Midnight Garden stories now on Joseph Carrabis: “The Tomb”


Final Day on the WordCrafter “Midnight Garden” Book Blog Tour

This is the final stop on the WordCrafter Midnight Garden Book Blog Tour and we’re wrapping up with a guest post by contributing author Joseph Carrabis about the inspiration of his story, “The Tomb” and a reading of his story “The Exchange”, which are both featured in this deliciously dark anthology, Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow.

About Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow

17 authors bring you 21 magnificent dark tales. Stories of magic, monsters and mayhem. Tales of murder and madness which will make your skin crawl. These are the tales that explore your darkest Midnight Garden… if you dare.

Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/MidnightGardenAnthology

Reading of “The Exchange” by Joseph Carrabis

Inspiration for “The Tomb”, by Joseph Carrabis

The Tomb

The Tomb was originally written in the late 1970s. and no one was interested in it. What you read is the last major edit, circa 2011. The original version – and much of what’s in the published version – came from a dream.

The story is personal to me as I was blind – technically “limited eyesight” and legally blind – until about four years ago. I was considered for some experimental surgeries back in the late 1970s and one thing or another dropped me from consideration. Finally, in 2020 – yep, the year of Covid – Technology caught up to what I needed it to be and several operations later, I can see.

In case you’re curious, going from an auditory landscape to a visual one is not easy. Susan (wife/partner/Princess) got a chuckle out of my staring at something while I matched what it looked like to the sound it made (and which I recognized).

The story itself deals with the fact that “seeing” means seeing everything, some of which isn’t pretty, and some, which others might consider ugly or horrid, is beautiful simply because it can be seen.

About Author Joseph Carrabis

Author Joseph Carrabis

Joseph Carrabis told stories to anyone who would listen starting in childhood, wrote his first stories in grade school, and started getting paid for his writing in 1978. He’s been everything from a long-haul trucker to a Chief Research Scientist and holds patents covering mathematics, anthropology, neuroscience, and linguistics. After patenting a technology which he created in his basement and creating an international company, he retired from corporate life and now he spends his time writing fiction based on his experiences. His work appears regularly in several anthologies and his own published novels. You can learn more about him at https://josephcarrabis.com.

Excerpt From “The Puppet Men”

Excerpt From “Self-Mutiny”, by Zack Ellafy

Giveaway

Three lucky winners will receive a digital copy of Midnight Garden in a random drawing following the tour. All you have to do to enter is follow the tour and leave a comment at each stop that you visit. If you missed a stop, you can go back and visit through the links in the schedule below.

Schedule

Monday – October 7 – M.J. Mallon: Interview & Reading from “The Seagull Man” – Writing to be Read

Tuesday – October 8 – Danaeka Scrimshaw: Inspiration for “The Fae Game”) & Denise Aparo: Reading from “Jack Moon & the Vanishing Book” – Roberta Writes

Wednesday – October 9 – Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “The Last Drop” & Inspiration for “Striders” – Paul Martz

Thursday – October 10 – Paul Martz: Reading & Inspiration for “The Blackest Ink” – Writing to be Read

Friday – October 11 – Molly Ertel: Inspiration for “Antipenultimate” & Abe Margel: Inspiration for “My Balance” – Kyrosmagica

Saturday – October 12 – Paul Kane: Inspiration for “Drip Feed” & Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “Grande Ture” – Undawnted

Sunday – October 13 – DL Mullan: Reading from “Kurst” & Ell Rodman: Inspiration for “The Drummer” – BookPlaces

Monday – October 14 – Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “The Exchange” & Inspiration for “The Tomb” – Writing to be Read

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Book your WordCrafter Book Blog Tour today!


Midnight Garden stories now on Joseph Carrabis: “The Exchange”


Day 7 of the WordCrafter “Midnight Garden” Book Blog Tour

Join us over at BookPlaces for Day 7 of the Wordcrafter Midnight Garden Book Blog Tour where cobtributing authors DL Mullan and Ell Rodman share their inspiration for their stories, “Kurst” and “The Drummer”, and another chance to win a free digital copy of Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow.


