Journal

Love Me to the Bone – DRAFT DIARY – Day #2


Love Me to the Bone
Draft 1


Words Added: 1,590

2706 / 60000

What Happened in the Story: Have you noticed that we are skeletons now? That’s right! Madeline, our beloved MC, finds herself on a train going to a place called Requiem. She’s beginning to put together what’s happened, though there’s a wee part of her that’s still hoping this is all a strange dream. Sorry, Mads. It isn’t.

Additional Notes: Got started a little later than I’d have liked today, because I thought, “Gee, self! Making a slow-cooker soup that will be ready by dinner time sounds like a great way to save time!” And then an hour and twenty minutes later, I finally have all the veg cut up and mixed together to get it started. At that point, it seemed silly to drive all the way into the office for an hour, since I have physio at 2pm anyway. So I decided to write from home today.

I also, impulsively, decided to write this scene by hand! I wasn’t sure how that’d go, given that there’s obviously no word-tracker on a notepad, but honestly, it was absolutely fantastic. I think writing by hand forces me to slow down just a little bit (I can type stupidly fast) and really think about what words I’m picking/metaphors I’m using. I think it also really helped me capture the surreal feel of the scene, like writing down a dream.

One thing I’m focusing on this week is writing in whole scenes. Instead of setting a word goal (my minimum is still an expected 1k/day), I’m trying to encapsulate an entire scene in order to feel the pull and push of tension. If I set a word goal of a thousand words a day, what’ll happen is that every scene will be essentially a thousand words, which feels weird when you’re reading it later. Writing in whole scenes means that, yes, some days I’ll write a lot more, because the scene will require it, but I probably won’t write scenes longer than 4k, because my brain will melt. Gives me a little more flexibility to get the scene arc correct if I do it in one sitting. Feels more natural, so we’ll see if that works in the long run!


Thanks for following along, and I hope you enjoy the ride! I’ll try and make these daily updates (on writing days), but I’ll probably miss a few now and then. Sorry about that in advance, but I’ll do my best to be consistent. If you’re craving some personal stakes in this process, feel free to toss me a “You Can Do It!” donation at my Ko-fi shop! I’m going to need a lot of coffee for this…

Journal

Love Me to the Bone: Drafting Diary – Day 1

Way, way, wayyyyy back in the late twenty-teens, I set out to write a novel draft and documented every day that I worked on it here (for posterity, of course!). I thought, as I set out this October and November to try to pin down this heavy, from-scratch rewrite of my current novel, that it might be fun to revisit the diary method and see if it proves useful and/or interesting for folks reading along!

So here it is! The Drafting Diary for Love Me to the Bone – draft 1. I’ll be tracking word count and making general notes about the process, but if there’s anything you’d like to get more detailed with, let me know either in the comments or via the contact form, and I’ll see what I can do!


Love Me to the Bone
Draft 1 – Drafting Diary


Words Added: 1,106

1106 / 60000

What Happened in the Story: Madeline George, our intrepid MC, has just achieved the major career success she’s been working herself ragged for, is high on Cloud 9, and just died getting hit by a car. RATS. As my sons would say: Worst. Day. Ever.

Additional Notes: So a couple of things to note as I get started here. The first is that I’ve decided to do the Matt Bell (Refuse to be Done) method of formatting my document like I’m book formatting the final product. Honestly, this is just to keep things fun and remind myself what I’m working towards. I enjoyed book formatting for Apex Books back in the day, so this is a nice throwback to that kind of thing.

Secondly, I’m working off a very loose outline. It’s about two pages of light summary, but not nearly as detailed as summary drafts I’ve done in the past. It’s basically got the tentpole moments, and that’s about it, giving me a lot of freedom to screw around and take random detours as my wild little heart desires. But otherwise, aside from those major moments, I have very little planned out other than vibes and feels.

Now, to note, this is essentially a third draft, because I wrote two other drafts of this story previously. HOWEVER, it’s a complete, from-scratch rewrite. What does this mean? It means I’ve basically got the same characters to play with, but they’ve been re-envisioned, reworked, redeveloped, and I’ve swapped main characters, and basically nothing from the first versions will be able to translate. HA. Fun. But I’m actually excited about this because ultimately, I think this variant is going to be so much more fun.


Thanks for following along, and I hope you enjoy the ride! I’ll try and make these daily updates (on writing days), but I’ll probably miss a few now and then. Sorry about that in advance, but I’ll do my best to be consistent. If you’re craving some personal stakes in this process, feel free to toss me a “You Can Do It!” donation at my Ko-fi shop! I’m going to need a lot of coffee for this…

Journal

Zine Fair and Nominations!

