Archive for the ‘Joshua Scribner’ Category

SOUL MATES: By Joshua Scribner

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

I don’t know why we have to have the same argument over and over.  I said I was sorry.  Why can’t we just move on?
 
And let me just add that it took both of us to get to this point. 
 
And again, I know what you’re going to say, that I had become cold and distant, that you still loved me, but you needed passion in your life, that you tried to tell me this, but I wouldn’t listen.
 
But the thing is, I did listen, and I did respond.  I just didn’t respond how you wanted.  I told you it was a rough time for me, that things would get better, to just be patient.  And I know that I was screaming when I said this, but that’s just because I needed passion in my life too. 
 
You became distant at that point, and I’ll say it for the thousandth time, my reaction, or more accurately, my non-reaction, wasn’t because I didn’t care.  On the freaking contrary, I didn’t react because I do love you and I understood what you were going through. I was just trying to give you space, not push you away, because I understand what it’s like to need space and to get pressured instead.
 
Now, hold on, don’t speak just yet.  I know it sounds like I’m putting it all on you, but I’m not.  I just wish you would see my side of the story, because I know that once we develop perspective, things look a lot different.
 
Go ahead and wipe that smirk off your face.  I know you’re mocking me in your head, and it’s because I had the ultimate opportunity to develop perspective, that I got to see the happy and the stuck and which category I fell into. 
 
But here’s the kicker, baby. You’re right beside me in this one, so mocking me is mocking yourself.
 
Hah!  Smirk’s gone and scowl has arrived.
 
No! No! No! Wait!  I’m sorry.  I’m becoming petty, and that’s not what I want to do right now.  As I said, I just want you to see my side.  I want you to understand how much it hurt to see you with that other man.
 
I know we were separated at the time.  I know I was with another woman.  That doesn’t mean that I didn’t love you.  I was just playing games.  I know that was stupid now.  But you were playing games too.  When I confronted you, you tried to pretend that you didn’t love me anymore.  You tried to pretend that you wouldn’t come back to me.
 
No.  Don’t interrupt.  I know what you’ve said.  I remember what you’ve told me since, that you really didn’t love me, that you really wouldn’t have come back, but I know you.  You’re stubborn.  You’d never admit that you were lying. 
 
But, you see, the proof is in the pudding. You’re by my side now. 
 
And I know that I restrained you.  I know I tied you to the bedpost.  I know I shouldn’t have done that, but you have to understand how desperate I felt.  I wanted you to stay, because I love you so much. And it seemed like you weren’t even listening.  The way you were shouting and trying to pull from my grip, it was like you were really going to leave.
 
Damn it!  And there you go again, trying to move away from me now.  Go ahead.  It’s not like I can tie you up again.
 
No.  Wait.  I’m sorry.  I wouldn’t tie you up even if I could.  I don’t even think I need to.  I think that’s why we’re together now.  It’s because we’re soul mates. The universe has glued us together.
 
And I know what you’re going to say to that.  I know we’ve met others like us roaming around, and I know they all had one thing in common, that it was the passion that made them stay.  And I know passion isn’t the word you choose.  I know you like to call it violence.
 
Call it what you want, but we have to stop playing games.  We have to accept that we love each other and were meant to be together.  We have to accept that we were both at fault for me shooting you and then shooting myself. 
 
Damn it! Come back here.

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©2010 Joshua Scribner

Joshua Scribner is the author of the novels Mantis Nights, The Coma Lights and Nescata.  His fiction won both second and fifth place in the 2008 Whispering Spirits Flash Fiction contest.  Up to date information on his work can be found at joshuascribner.com.  Joshua currently lives in Michigan with his wife and two daughters.

Also, you can read Joshua’s interview with Flashes in the Dark here:

http://flashesinthedark.com/2010/01/24/sunday-special-joshua-scribner/

 

SUNDAY SPECIAL: Joshua Scribner

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

I spoke to Joshua Scribner about his novel Mantis Nights, what drives him as an author, and what fascinates him with the darker side of life.

 LT:    Tell us about your upcoming novel, Mantis Nights.
 
JS:   Mantis is an insurance adjuster who’s alienated from his job and the world in general.  At night, while walking around town, he relaxes his body and closes his eyes.  This allows him to achieve altered states of mind, where he can become a character in dreamlike visions.  At first, his walks are just a special hobby that allows him to escape the doldrums of everyday life.  Then he becomes trapped in a vision and has to find his way back to normal reality. 
 
LT:    When did you first start writing?
 
JS:   I started writing in 1997 after reading a Stephen King book I picked up at a garage sale.  I liked it so much that I knew merely reading horror stories would not be enough. 
 
LT:    Altered states are a recurring theme in your stories. Why do you think this is?
 
JS:   I’ve spent much of my life experimenting with altered states of mind, like meditation, lucid dreaming, hypnosis, and astral projection.  Often I experience something strange or fascinating in those states and it develops into a story idea.  
 
LT:    What scares you?
 
JS:   Sometimes life is clear and sunny.  Sometimes there’s fog.  Other times, it’s so dark you can’t see two feet in front of you.  In the times it’s been the darkest for me, the times I was most afraid, there always seemed to be something spiritual with me.  The thought of being in the pitch black alone scares me.  The thought of my children being there scares me even more.
 
LT:    What challenges did you face in writing your first novel? What were the positives?
 
JS:   I wrote my first novel, Nescata, in 1997.  The challenges of writing haven’t changed.  Coming up with ideas and a plot are pretty easy for me.  The difficulty is conveying to the reader what I see in my mind.  This is something I try to get better at every day.  Thank you editors and critics!  The biggest positive of writing the first novel is getting through it.  I often tell people who want to write novels to get that first one done, even if it’s awful.  That’ll get you over the hump of thinking you can’t finish.   
 
LT:    Out of your work so far, which character is your favorite?
 
 JS:   Why don’t you just ask which of my children I like the best?  LOL.  The only way to answer this question is to cheat and say it’s a tie.  Each main character has a little bit of me in them.  In Soul Tripping, the second book of my Beyond Reception series, I split myself in two.  Half was given to the protagonist, Joseph Stanton, the other half to the villain, Donald Pagel.  I don’t want to sound like an egomaniac and say I like those two the best, but I probably enjoyed writing them the most. 
 
LT:    What draws you to the horror genre?
 
JS:   Life draws me to the horror genre.  I’ve experienced so much of the weird and scary I feel compelled to write about it. 
  
LT:    Are you currently working on another writing project?
 
JS:   Right now, Mantis Coma, book two in the Mantis series, is under contract, and I’m working with an editor on that.  I started the third book last summer and hope I can pick it back up soon.  I signed the first book of my Beyond Reception with Shadow Line Press in November.  I’m editing the second book in that series.     
 
LT:    When and where can our readers find Mantis Nights?
 
JS:    The release date is January 18th.  It will be available from onceuponabookstore.com on that day, then at fictionwise.com and other ebook retailers within a week or so.  The easiest way to get it is to go to joshuascribner.com and follow the links.
 
LT:    What authors do you read?
 
JS:   I like John Saul, Stephen King, Dean Koontz, and John Sandford.  I read various authors at places like Flashes in the Dark and Microhorror
 
LT:    Is there anything that you’d like to add?
 
JS:    I’d like to thank Flashes in the Dark for having me.

 

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©2010 Lori Titus