Midnight Garden stories now on Joseph Carrabis: “Striders”


Day 6 of the WordCrafter “Midnight Garden” Book Blog Tour

Today we’re over at Undawnted for Day 6 of the WordCrafter Midnight Garden Book Blog Tour with the inspiration for contributing author Paul Kane’s story, “Drip Feed” and a reading of “Grande Ture” by Joseph Carrabis. Drop by and comment here for a chance to win a free digital copy of Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow.

http://www.undawnted.com/2024/10/kane-carrabis-midnight-garden-anthology.html


Midnight Garden stories now on Joseph Carrabis: “The Last Drop”


Midnight Garden stories now on Joseph Carrabis: “The Drummer”


Day 5 of the WordCrafter “Midnight Garden” Book Blog Tour

Today we’re over at Kyrosmagica for Day 5 of the WordCrafter Midnight Garden Book Blog Tour with contributing authors Abe Margel and Molly Ertel share the inspirations for their stories “My Balance” and “Antepenultimate”. Join us and get a chance to win a free digital copy of Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow.


Day 4 of the WordCrafter Midnight Garden” Book Blog Tour

Welcome to Day 5 of the WordCrafter Midnight Garden Book Blog Tour. Thanks for dropping by to help us send off this deliciously dark anthology, Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow. Today we have a guest post and a reading of “The Blackest Ink” from contributing author, Paul Martz, which I think you’ll enjoy.

Giveaway

Three lucky winners will receive a digital copy of Midnight Garden in a random drawing following the tour. All you have to do to enter is follow the tour and leave a comment at each stop that you visit.

If you miss a stop, you can go back and visit through the links in the schedule below. (Links won’t work until the stop goes live).

Schedule

Monday – October 7 – M.J. Mallon: Interview & Reading from “The Seagull Man” – Writing to be Read

Tuesday – October 8 – Danaeka Scrimshaw: Inspiration for “The Fae Game” & Denise Aparo: Reading from “Jack Moon & the Vanishing Book” – Roberta Writes

Wednesday – October 9 – Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “The Last Drop” & Inspiration for “Striders” – Paul Martz

Thursday – October 10 – Paul Martz: Reading & Inspiration for “The Blackest Ink” – Writing to be Read

Friday – October 11 – Molly Ertel: Inspiration for “Antipenultimate” & Abe Margel: Inspiration for “My Balance” – Kyrosmagica

Saturday – October 12 – Paul Kane: Inspiration for “Drip Feed” & Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “Grande Ture” – Undawnted

Sunday – October 13 – DL Mullan: Reading from “Kurst” & Ell Rodman: Inspiration for “The Drummer” – BookPlaces

Monday – October 14 – Joseph Carrabis: Reading of “The Exchange” & Inspiration for “The Tomb” – Writing to be Read

About Midnight Garden: Where Dark Tales Grow

17 authors bring you 21 magnificent dark tales. Stories of magic, monsters and mayhem. Tales of murder and madness which will make your skin crawl. These are the tales that explore your darkest Midnight Garden… if you dare.

Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/MidnightGardenAnthology

Inspiration for “The Blackest Ink”, by Paul Martz

How to Mix “The Blackest Ink”

“The Blackest Ink” is a tale of unrequited love set in future Istanbul. Abdul is an apprentice to the master calligrapher Zolia, who has perfected a lettercraft so beautiful that it imbues inanimate objects with life. When Abdul awkwardly expresses his love for Zolia, she rebuffs him, and the story unfolds from there.

The story had its genesis in this MIT research article. Entirely by chance,  researchers had discovered an exceptionally black material that absorbs 99.995% of all incoming light. The material was made from carbon nanotubes, which are atomic-scale tubes constructed from carbon atoms. The article resonated with me. I’d been fascinated with structures built from carbon atoms since a post-grad neighbor brought me a sample of graphene from his lab. I imagined carbon nanotubes as a kind of atomic siphon. I couldn’t help but wonder, where did the light go? If carbon nanotubes absorb light, what else might they absorb? Souls? Emotions? Reality?

And–if they were used as a pigment to make ink, how black would it be?

I was thrilled to learn that “The Blackest Ink” was a runner-up in Wordcrafter’s 2024 Short Fiction contest, and look forward to reading every dark tale that grows in Midnight Garden.

Reading Excerpt from “The Blackest Ink”, by Paul Martz

Excerpt From “Black Moon”, by Julie Jones

Excerpt From “Amahle’s Demon”, by Roberta Eaton Cheadle

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Book your WordCrafter Book Blog Tour today!