Two quick fun updates for today: First, I just got word from the lovely folks at Fork Apple Press (publishers of The Core Review) that they’ve nominated my short story, “Gluten Breath” (sentient bread, toxic relationships to food, and bad breakups) for a Best of the Net Award! Very cool! This is my second nomination, so I’m dreadfully flattered, but also just pleased that the story resonated enough to be a favorite of theirs.

Second, I just got word that two of my zines–“Penpocalypse” and “The Oddscope Vol. 1”–have been accepted to the Biggest Little Zine Fair! This is a pop-up zine fair that travels around the LA area (like Recreation Coffee in Long Beach!) and features zines from all over the US (and possibly the world!). Mine will be at the Biggest Little Zine Holiday Fair at Recreation Coffee in Long Beach, CA on Sunday, November 16th. If you’re in the area, definitely go check it out!

If you’re not going to be in the Long Beach area around that time, but still want to check out some zines, feel free to pop over to my Ko-fi shop, where I have both “Penpocalypse” and the brand-new “Aloe Gerald” zine for sale!


In utterly un-writing related news, I took two art classes at the fabulous Hollis Artspace this past week, which have been absolutely fantastic. The first was an alla prima oil painting class (alla prima means wet-on-wet, vs. painting one layer over a dry layer–alla prima is often used for single-sitting outdoor painting (also called plein-air painting)) and the second was a class on felting squirrels! (My squiggle may have turned out looking a bit like a rat, rather than a squirrel, but he’s still pretty cute!)

The painting class got my brain painting-wired again, and the other day, while Andy and I watched The Ruling Class (a dark comedy starring Peter O’Toole, one of our favorite actors), I snapped a few photos of O’Toole smoking a cigar and decided to turn it into a mini-series of smol paintings to practice tonality and underpainting. I also threw together a tonal painting of my kitchen sink filled with dishes, because I enjoy torturing myself.

My other obsession at the moment is pink eraser art printing. I just got my copy of Serena Rios McRae’s book, and it’s so incredibly inspiring, I’m dying to get started! I got myself a little speedball carver and some pink erasers and I’m going to play around and see what happens. I think prints like these could be super cool for making a zine of “Tower’s End” so we’ll see!

Turned in one short story (hopefully it’ll meet with approval, but who knows-!), working on wrapping up some proof-reading for another project, and I’m hoping to start powering through the novel rewrite (now tentatively titled Love Me to the Bone) on Friday! I’m trying something a little new with the noveling this time: I’m trying to create my own NANO-style push to get the rough draft done as fast as possible (in this case, by the end of November) so that I can better compartmentalize my desire to switch between long and short form. We’ll see if it works!

I’ve also got a short story that needs one final pass before I get it submitted (I’m making progress on my 50 submissions/yr goal, though I’ve got some ways to go yet), and I’ve got another that if I have time I’ll try to get out in the next month or so, but those are somewhat lower priority than the novel drafting.


Also in fun news, my dear friend poet Katherine Quevedo just won an Elgin award for her beautiful poetry collection, The Inca Weaver’s Tales! It’s only $10.00 from Sword & Kettle Press, and you can find out more about what Katherine’s up to (and attend one of her readings if you can, because she’s a wonderful performer!) on her website, here.


That’s all for this update! If you’d like to see what I’m up to between posts, I’m fairly regular on Instagram (for now, at least–I keep threatening to quit the internet, aside from here, of course), and I’m posting a bit more on my Ko-fi shop for fun! Feel like funding my new pink eraser art obsession? Donate to my art fund!

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Ko-fi Shop Open!

I finally took the plunge and posted two zines on my Ko-fi Shop! I’ve been meaning to make these available at some point, and one of them is a brand spanking new adaptation of “Aloe Gerald,” which you may have read on this blog. The other is my beloved “Penpocalypse,” updated and ready to fly to whomever needs a reason to donate those extra pens in your house. I promise, it’ll be better in the end if you do.

Penpocalypse Mini-Zine

Ever wondered why you shouldnโ€™t hoard unused pens? Youโ€™re about to find out! This mini-zine contains my horror flash fiction story โ€œPenpocalypse,โ€ about precisely what happens when you donโ€™t get rid of those extra pens. If youโ€™ve got this zine: youโ€™ve been warned. This is a mini-zine with a fold-out center page, mailed by good olโ€™ USPS in a standard envelope.

(Currently USA-only (but hopefully not forever!).)

You can find “Penpocalypse” here: https://ko-fi.com/s/d8d5bbe8ee

Aloe Gerald Zine

The dating scene has never been worse, so is it any surprise when Christinaโ€™s friend Alice decides to marry a houseplant? Unfortunately, toxic masculinity seems to be in the waterโ€ฆ This foul-mouthed, 8-page quarter-sized zine contains my flash fiction story โ€œAloe Gerald,โ€ and features a variety of smexy plant men, in case youโ€™re on the prowl. Cozy up with outdoorsy โ€œFrankโ€ Fern, let โ€œHankโ€ Hosta take you out on the town, or simply admire โ€œPhilโ€ Philodendronโ€™s legs or vinesโ€”but be careful! Not all plant men are catches!

