Showing posts with label Mark Wallace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Wallace. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

The End of America 8 now available for pre-order

 




My new book, The End of America, Book 8, is now available for pre-order, on sale, from Bookshop.


Orders coming mid-January on Bookshop and on Amazon.

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

I have poems in the March 2022 issue of the Brooklyn Rail and will be reading a few on March 11, 2022

 




I’m pleased to have some poems in the March 2022 of The Brooklyn Rail. Thanks to Anselm Berrigan and the other editors and workers who do such a great job with that publication. Here’s the link.

https://brooklynrail.org/2022/03/poetry/three-322b?fbclid=IwAR1k1rRvxrlxufAIZcajv7sPGc4cpd8tPvzepFGtZWcC6ilCJ6PI9Ts8Ol4


Also, I’m reading a few minutes of poetry this Friday March 11 around 11:10 or 11:15 a.m. Pacific Time for The Brooklyn Rail at the conclusion of an discussion roundtable on the art of Ad Reinhardt. The event is free although you do need to sign up beforehand. The discussion begins at 10 a.m. Pacific Time. Scroll to the bottom of the event page to sign up.


https://brooklynrail.org/events/2022/03/11/color-out-of-darkness-ad-reinhardt-curated-by-james-turrell/?fbclid=IwAR3SUUyoPi9K9ys9clL3MihPy3-WJRNy_bnM1kaBqjTV73U9dL_c7CjJHMA


Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Support Independent Bookstores and Order Crab from Indiebound



Maybe the way to buy a copy of my novel Crab that’s most supportive of the world of literature is through Indiebound.com, a community of independent local bookstores (link below). You can buy the book directly from Indiebound or use the page to locate a local, independent bookstore that will order Crab for you.

http://www.indiebound.org/book/9781943899036


Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Crab, my new novel, is now available at Amazon



Crab, from Submodern Books, is now available at Amazon:

Crab: a novel by Mark Wallace


It’s 1999. Change is coming. A mysterious technology called the Crab is infiltrating the minds of U.S. citizens with dreams from another planet. Sarah’s psychic abilities make her the first person to recognize the alien dreams crashing around New York City, but what should she do? Does the Crab free people’s minds, or enslave them? Marinda, a painter who can’t make herself paint, has an ex-boyfriend determined to get her back or punish her for leaving, he can’t tell which. The strange late night phone calls he’s getting, source unknown, are egging him on. Jerry, who thinks New York is his for the taking, is getting the calls too, and growing increasingly volatile and confused. Across the U.S., in government buildings and in bars, violence is spreading, and no one knows why. Is it the Crab? As the danger rises in this disturbing, suspenseful, and humorous novel, the question turns urgent: whose dreams are people really dreaming?


*

Crab is a perfect example of slipstream fiction. It blends literary and sci-fi writing seamlessly and enjoyably. Wallace makes use of sophisticated language and in-depth psychological development, the hallmarks of good literary writing. With equal ease, he crafts an engaging plot and interesting speculative concepts, both central to sci-fi. We encounter technologically induced surrealism alongside psychological realism alongside dystopian decline alongside that rarest thing in fiction: deft and actually funny humor. A compelling and original work, Crab should garner much attention and many devoted readers.

—Okla Elliott, author of From the Crooked Timber and The Doors You Mark Are Your Own


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