John Urbancik's Blog: DarkFluidity - Posts Tagged "urbancik"
Midnight
The idea for Midnight started with a preposition. IN. It doesn't belong there in a title like Once Upon a Time in Midnight. It's jarring. It almost sounds like a mistake.
It's not a mistake. It's exactly the right word.
Suddenly, this noun, MIDNIGHT, which we usually think of as a time, becomes a place. Or maybe the time is the place? Should it be written for a younger audience? Should it be the darkest, grittiest thing I've ever written?
Or should Midnight be a city that's dark and real, gritty but also mystic, with hints of magic and history and legend? That's the direction I chose, years ago, when I wrote the first Midnight story. I could've gone somewhere else.
The preposition, however, that small two letter word, guided me to where I am today. Where the first novel is (thru July 4) free on Kindle (after the original limited edition, in 2011, sold out in pre-order). Where there are several novellas (including the first, Beneath Midnight, published back in 2004; and the upcoming Madmen, Poets & Thieves) and short stories and, in fact, a lot of other ideas floating around in my head. Where there are as many possible stories, in every genre, as there are stories set in any other city.
That preposition twisted an idea (the original thought being Once Upon a Time in Midnight, which is more ambiguous) and allowed me to discover what it really meant. It gave me room to explore my City of Night.
I know what's coming to Midnight. And I know what's already there.
I hope the City of Night survives it.
In the meantime, Once Upon a Time in Midnight is, I think, an excellent starting place.
It's not a mistake. It's exactly the right word.
Suddenly, this noun, MIDNIGHT, which we usually think of as a time, becomes a place. Or maybe the time is the place? Should it be written for a younger audience? Should it be the darkest, grittiest thing I've ever written?
Or should Midnight be a city that's dark and real, gritty but also mystic, with hints of magic and history and legend? That's the direction I chose, years ago, when I wrote the first Midnight story. I could've gone somewhere else.
The preposition, however, that small two letter word, guided me to where I am today. Where the first novel is (thru July 4) free on Kindle (after the original limited edition, in 2011, sold out in pre-order). Where there are several novellas (including the first, Beneath Midnight, published back in 2004; and the upcoming Madmen, Poets & Thieves) and short stories and, in fact, a lot of other ideas floating around in my head. Where there are as many possible stories, in every genre, as there are stories set in any other city.
That preposition twisted an idea (the original thought being Once Upon a Time in Midnight, which is more ambiguous) and allowed me to discover what it really meant. It gave me room to explore my City of Night.
I know what's coming to Midnight. And I know what's already there.
I hope the City of Night survives it.
In the meantime, Once Upon a Time in Midnight is, I think, an excellent starting place.
Tales of the Fantastic and the Phantasmagoric Volume 1
It’s finally here.
Tales of the Fantastic and the Phantasmagoric was released for the Kindle and the Nook this week.

What’s inside?
An introduction. Afterwords for each of four novellas. Four vignettes. A selection from 6 Nights of Midnight.
The novellas (the stars):
Rare and sold-out Necropolis: when several people spend the night in a cemetery, some by choice, it’s not likely to end happily for all. Intertwining stories of loves lost, unrequited, and proved. Featuring appearances by the Master of Winds, the Queen of Spiders, and the goddess of night herself, Nyx.
Rare and sold-out House of Shadow and Ash: the second appearance of Cool-Eyes. Philip’s shadow cuts itself loose and leaves him, but you cannot long live without your shadow. Cool-Eyes comes to the rescue (?) and brings him to a house of secrets, in which every door opens upon different rooms. They journey takes them through the Chamber of Bones, the Chamber of Winds, and the Chamber of Fortunes.
New and never-before-seen Madmen, Poets & Thieves: Do you trust me to tell you a story? What if I’m one or all of these things? It’s a Midnight tale, so it takes place in the shadows, from the point of view of a poet who may be mad and may be delusional. Is there an escape from the City of Night?
New and never-before-seen The Dry Dusted Sands: It starts with a map, leads to a train that stops where it shouldn’t, and takes them to another world where they encounter the Stationmaster and the Stationmaster’s wife, the Riders, and a threat from the stars.
Tales of the Fantastic and the Phantasmagoric was released for the Kindle and the Nook this week.

What’s inside?
An introduction. Afterwords for each of four novellas. Four vignettes. A selection from 6 Nights of Midnight.