***NOTE: This zine contains foul-language. Not for the weeping willows or fainting ferns among us.***

This is a stapled, 8-page quarter-size zine, mailed by good olโ€™ USPS in a standard envelope. Currently USA-only (but hopefully not forever!).

You can find “Aloe Gerald” here: https://ko-fi.com/s/ec5fa78d94


In other news, I am alive! Took a little blog break after finishing up the Summer Flash series, but I’m looking forward to getting back to regular updates and sharing the things I’m reading/watching/enjoying, which hopefully you will, too!

Journal

FRIDAY FLASH: Gummy Bones (950)

And here it is–the very last of the Summer 2025 Friday Flash stories! School started yesterday, and I’m adjusting to the new schedule and knuckling down on some new (and old) projects that have been resting all summer, just waiting for this moment. In the meantime, please enjoy this last, very strange story, inspired by the fact that I threw my neck out on Monday and it’s only now starting to get a liiiiiittle bit better…


Gummy Bones

A short, strange flash by Maggie Slater

Bryony shivered in the refrigerator-cold exam room and jabbed her fingertips into the bundle of angry muscle at the nape of her neck. โ€œI donโ€™t have time for this, thisโ€”โ€ She couldnโ€™t even pay attention to what the paunchy doctor had told her. 

โ€œStiff-Necked Syndrome,โ€ he said helpfully. He had a nervous way of avoiding her gaze, though whether that was because of run-of-the-mill misogyny or a harmless tendency due to neurodivergence, she couldnโ€™t be sure. โ€œI realize this may be a shock. While traditionally itโ€™s a menโ€™s ailment, it has been presenting more commonly in women within the past two decades. In your case, the calcification of your spine is the most advanced Iโ€™ve seen. You must have an incredibly high pain tolerance.โ€

Said pain was beginning to radiate up into the base of her skull, and Bryony jammed her thumb up against the bulge and felt a momentโ€™s relief before the muscles clamped down again.ย 

โ€œThere has to be a cure. Iโ€™ve never heard of anyone justโ€ฆturning into some kind of calcified statue!โ€

 The pain had started two months ago, right after the meeting between Bryony and her thesis advisor in which heโ€™d drunk almost a bottle of wine himself and said her eyes were pretty and sheโ€™d told him to fuck off. The next morning, right before her AM basic anatomy lecture, sheโ€™d awoken with a blinding pain in her neck. Itโ€™d only gotten worse since then. Tylenol and Motrin didnโ€™t touch it. Her roomateโ€™s Percocet might as well have been Tic-Tacs for all the good they did. The thought of it getting progressively more stiff and painful was intolerable. 

โ€œIโ€™ll do anything,โ€ Bryony said. She had three months until her thesis defense. 

Now, the doctor met her gaze without any difficulty. Bryony would have rolled her eyes at the smug little smirk on his face, but it hurt too much. 

 โ€œWell, actually,โ€ he said, โ€œI do have a colleague running an interesting clinical trialโ€ฆโ€

#

The DoaMatta injections helped at first. Bryony almost cried after the first one released all the muscles along her back and shoulders, allowing her to turn her head from side to side for the first time in weeks without a jolt of pain. It gave her a boost of energy, too, in part because she was finally able to throttle up her productivity without worrying about aggravating her spine. She threw herself into her dissertation and spent more than a few nights in the lab, sleeping on a camping pad, and made huge progress on her work. 

When the pain came back, and it did come back, it kept her awake for thirty-two hours until she could get in for another shot. The clinical trial lead, a Dr. Hoffman, suggested a pump might be better for her, so she wouldnโ€™t need to schedule emergency injections. 

โ€œIf you wonโ€™t stop pushing yourself like this,โ€ he said, with a note of grating condescension, โ€œthen itโ€™s really the only option until the calcification reverses. But it will take longer and require higher DoaMatta doses.โ€ 

Bryony told him to do it. She had the pump installed on Thursday, and the pain was gone. She could feel her spine becoming more flexible and pliant, and it felt so very good after all the agony of the weeks prior. 

When her colleague forgot to put her name on their joint paper, she was surprised how little it bothered her, even when he refused to apologize because heโ€™d never agreed to be in charge of the byline. When her sister-in-law stirred up last-minute wedding planning drama for the whole family and demanded Bryony handle the bachelorette party despite it being only two days away, she found she could bend all the way over backwards without any trouble at all. And when her old college friends planned a trip to Vegas on the one weekend sheโ€™d said she couldnโ€™t go, she found the normal irritation just bounced right off her like it was nothing. She was rubber, and they were glue. It made her giggle. 

