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RELEASE DAY

Three years and eight days ago I started writing a book. Today that book is a real, actual thing. Frost is available in digital and paperback formats at long last.

For those of you who preordered, it’ll automatically download to your kindle, showing up like an unwanted distant relative who just needs a place to crash for a few nights. For everyone waiting for the paperback, now is the time.

It’s tough to know what to say other than I hope you read it, and enjoy it. Writing something of this length and scope is an intensely personal process and it always feels strange, and uncomfortable, and terrifying, and presumptive, to release it into the wild. “Here. You deal with it now.” That type of thing.

With that said, I’m extremely excited about all of this. Amy Frost is easily my favorite protagonist I’ve written, and she’ll be living in my head for a long time. I ask that you take her journey with her despite her flaws.

Thanks a million to the group of people who spent their hard-earned free time helping me get this thing to the finish line. You know who you are, and booze is on the way.

 

Talk soon,

Sam

Chapter 2

Frost officially releases November 1. To read Chapter 1, click here.

Chapter 2

I return home late afternoon and Mom is in the living room, as usual. Sitting on the couch with the TV on, looking at her phone, tight white jeans, dripping in gold, full hair and makeup. Dressed to the nines, nowhere to go.

“How was it?” she asks without looking up.

“Fine. Got a quick champagne buzz but it’s gone now.”

She sighs. “Amy.”

I walk to the fridge and open it. I can no longer see her but our voices carry through the floor plan.

“It was fine, Mom.”

“Fine?”

Chapter 1

Frost officially releases November 1. The following is an excerpt from the book. If you’ve already pre-ordered, don’t forget to enter the giveaway

Chapter 1

Tonya Katz is a Grade A bitch, and I am reminded of this each time I’m in her presence. You can dilute it with more palatable language if you like, but I’ll roll with the truth, thank you very much.

I play with the word on my tongue, rolling it around but not saying it. Bitch, bitch, bitch.

She isn’t mean; meanness would be a welcome moment of humanity for Tonya Katz. She’s exceedingly nice—that’s the deal—and the first few times you meet her, it’s easy to mistake it for real, genuine warmth. It once led me to the edge of liking her. But after that—after things progress past surface talk and simple pleasantries and oh well it sure looks like rain, doesn’t it?—that’s when you realize who Tonya Katz really is. Which is to say, she’s no one; the broad either doesn’t have a real personality, or she’s so ashamed of it, she smothers it with canned lines and pageant smiles until it’s unrecognizable. Why someone would choose to live this way, I don’t know. How exhausting.

Frost Giveaway

Hi. Just checking in with a quick heads-up/update. As you well know, my new novel, Frost, will be released November 1. Since you’re a reader of this blog and are definitely going to buy it anyway (RIGHT????), I suggest you pre-order now and enter my giveaway. Details? Details:

All you have to do is pre-order Frost before November 1 and send proof of purchase (a screenshot or picture of your receipt, Amazon order confirmation page, or anything else that makes it obvious) to OtterLodgeGiveaways@gmail.com, and you’re entered to win a free Fire HD 8 Tablet. I’ll draw the winner the week of release. So get on it!

Easy. If you’ve already pre-ordered, just send that email to get in on the action. If not, you can pre-order here.

ALSO, for the large number of you who have asked about a paperback version: I’m working on it. Proof copies are being printed and I’m hoping to have it live by November 1 to go along with the ebook. Stay tuned.

Frost Pre-order + Cover Reveal

Hello, dear people of the Lodge. I’m here to tell you I’ve emerged from quasi-exile with something to show. Three years in the making, my new novel is finally done and set for pre-orderFrost will be released November 1, and is live on Amazon now.

As I mentioned to the email list yesterday, I’ve worked a lot on the craft in the last few years, and I think I’ve grown as a writer and storyteller. That should be evident in this one. It’s been a lot of hard work (like mentally-exhausting hard…not cement-pouring–i.e. actually–hard…but anyway) and there were times this book about killed me (metaphorically speaking), but in the end I think I wrote the story I set out to write. That’s all you can hope for as a writer, and I’m pretty damn proud of it.

Here’s the cover and description:

The Best Thing I’ve Read Recently

Since it’s Friday afternoon and you’re slacking off anyway, I can’t think of a more fitting use of your time than glancing over this 10-15 minute read on our collective “busyness,” and the value of not doing anything. It struck some sort of chord for me, and it’s just very well written.