The novellas (the stars):
Rare and sold-out Necropolis: when several people spend the night in a cemetery, some by choice, it’s not likely to end happily for all. Intertwining stories of loves lost, unrequited, and proved. Featuring appearances by the Master of Winds, the Queen of Spiders, and the goddess of night herself, Nyx.
Rare and sold-out House of Shadow and Ash: the second appearance of Cool-Eyes. Philip’s shadow cuts itself loose and leaves him, but you cannot long live without your shadow. Cool-Eyes comes to the rescue (?) and brings him to a house of secrets, in which every door opens upon different rooms. They journey takes them through the Chamber of Bones, the Chamber of Winds, and the Chamber of Fortunes.
New and never-before-seen Madmen, Poets & Thieves: Do you trust me to tell you a story? What if I’m one or all of these things? It’s a Midnight tale, so it takes place in the shadows, from the point of view of a poet who may be mad and may be delusional. Is there an escape from the City of Night?
New and never-before-seen The Dry Dusted Sands: It starts with a map, leads to a train that stops where it shouldn’t, and takes them to another world where they encounter the Stationmaster and the Stationmaster’s wife, the Riders, and a threat from the stars.
Published on December 09, 2012 18:51
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Tags:
collection, fairy-tales, fantastic, fantasty, fiction, ghost-stories, john-urbancik, phantasmagoric, urbancik
Volume 1
TALES OF THE FANTASTIC AND THE PHANTASMAGORIC VOLUME 1 is currently on sale for nothing -- nada -- zero -- zip.
It contains four novellas, including one I feel is one of my strongest works ever, the Midnight tale MADMEN, POETS & THIEVES.
Please enjoy!
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00A...
It contains four novellas, including one I feel is one of my strongest works ever, the Midnight tale MADMEN, POETS & THIEVES.
Please enjoy!
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00A...
Published on February 16, 2014 11:23
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Tags:
dark-fantasy, fantasy, midnight, urban-fantasy, urbancik
InkStains
The project concept was simple, if insane: write a story a day, by hand, every day for a year.
Okay, no, not quite that: go ahead and take 1 day off every month. I insist.
That's InkStains.
It took a while to type up almost 250,000 words, but now I'm releasing all these short pieces -- mostly fiction, but also memoirs, memories, articles, essays, and oddities -- in monthly doses.
You can find the e-version of January in a variety of places for free. Smashwords. Barnes & Noble. You can go to Amazon and buy a print version.
E-versions of other months will come out on the first day of the month. You can, if you wish, read one story a day every day for the year.
As you do so, in 2015 I'm doing it again: another InkStains series, this time with monthly themes. Wish me luck
Okay, no, not quite that: go ahead and take 1 day off every month. I insist.
That's InkStains.
It took a while to type up almost 250,000 words, but now I'm releasing all these short pieces -- mostly fiction, but also memoirs, memories, articles, essays, and oddities -- in monthly doses.
You can find the e-version of January in a variety of places for free. Smashwords. Barnes & Noble. You can go to Amazon and buy a print version.
E-versions of other months will come out on the first day of the month. You can, if you wish, read one story a day every day for the year.
As you do so, in 2015 I'm doing it again: another InkStains series, this time with monthly themes. Wish me luck
Published on January 28, 2015 10:42
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Tags:
inkstains, john-urbancik, short-stories, shorts, urbancik
Stale Reality
Just came back from Scares That Care Weekend, where we raised a whole lot of money for a good cause (or three good causes), and where I also debuted my newest novel, Stale Reality.
This is possibly the darkest novel I've ever written. It's also a lament for my lost Sydney -- I wrote the first draft immediately after leaving Australia.
It's also gotten a lot of good response, thus far, and it sold well at every stop along the road (book signings with Brian Keene in the week before the convention).
I'm very excited to see this finally in print, and to offer Stale Reality to you.
This is possibly the darkest novel I've ever written. It's also a lament for my lost Sydney -- I wrote the first draft immediately after leaving Australia.
It's also gotten a lot of good response, thus far, and it sold well at every stop along the road (book signings with Brian Keene in the week before the convention).
I'm very excited to see this finally in print, and to offer Stale Reality to you.
Published on July 28, 2016 08:18
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Tags:
dark-fantasy, horror, john-urbancik, urbancik
DarkFluidity
random thoughts on writing and reading -- by John Urbancik
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