Then her fingers couldnโ€™t hold her pen anymore. They flopped all over the place, boneless and squid-like. She couldnโ€™t get any kind of grip on the DoaMatta pump to turn it down or tear it off. She tried to call Dr. Hoffmanโ€™s clinic, but the line was disconnected, and her lips and tongue wouldnโ€™t cooperate to tell the hospital call center who she was trying to reach.  

A month after the pump install, she collapsed in a study carol in the library and lay there for three days before her thesis advisor and her colleague found her. Her advisor sighed and shook his head. 

โ€œYou know, not everybodyโ€™s cut out for a PhD, my dear,โ€ her advisor said while her colleague shook his head sympathetically. โ€œI mean, you gave it a good shot, but it takes a tough personality to withstand the rigors of academia, and youโ€™re justโ€ฆwell, youโ€™ve becomeโ€ฆโ€

โ€œSoft,โ€ her colleague supplied. 

โ€œYes, soft,โ€ her advisor said with a sad shrug. โ€œItโ€™s really too bad. Come along now, letโ€™s get you up, shall we?โ€

Bryony was too pliable to fight back as the two men picked her up and folded her gently into a large cardboard box theyโ€™d brought along and lined with her research folders and printouts. Then they shut it and carried it somewhere that sounded hollow like the old storage lockers in the basement, and Bryony caught a whiff of dust as the box dank suddenly into shadow, grinding across a cold floor. A clang of metal grating and the rasp of a key were the last sounds she heard before footsteps receded and Bryony found herself tucked away and forgotten. 


Hi there! If you don’t know me, I’m Maggie Slater. I write speculative fiction of a variety of stripes ranging from outright horror, sci-fi, and fantasy to strange, humorous literary stuff. My work has appeared in genre mags like Apex Magazine, Metaphorosis (and even got translated into Mandarin for Science Fiction World), as well as in literary magazines like Redivider and The Core Review.

If you enjoyed this story, please consider donating a buck to my Ko-Fi or following me on Instagram (if you enjoy notebooks, books, movies, and occasional art journaling). I’m also loosely on Bluesky and Substack. Or subscribe to this blog for any and all updates of flash fiction, general writerly nonsense, and periodic interviews with fantastic authors!

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FRIDAY FLASH: Grin Win (700)

Grin Win

A short, silly, odd flash story
by Maggie Slater


Devonโ€™s whole six-foot-two frame collapsed onto the kitchen stool, his gloomy eyes watching me. Where his mouth usually lay under the downy hints of his first moustache there was only blank skin. Heโ€™d lost his smile again. For the fourth time in three days. 

I sucked in a steadying breath and tried to keep the irritation out of my voice. โ€œWhereโ€™d you have it last?โ€ 

He shrugged and wilted onto the countertop. 

โ€œHow about last night?โ€ I prompted. โ€œYou were gaming, right? Did you smile then?โ€

Another silent shrug. I glanced at the oven clock. I had twenty minutes before I had to leave for work, and his buddy would be picking him up for school in ten. We didnโ€™t have time for this! 

โ€œWhy not wear Dadโ€™s smile today?โ€ 

Devon held out his arms, hands wide. Too big. Okay. 

โ€œWhat about Nickโ€™s? Iโ€™m sure heโ€™d lend it to you for a day.โ€

Nick was his eleven year old brother. Not a precise fit, and missing some teeth, but better than nothing. Devon shook his head, holding up pinched fingers. Too small. Fine. 

I couldn’t spare mine. Any other day, I’d have happily offered it, even though he probably wouldn’t accept it, but the Nielsons were signing on the biggest house Iโ€™d ever sold. Itโ€™d make our vacation fund. Itโ€™d make a good chunk of his and Nick’s annual 529 contributions. I needed it for this meeting.

Seven minutes until his car came.

โ€œOkay, okay, letโ€™s think.โ€ 

The coffee Iโ€™d chugged at 6AM to wake up was hitting my empty stomach hard. When was the last time I’d seen Devonโ€™s smile? Not at dinner last night, certainly, when Brad made everybody grumpy and uncomfortable grilling Devon about his school day. Not yesterday afternoon, when I finally convinced him to bring the moldy dishes down from his room. 

His room! He was always leaving stuff laying around on the floor. I bolted upstairs to the mountain of smelly laundry he called his bedroom. I picked through it gingerly, trying not to gag. Nothing obvious. I fled back into the hall and shut the door behind me. 

Five minutes. 

I ran back down to the living room and pulled up all the couch cushions. I found Bradโ€™s sexy smirk and tucked it in my back pocket. No need for the boys to know weโ€™d messed around on the couch after they were both in bed. They didnโ€™t need the therapy fuel. 

