Urban Harvest: Tales of the Paranormal in New York City Anthology
Publication Date: September 22nd 2013
Genre: New Adult Urban Fantasy
~Summary~
New York City–it’s home to 8 million people trying to make their way through the day–a crop of humanity seething with hopes and fears, dreams and nightmares. Autumn comes, and nine authors harvest nine tales from this unique setting and people. From stories of everyday life in an otherworldly light to nightmarish tales of human darkness, Urban Harvest has something for everyone.
Urban Harvest contains tales of the paranormal from Alex Shvartsman, Laurie Treacy, Donna Ansari, Tara Hill, Laura Wenham, Andrea Stanet, Don Corcoran, Saif Ansari, and Sean Sakamoto.
In keeping with the spirit of harvest, all proceeds from this anthology will go to support City Harvest, an organization that feeds NYC’s hungry.
Urban Harvest contains tales of the paranormal from Alex Shvartsman, Laurie Treacy, Donna Ansari, Tara Hill, Laura Wenham, Andrea Stanet, Don Corcoran, Saif Ansari, and Sean Sakamoto.
In keeping with the spirit of harvest, all proceeds from this anthology will go to support City Harvest, an organization that feeds NYC’s hungry.
Purchase Link: Amazon
~Excerpt~
Coexistence
I knew I had to have an excess of proof in order to not be seen
as another Bigfoot or Loch Ness Monster hunter. I spent months, and then years,
creating the most thorough maps of the NYC underground. During this time, I
became increasingly oblivious to events on the surface. The friend whose apartment
I had been using moved during one of my long periods underground. When I
resurfaced to shower and pick up my unemployment checks, I was very surprised
to knock on his door and meet a nice Asian couple who had no idea who I was. My
belongings, and one of my few remaining connections to the surface world, were
gone without a forwarding address.
I can’t explain the patterns I saw without my data, which the
FBI confiscated when they arrested me. It’s probably collecting dust in an FBI
basement now, but back in the spring of 2014 with everything right in front of
me, I thought I had developed enough of an understanding of the markings that I
was considering altering them to attempt communication with my theoretical life
forms. Before I could do anything, however, the decision was taken away from
me.
I was camping in a small open area formed by the intersection of
two of the marked tunnels when I saw it. This was not a small tube worm or
hydrogen-sulfide breathing scorpion. Emerging from the smaller tunnel was what
I would best describe as an earth dragon. Not a winged creature like Toothless
fromHow to Train Your Dragon, but instead similar to a large worm-snake
with a scaly covering of rock in every earth-tone imaginable.
As the dragon stretched to pull itself out of the tunnel, I
could do nothing but stare in awe. The tangled asbestos fibers were clearly
from a pelt that covered the dragon’s ventral side. As it emerged fully into
the room, I realized it had a “head” end which had circular shiny, almost polished
areas, and a “mouth” area which had shiny white crystals inside, while its
“tail” end came to a sharp point. It was, I would find out later, on the
smaller side for a dragon—but at the time the fact that it was probably three
feet around and six feet long was impressive enough.
~The Authors~
~Interview~
Laura Wenham is one of the authors featured in Urban
Harvest: Tales of the Paranormal in New York City.
Your story, Coexistence, is about dragons who
live under NYC. What prompted you to write this story?
The idea for my story began when I got my
first job in Manhattan and walked every day past manhole covers that were
constantly emitting streams of steam and smoke. At first I largely
thought how inefficient the steam heating systems were to be losing so much
heat. Then, as I kept walking past them, I thought all of that smoke would make
a good cover for dragons hiding underground. Then I began to wonder how
much evidence you would need to support the idea of underground dragons and
what the likely reaction of the rest of society would be if a scientist claimed
to have discovered dragons under Manhattan. I couldn’t figure out what
might cause a scientist to seriously research this until the various steam pipe
explosions began happening in Manhattan. Like the character in my story, I
walked right past the hole left by the explosion in front of NYU’s
library, which made quite an impression on me.
What other things have you written/are you
writing?
I have folders full of stories and poems and
songs on my computer. I am very good at coming up with interesting ideas and
very bad at figuring out where the plot and characters want to go. I am
currently working on two different short stories. One of them is based on the
idea that we become able to communicate with our dark-matter doppelgangers and
the new rich tourist activity is not traveling into space, but instead meeting
their doppelgangers in a room sealed by plasma to keep the universe from
exploding – until one of the dark-matter doppelgangers is murdered after
the meeting and the detectives on our side of the universe have to figure out
the motive without access to any physical evidence. The other story is about
these tiny kangaroo-like robots that are built to be used for surveillance of
enemy terrain (http://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/robotics-hardware/tiny-jumping-robot-finds-room-for-a-tail). When
the military figures out a way to also have them radiate to increase the
enemy’s feelings of fear, an anti-war group decides to make them
broadcast feelings of peace, make them self-replicating, and releases them in
the US, with wide-ranging results. I am also trying to write down the amusing
anecdotes of my 2.5 year old son’s daily adventures.
Do you have a writing mentor or inspiration?
I am extremely grateful to the members of the
Mom’s Writer’s Group at the Midshore Mothers’ Center (http://midshoremotherscenter.org/) who,
when I described my story idea to them, patiently encouraged me to actually
finish and submit it. I would also like to thank my various friends who read
the final draft for mistakes, particularly Preston Ray, whose edits were
extremely helpful in decreasing my word count without losing content.
What’s your writing schedule? Do you have a
favorite place to write?
With a 2.5 year old, my writing time is
limited – which is why I value the free write time we have as part of the
Mothers’ Center group as well as late nights in bed typing (sometimes
incoherent) story ideas on my iPad.
What’s next?
Our Writer’s Group starts up again in early
October, so I intend to keep working on the two stories I mentioned above (as
well as the several ideas I will probably come up with between now and
then).
Anything else you’d like to add?
I love the idea of writing anthologies and
donating the profits to charities, particularly when they are local, meaningful
charities such as City Harvest. Not only am I now a published author, but as I
encourage my friends and family to buy the anthology on Sunday because I
want them to read what I wrote, I also do so knowing that they are helping out
a great cause! (And I have to confess I am terribly curious about and anxiously
waiting to read the other stories in the anthology!)
Thanks for stopping by!
This book sounds great and the excerpt was awesome! Love anthologies.
ReplyDeleteI love anthologies, too. I think it has something to do with my attention span... uh, what were we talking about?
ReplyDelete