I came across it first in Tim Ferriss’s book Tools of Titans, which is really interesting in a lot of ways, but this one essay that’s kind of randomly stuck in the middle is the one part I keep coming back to. It’s been months since I read it, and I keep thinking about it, seemingly out of nowhere. A couple poignant parts:

Almost everyone I know is busy. They feel anxious and guilty when they aren’t working or doing something to promote their work. They schedule in time with their friends the way 4.0 students make sure to sign up for some extracurricular activities because they look good on college applications. I recently wrote a friend asking if he wanted to do something this week, and he answered that he didn’t have a lot of time but if something was going on to let him know and maybe he could ditch work for a few hours. My question had not a preliminary heads-up to some future invitation: This was the invitation. I was hereby asking him to do something with me. But his busyness was like some vast churning noise through which he as shouting out at me, and I gave up trying to shout back over it.

…and…

This frantic, self-congratualtory busyness is a distinctly upscale affliction. Notice it isn’t generally people pulling back-to-back shifts in the ICU, taking care of their senescent parents, or holding down three minimum-wage jobs they have to commute to by bus who need to tell you how busy they are; what those people are is not busy but tiredExhausted. Dead on their feet. It’s most often said by people whose lamented busyness is purely self-imposed: work and obligations they’ve taken on voluntarily, classes and activities they’re “encouraged” their kids to participate in. They’re busy because of their own ambition or drive or anxiety, because they are addicted to busyness and dread what they might have to face in tits absence.

…and…

I can’t help but wonder whether all this histrionic exhaustion isn’t a way of covering up the fact that most of what we do doesn’t matter. I once dated a woman that interned at a magazine where she wan’t allowed to take lunch hours out, lest she be urgently needed. This was an entertainment magazine whose raison d’etre had been obviated when Menu buttons appeared on remotes, so it’s hard to see this pretense of indispensability as anything other than a form of institutional self-delusion. Based on the volume of my email correspondence and the amount of Internet ephemera I am forwarded on a daily basis, I suspect that most people with office jobs are doing as little as I am. More and more people in this country no longer make or do anything tangible; if your job wasn’t performed by a cat or a boa constrictor or a worm in a Tyrollean hat in a Richard Scarry book I’m not convinced it’s necessary. Yes, I know we’re all very busy, but what, exactly, is getting done? Are all those people running late for meetings and yelling on their cell phones stopping the spread of malaria or developing feasible alternatives to fossil fuels or making anything beautiful?

Read the whole thing here. Happy Friday.

– Sam

Shooting the Boyfriend

Recently, former NFL kicker (and current PGA Tour golfer, if that getup is any indication) tweeted this joke in advance of his daughter’s prom:

Jay Feely

He’s holding a gun. It’s a continuation of the timeless “father threatens to shoot boyfriend if he misbehaves” trope, and like most things #online, it has caused considerable outrage. The logic seems to be:

  • The kids are in high school.
  • There have been terrible mass shootings in high schools in recent years.
  • Jay is poking fun at or, at the very least, being insensitive to these shootings with the picture.

To me, that final leap smells more like opportunity than honest reaction, but that’s not what we’re here to discuss. We’re here to discuss the meme itself; the gun/boyfriend joke. It’s a comedic device that’s been used at least as long as I’ve been alive, and it’s something I’ve always found charmingly inane.

Mark, Go Buy an Island

I’m sitting here watching the Facebook guy testify before congress, looking justifiably exhausted and terrified. They’re talking about Russian meddling in the 2016 election and the security of the American public’s personal information, two things his website somehow became deeply involved in. We’ve seen the movie; this guy was just trying to create a little network for his college that would help classmates get to know each other and—much more importantly—get him laid. Now he’s being grilled by senators about how he is sort of responsible for the downfall of America. Talk about a situation getting away from you.

The thing I don’t get is why the guy is still doing the job in the first place. I’ve wondered this for a while, long before his website helped elected presidents and that sort of thing. My friend, you’re insanely rich. You’re successful beyond most measures of human comprehension. Why in the sam hill are you still working?

Here Is My Writing Playlist

This is a living document, and something I add to as I go, usually when I come across a good track that fits the mood on Pandora. But in general, when I sit down to write — either at the home office before sunrise, or at the Chipotle at 32nd and Lowell during the lunch hour — I put on this bad boy.

I like it because it’s got that murky, weird vibe that seems to help keep my mind moving forward, and the lyrics, in most cases, are either ancillary or nonexistent. I always find it difficult to produce words when you’re fighting other words in your ears.

Anywho, here it is. It gets me in the mood.