I searched through dog hair tumbleweeds under the other furniture, lifted the gritty edges of the rug to see if itโ€™d slipped under the tassels, peeked between the books on the shelf in case it had gotten stuffed into the tattered copy of Hitchhikerโ€™s Guide again: no smile. 

I raked my memory for some recollection of Devon laughing. It felt like it’d been forever. Heโ€™d grown so sullen over the last few years as puberty hit home. 

Then I remembered: last night, Iโ€™d heard that still-startlingly deep guffaw from Nickโ€™s room. Theyโ€™d been having one of those increasingly rare moments of goofy, brotherly camaraderie, curled up on Nickโ€™s bed before lights-out watching silly cat videos and losing their minds. 

Three minutes. 

โ€œI know where it is!โ€

I bolted upstairs to Nickโ€™s room. 

Nick was tangled up in his blankets, half-in and half-out of his bed, his head on the floor. He was undressed, unfed, half-asleep, but his bus didn’t come for another forty-five minutes, and anyway, it was Bradโ€™s problem this morning. 

โ€œRise and shine!โ€ I sang, stooping to plant a kiss on his mussed hair. He grumble-mumbled, โ€œMorning,โ€ and then pretended to fall into a deep, snoring sleep. 

Thatโ€™s when I spotted it: Devonโ€™s big, toothy grin tucked just behind the bedside table where it must have fallen the night before. I snatched it and ran back downstairs just as Devonโ€™s friend pulled his battered Ford Taurus into our driveway. 

โ€œHere!โ€ I tossed it to Devonโ€™s outstretched hands. He slapped it on his face, and I saw those charming dimples that he had always been so embarrassed about. 

โ€œThanks, Mom,โ€ he said in that deep voice I was still getting used to, and gave me a bear hug before ducking out to the waiting car. 

I signed the biggest deal of my life that morning, but honestly?

Finding that grin was the biggest win of my day. 


Screenshot

Hi there! If you don’t know me, I’m Maggie Slater. I write speculative fiction of a variety of stripes ranging from outright horror, sci-fi, and fantasy to strange, humorous literary stuff. My work has appeared in genre mags like Apex Magazine, Metaphorosis (and even got translated into Mandarin for Science Fiction World), as well as in literary magazines like Redivider and The Core Review.

If you enjoyed this story, please consider donating a buck to myย Ko-Fiย or following me onย Instagramย (if you enjoy notebooks, books, movies, and occasional art journaling). I’m also loosely onย Blueskyย andย Substack. Or subscribe to this blog for any and all updates of flash fiction, general writerly nonsense, and periodic interviews with fantastic authors!

Journal

West Coast Voyage, Tiger Lilies, & A Breakthrough (Finally!)

It has been a whirlwind August. My family went on our EPIC, three-part voyage to the West Coast, and while it was awesome, I am so tired now.

First stop: L.A.

We stayed in an AirBnB by the ocean in San Clemente and spent almost every day at the beach with my sister and her family. The boys are all pretty close in age, and played together for hours. We did nothing else, aside from eat delicious food, and sleep way too late, and although I got sunburned, nobody else did! A small miracle when Andy is an almost literal vampire who catches fire if he’s in the sun between 10:30AM – 3:30PM. It was so ridiculously relaxing. We visited my long-time friend Karen at her retirement community, and on our last day, we drove Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood Boulevard, and had In-N-Out Burgers at a Mulholland Drive lookout above the valley. It was so very cool.

Second stop: Portland

Portland was me and Andy’s stomping ground from the late 2000s to the early 2010s. We weren’t sure what we’d find there, since the news on the East Coast tends to focus on all the no good, very bad things that have happened there in past years. A lot of the old restaurants we loved have closed, but there were a lot still there! In fact, we were pleased to find it was very much like we remembered. We took the boys to a cat-video compilation show at The Living Room Theater, spent too much at Powell’s, got perfectly lost in the Japanese Garden, wandered the hills of the Hoyt Arboretum, stepped inside a replica of Mt. St. Helens (complete with lava), and spent a ton of time with our beloved adopted family out there. We drove by all our old haunts, and dined at Pig-N-Pancake and McMenamins and Escape from New York Pizza and PDX Sliders and Rogue Brewing. We toured the submarine at OMSI.

And can I gush a little about HOW FREAKING BEAUTIFUL the PDX airport is now? Like…OMG guys. Wow. Best airport we’ve been in lately by FAR.

Third Stop: Seattle

After Portland, Andy and the boys flew home, but I continued on up to WorldCon. I only stayed for a day and a half, which was probably a little bit too short of a time, but I got to see everyone I desperately wanted to see, primarily my friends, Katherine Quevedo and Rachel Unger. They’re the absolute best, it was amazing to hang out with them in-person again! I also got to hang out with the lovely Scott from BCS and the imminently unmatchable Maurice Broaddus of Mo*Con fame, and I met a bunch of other people and made some new friends, too! It was a total blast.

