an Idaho-sensibility in my work. It’s based on the idea that perceptions of Idaho change depending on who you ask. Growing up here, going to college, and working in Idaho, I noticed some locals falling into two categories. Some see Idaho as the greatest place on Earth, others couldn’t get out of the state fast enough. And of course, there are plenty of folks in the middle.

When I was a traveling archaeologist, I met many out-of-staters who had a lot of assumptions, misconceptions, and ideas about Idaho. To out-of-staters, Idaho was a place to escape to, or it was a place to run from. It really seems to depend on the individual. To give you some examples, a fellow archaeologist, a person not from Idaho, once asked me, “You’re from Idaho, right Sam? Do people in your state have running water, indoor toilets, electricity?” I laughed, but they were completely serious. [It’s funny because it’s true…] Another time, a biologist I was working with in Texas, a native of Texas and avid hunter, asked me, “I’ve waited my whole life to hunt elk in Idaho. I’m going to move there someday. Are your mountains really as rugged as they say? Are the lakes as crystal clear as the pictures?” He was all in on Idaho.

As Joe IDAHO, I try to portray and deconstruct the concept of Idaho using the different perspectives people have. I like to examine where the extreme ends of those perceptions meet. I see Idaho as many things all at once and more complex than the stereotypes, as I’m sure every state is. One experience that got me onto the idea of a series of Idaho themed books was a collection of stories a student handed me all about their home state of Florida. Every story was by a different Florida author and was loosely based on a crime or crazy incident that could only happen in that state. Each story imparted a Florida-sensibility unique to the author. It was so interesting it helped inspire me to write my Joe IDAHO stories.

One final question, is there a book (or two…or 18, if you get really carried away), that embodies Idaho/the Idaho spirit to you to recommend to my readers?
One book I would recommend to readers that embodies the Idaho spirit ‌would be Mountain Man by Vardis Fisher. Many people know the book and author from Sydney Pollack’s 1972 film Jeremiah Johnson, starring Robert Redford. Fisher, an Idaho native, drew upon his deep familiarity with the region to craft the novel’s setting. His intimate knowledge of Idaho’s terrain and history enriches the narrative, offering readers an authentic glimpse into the life of mountain men in the American West. I loved reading this book in high school. One of my first projects as an undergrad at BSU was surveying and recording the historic house Fisher built in Hagerman, Idaho.

I’m ashamed to say that Fisher never got on my radar as an Idaho novelist. I should get acquainted with Mountain Men.

Thanks for your time and participation! Hope you enjoyed it!


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