Home Again

Back home at long last (and after a somewhat terrifying landing at Logan in Boston), I’m easing back into our summer schedule once again. We’ve been dealing with a cracked tooth, an accidentally defrosted freezer that required emergency cleanup, a broken Telsa solar system (still… ongoing since 7/1), and rescheduling everything we need to reschedule as plans and work requirements shift while we were on vacation. Still, it’s amazing to be sleeping in my own bed again, even if my brain is still on West Coast Time, and doesn’t want to go to sleep until midnight. Thanks, Brain!

In two weeks school starts up again, and my days are going to be unrecognizable after the last ten years of having an under 5 at home at all times. Both boys are going to be in full-time school come September. I’m going to have a lot more time to myself, and I’m trying to brace myself for the inevitable transition week. Every fall, I’m eager to kick into high gear on writing, but it always takes a week for me to get used to the new schedule. So while I’m looking forward to the newfound freedom, I’m also a little intimidated by it.

Otherwise, I’m spending time catching up on submissions for BCS and walking around my garden, seeing what’s blooming and what’s done. A bunch of black eyed Susans have popped up in places I didn’t remember planting them. The weeds have overrun my little vegetable patch, but to be fair I’ve neglected it all summer. The day lilies are gone, but there are a few scattered tiger lilies that have bloomed. When I was in second grade and moved to this house for the first time, we had tiger lilies everywhere. Then one year, a beetle or some disease came through, and pretty much wiped them out. We haven’t had any for years. I replanted some last fall in the hopes that maybe they’d make it, but I’d forgotten where I’d put them, so I’m really excited to see them!

The hydrangea is exploding, too, though I didn’t seed them with enough wood ash OR coffee grounds to turn them colors this year (pink for ash; blue for coffee), but the bush looks lush and happy, so I’m happy about that, too. The stonecrop is bursting with white buds. I can’t wait to see their merlot flowers this fall as one of the last-blooming. I wish I’d gotten my zinnia seeds planted, but ah well! Next year, eh? The lavender is booming, even the one that I had to chop back because it went all woody and crazy. Lots of mojito mint still, lots of parsley. The bleeding heart is completely done and has surrendered its corpse to the earth. There are a lot of weeds to chop back. The Milkweed is nearing its finale with pods full of silky seed fibers. I saw a caterpillar on one that was black and yellow and spiky (did not touch). I don’t know what that one is, though I’m 99.9% sure it’s not a Monarch. I’ll have to look what that is, and will add a footnote.

What I’m Going to Work On in September

I am SO excited, because I just had a major breakthrough on my work in progress novel that has been honest to goodness stalled for the past nine months. It’s been trapped in that uncomfortable percolating phase, with nothing coming together, nothing connecting. But I think I finally got it, and I am so excited to tackle this.

So September will be planning, prepping, and starting to write that draft as fast as I possibly can. Looking forward to making progress on it at long last!

I’m also spending a lot of time thinking about how to track my writing-in-progress projects, and removes the burden of uncertainty (a little) in what to pursue and what to abandon (even temporarily). I’m a fast writer (it’s not at all inconcevable for me to write 2k in an hour, and I often do), which means I produce lots of rough drafts. The challenge I run into is finishing them–or determining which ones are worth finishing–and getting them submitted. Most sit around for years, untouched.

So I’m looking for ways to organize myself and take those projects I really do want to finish and move them towards the completion. I’ve been a recovering perfectionist for a few years now, leaning hard into the 70% Rule, and coming to the awareness that my shit-detector is a bit overclocked. Part of my Friday Flash challenge has been to teach myself to let go of things and play more.

So that’s what’s going on with me right now. Keep cool, hang in there, enjoy these last two weeks of August, and I’ll post a Friday Flash this Friday and next Friday. After that, I’ll see whether or not that’s something I’m going to continue during the fall season, or if I’m going to let that slide to focus on bigger projects. I kind of enjoy Friday Flash being as summer-specific thing, but we’ll see.

Until next time!

Journal

Video Interview on Writers Not Writing!

Meant to post this a week ago when it came out, but I FORGOT. (Also, I’m on vacation, so that’s my excuse.) I’m on a group interview with the marvelous Benjamin Gorman of Not A Pipe Publishing via his YouTube channel Writers Not Writing! It’s a nice long one with the editor of HOPE: The Thing with Feathers (B. Morris Allen) and two co-contributors, Lisa Fransson and Louie Sullivan. We talk about lots of things–the anthology, politics, and hobbies!–and you’ll learn a little more about the anthology, too! Check it out here:

Hope you enjoy it, and definitely pick up a copy of HOPE: The Thing with Feathers which contains my strange escaping-toxic-friendship tale, “The Trash King”!

And if you’re in the Seattle area 8/15-8/16, send me a message via my contact page or Instagram/Substack and maybe we can meet up in person! :D

Journal

THREE QUESTIONS: Erin Darrow

In the lead-up to the release of Hope: The Thing with Feathers, I’m going to be posting mini-interviews with my fellow ToC-mates! You can pre-order Hope: The Thing with Feathers here.

In a dystopian world of dust and murderous, water-hungry hoards, Sora must protect her adopted daughter Veery in a dangerous world. But when her home is decimated by monsters, Sora finds hope in the most unlikely of places, and goes to find the magic she long ago gave up belief in.

Writing can be a tough profession, and authors of all stages tend to get โ€œnoโ€ more often than โ€œyes.โ€ How do you cope with rejection?

Most of all, it helps to remember that writing is an art and is therefore subjective. What resonates with one reader may not resonate for another, which is why we need all kinds of stories in the world. Being a first reader and seeing the other side and how difficult those final decisions can be really helped me better understand this.

Rejections can also be an opportunity to revisit my work, assess whether it may not be quite ready after all or needs to be further revised while remaining true to my vision of the piece. Despite knowing these things, it can definitely still be frustrating and discouraging at times. I find having a list of potential publishers to submit to next helps me cope with a rejection in the moment because I already planned the next steps.

There are hundreds and hundreds of books on writing out there. Do you have one that you especially cherish? 

Leonard S. Marcusโ€™s The Wand in the Word: Conversations with Writers of Fantasy is a collection of interviews with fantasy authors I read as a child, such as Tamora Pierce, Madeleine Lโ€™Engle, and Jane Yolen. Reading about their experiences and vast array of writing styles, processes, and preferences helped me realize that itโ€™s okay to follow your own path.

The other thing that surprised me was how many of them donโ€™t or didn’t outline despite what most writing advice says these days. There is certainly wisdom out there, but I think overall, there is an awful lot of noise about how to write so it was refreshing to read and acknowledge that different things work for different people. There is no one right way, only the right way for you.

Is there a book, TV show, or movie you consistently return to because it just makes you happy? 

All Creatures Great and Small is my comfort show. Itโ€™s not speculative but its full of touching, heartwarming stories of humans and animals that takes me through the full breadth of human emotions. Ultimately, thatโ€™s what I want in any story I consume whatever the medium or genre.

What draws you to writing speculative fiction? Do you lean more towards one genre (science fiction/fantasy/horror) more than others, or do you like to mix them together?

I enjoy exploring endless possibilities and using speculative elements to reflect on human experiences. My natural tendency is typically toward fantasy. I am often inspired by fairy tales or myths but I do veer into sci-fi as well. Nature always features in my writing, opening up doors to both science and magic, and the opportunity to blend the two in interesting ways.

Itโ€™s the End of the World. Your ideal bunker: what does it have to have in it to make the apocalypse bearable?
Cats! Simply by being, they make everything better. Even the end of the world, I am sure.


Erin Darrow writes fantasy and science fiction inspired by nature, ecology, myths, and fairy tales. When not writing, reading or getting lost in imagination, she wanders the woods, watches birds, cuddles cats, and takes too many nature photos. After many migrations across continents and oceans, she has found a nest to call home in Aotearoa New Zealand. Find Erin online at www.erindarrow.com

Journal

FRIDAY FLASH: Aloe Gerald (850)

Aloe Gerald

A short, odd flash by Maggie Slater
*There is coarse language in this one. You’ve been warned.*

โ€œWeโ€™re exchanging vows on Thursday,โ€ Alice said as though she werenโ€™t sitting with a tattooed arm draped around a large potted aloe. Its prickly fronds were thick and robust in the shade from the bistro tableโ€™s umbrella. 

Christiana waited for Alice to crack a grin, to laugh it off, to make fun of her for her gaping disbelief, but Alice merely sat there, as cozy with the aloe as she might have been with a human lover.

โ€œYouโ€™reโ€ฆmarrying a plant.โ€ย 

โ€œHis nameโ€™s Gerald, but technically, yes. Heโ€™s a six year oldย Aloe vera, which makes him about twenty-four, so the age-difference isn’t that crazy. Anyway, I wanted you to witness it for us.โ€ย 

The aloe looked smug to Christiana, cocky to the tips of its tentacular blades. Was it her imagination, or did it lean closer to Alice when she stooped to brush her lips against it?ย 

Alice chuckled. โ€œHe says you shouldnโ€™t beat yourself up for being prejudiced against him. He gets that cross-genus relationships can seem a bit weird at first.โ€ย 

The breeze picked up; Geraldโ€™s fronds shifted, almost vibrating in the moving air. He was so incredibly green, a bright, hungry green that made Christiana suddenly self-conscious of the limp spring salad left on her plate in a pool of sanguine balsamic dressing. She could feel him watching her every move, observing everything she did, absorbing the very light that reflected off her skin and bounced onto his firm leaves.ย 

Christiana took a drag of water at the sudden heat invading her skin.ย 

Yeah. Oh, yeah. Drink that shit. Hydrate, bitch.

She choked. โ€œWh-what?โ€ย 

โ€œI said that the ceremonyโ€™s going to be at our house, around three oโ€™clock. Just a few friends and the officiant. You know them. Nick, Pauline, Jeremyโ€”the gang. But donโ€™t tell Louise. She wouldnโ€™t understand, but itโ€™d hurt her feelings not to be included. I just donโ€™t want that kind of negative energy on our special day, you know?โ€

Gerald the Aloe reclined in his pot like a regular, boring plant. He didnโ€™t look any different than any of the ones Christiana had inadvertently killed in the six years since sheโ€™d lived on her own. Yet, there was something about him, about the way his largest leaves stroked Aliceโ€™s arm possessively, or the way his upper fronds seemed stuck in a perpetual flip-off position. Gerald didnโ€™t give a damn, about anyone, of that she was certain.ย 

โ€œUm, bathroom?โ€ย 

Alice followed her away from the table, and the moment they were safely out of Geraldโ€™s sight, Christiana grabbed her arm. โ€œHeโ€™s weird. I donโ€™t like him.โ€ย 

โ€œPlants give off really different vibes than humans. Youโ€™ll get used to it when you spend some time with him. Heโ€™s definitely prickly on the outside, hard to get a handle on, you know? But deep down, heโ€™s really giving. Heโ€™s helped me heal more times than I can say.โ€ย 

Christiana weighted her words, and then swallowing said, โ€œI think he was just coming on to me.โ€ย 

Alice stiffened. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œJust now, when I was drinking my water, I heard- I thought he said-โ€

โ€œGoddammit!โ€ Alice tore free from Christianaโ€™s grasp and went tearing out onto the restaurant patio.ย 

By the time Christiana caught up, Alice was screaming at the plant in front of everyone. โ€œ-promised! Youย sworeย youโ€™d changed, you pup-of-a-turnip!โ€ย 

Christiana didnโ€™t catch Geraldโ€™s response, but whatever it was made Alice break into a shrill, angry laugh.ย 

โ€œYou think that excuse is going to flyย again? That bullshit? After everything we talked about with the counselor, about your disgusting obsession with Evian and Polar Springs commercials, you sick, dirt-sucking freak? I cannotย believeย I trusted you again after that shit with Louise! I knew, I knew, it was all you, but I blamedย her, you gnat-infested sun-whore! Fuck you!โ€ย 

Patrons at the other tables who had up until now merely watched the fight with startled delight, now jumped up and shouted as Alice grabbed Geraldโ€™s pot and made to throw him across the patio.ย 

The bald middle-aged man snagged the pot from her. โ€œHey! Hey, now. Letโ€™s all just calm down, okay?โ€

Tears poured down Aliceโ€™s cheeks asย ย Christiana caught her by the shoulders, holding her back.ย 

โ€œYou lying shit-monger! Weโ€™re through! Donโ€™t come looking for me when youโ€™re wilted and dry and root-rotted, you-!โ€ย 

The bald man set Gerald back down on the latticed patio table just as a police cruiser glided up to the curb. The door clunked and an officer clambered out. Christiana drew Alice towards the sidewalk.ย 

โ€œHeโ€™s not worth it,โ€ she whispered as Alice collapsed against her, sobbing like her sorrow would crack her ribs.ย 

โ€œI loved him so much!โ€ Alice wailed. โ€œI took such good care of him all those years together, howย could he hurt me like this?โ€

Christiana made a soothing sound and glanced back at the cafรฉ. The police officer was speaking to the bald man now. A single frond lay broken on the concrete. Christiana hurried Alice onward, trying not to think about the stump on Geraldโ€™s shoulder, its healing juices weeping for no one.ย 


Hi there! If you don’t know me, I’m Maggie Slater. I write speculative fiction of a variety of stripes ranging from outright horror, sci-fi, and fantasy to strange, humorous literary stuff. My work has appeared in genre mags like Apex Magazine, Metaphorosis (and even got translated into Mandarin for Science Fiction World), as well as in literary magazines like Redivider and The Core Review.

If you enjoyed this story, please consider donating a buck to my Ko-Fi or following me on Instagram (if you enjoy notebooks, books, movies, and occasional art journaling). I’m also loosely on Bluesky and Substack. Or subscribe to this blog for any and all updates of flash fiction, general writerly nonsense, and periodic interviews with fantastic authors!