Category Archives: Writing

Adios, Teach.

W.P. “Bill” Kinsella passed away yesterday. Most people only know him as “the baseball guy”, the one who wrote Field of Dreams. Bill did write about baseball, as one of the fundamental touchstones of the cosmos, and as a metaphor for humanity itself. He did write the book they based that movie on. As much as I love that movie, I love the book, Shoeless Joe, so much more. I love the short-story collection that started all of that Shoeless Joe Jackson Comes to Iowa even more. A year or two before the Kevin Costner movie made Kinsella a notable name in worldwide literature, a curious weirdo of a 12 year-old kid was wasting a lonely afternoon in a sketchy second-hand shop on 149th Street in Edmonton. In between beaded belts, Black Sabbath t-shirts and Don Ho records in milk crates, was a little bookshelf, mostly filled with Stephen King books (which that kid had already read) and Harlequin romances. Right in the middle where they met was one dog-eared copy of Shoeless Joe Jackson Comes to Iowa.

Ten-plus years, hundreds of books, and what seemed like a lifetime later, that same curious weirdo was stumbling towards the idea of being a writer – professionally – since he never really stopped writing, never could quit, for more than a day or three. He’d published a few stories as a teenager, written poetry every godforsaken day of his adolescence and throughout the post-pubescent angst that followed. He was loaded up with literature classes at the U of C, read widely and (what a 20 year-old) assumed was deeply. Wandering the book festival promenade one late-summer, early fall afternoon, he caught sight of a poster that said W.P. Kinsella – 3PM, or something along those lines. The kid ran home 9 blocks, up to the 8th floor apartment he shared with his girlfriend (now wife) and dug through a mountain of paperbacks and coffee table books, boxes of novels and short story collections and horror anthologies, but he just couldn’t find that damned book. That copy of Shoeless Joe Jackson Comes to Iowa that had been his entry to a different kind of writing, a weirder, softer kind of literature that didn’t feature rabid dogs, haunted hotels or aliens bent on human extinction. He couldn’t find the other ones either, the baseball collections like The Thrill of the Grass, or The Last Pennant Before Armageddon; not the “Indian” stories in Moccasin Telegraph and Dance Me Outside; not even the novel of Shoeless Joe. The only Kinsella he could find with time to get back to the park was the chewed-up copy of The Iowa Baseball Confederacy with the Field of Dreams cover. Somehow it felt like a betrayal, to take the man that book, with that cover – the cover that made no sense and used his magnificent words to advertise a movie that wasn’t half as beautiful as the other books that it came from.  It felt dirty and disingenuous and wrong, but it was the only goddamned book he could find.

Bill Kinsella gave his lecture, mostly on the miserable state of publishing in the mid-90’s, as Conglomerates ate up publishers and shat out fine, mid-list writers like so much half-chewed goat-cheese pizza. He also read a story, and enchanted the scant twelve people wise enough to be in the tent at the time. Unsuspecting moms with strollers, teenage lovers holding hands, fat theatre managers hustling to work all passed by, mere feet away from more magic than they would probably gather in a lifetime.

Bill signed that book. That shitty, worn-out copy of a fabulous novel with the worst mis-matched cover possible. He smiled and he chatted with the weirdo kid, found out he was a stumbling writer of poetry and a student of the art of words. Turns out they were both from the same place as that copy of Shoeless Joe Jackson Comes to Iowa. Two boys from Edmonton, not all that far from home. He talked frankly about the tough road ahead, the years of obscurity, the howls of depression, the inevitable moments of doubt. Then he signed that book. He signed it Go the Distance. Those famous words from that other book. The one they turned into that famous movie, the one thing he’d be most remembered for. Probably the way he signed every book that somebody shoved in his hands and said “Oh my god, I loved Field of Dreams!”

Maybe, the weirdo kid thought, maybe he thought that’s what I gave him to sign, what with the stupid mis-matched cover and all. The kid kept talking to his hero, all mumbled questions and awkward questions. Bill was kind, and funny, and his own kind of awkward and shook the kids hand, and smiled behind his glasses and his Colonel Sanders goatee, and the two eventually went on their separate ways.

It wasn’t until I got home that I found the card inside that book, the one with his address on it, the one that had keep in touch scrawled on the back.

I did, and we corresponded for a year or two, back in those heady days when you still put paper in an envelope and waited two months for a reply.  Bill was lovely enough to read some of my poetry, and give me some pointers and continued encouragement. We lost touch before he had the accident that stopped him writing for a long time, and I always wish I’d still had his number to say hello.

We reconnected once, years ago, when I saw him at another lecture in BC and he was older and whiter and just as quiet and unassuming as ever. I was just as awkward and weird.

file-2016-09-17-1-22-41-pmThe last time I saw him was just last fall, when he was back in Calgary, touring The Essential W.P. Kinsella. I didn’t buy it, as I already have every single one of his books on my shelf, half of them signed, all of them treasured. I bought four copies for other people, like my father-in-law who’s a baseball coach, and my pal Scott Dammit who loves Richard Brautigan as much as me and Bill. I got one blurry iPhone photo of us together.

Bill came a little late, looked a lot more worn and thin. He remembered me, but not my name. He told me he was tired. He finally signed that old copy of Shoeless Joe Jackson Comes to Iowa. I put it on the shelf right next to the book he signed that day at the book festival, the only book I could find. That book with that cover. The one that has become my most favorite thing of all.

I spent the morning today reading Bill’s stories, saying goodbye. I wrote a little something, which I almost never do… I wrote poems for my grandparents when they died, and my uncle who passed away. I think I wrote one when they killed Captain Kirk. Not even for our Lord and Saviour David Bowie (although I am putting him in a novel with my great-great grandfather who died in WWI). Anyways, the point being that I don’t trot these out for any old somebody who goes away… but this was Bill, and I wouldn’t be here, still fighting to Go the Distance.

Bill Kinsella Died Today

Bill Kinsella died today

Leaving, as he always did,

When he was damned good and ready

It broke my heart a little to hear it

Little cracks forming, splitting, glowing red from underneath

At the idea that he chose to leave us behind

Those cracks were already forming

The last time I saw him

Tall and thin as ever

Paper thin and faded like an old page

More crooked and folded and dog-eared than I remembered

Bill told me he was tired

Worn through

And I nodded, as one does

As if I knew the weight of the years he’d lived

Bill taught me

A long time ago

About the music of words

About the magic that glows behind life

and baseball

and Brautigan

Bill taught me about love and loss

About moonlight

and the hanging curve

and the terrible joy of hitting it square on

Bill wrote stories of regret and redemption

and the writerly things about writers

Because that’s what he was

Always

He took me on trips to Frank Pierce, Iowa

and Hobbema and Vegreville

and the weird back rooms of Vancouver

I rode with him across pages

from our own hometown in Alberta

to the jungles of Courteguay

Where voodoo chiropractorsturn out iron-armed infielders

and Dennys Kelly turned into a wolf

Bill showed me the world

with all of its cracks

and the magic glowing red underneath

the hot stuff

and the thundering tempo

and the seventh-inning stretch when we all get to look

and feel the heat on our face

Adios, Teach

Enjoy the next game

and save me a seat

  • For Bill 9/17/2016

#Furr launch – October 27 at Owl’s Nest Books

Here is the official launch announcement for my new novel Furr launching October 27

Come on down to Owl’s Nest Books in Calgary, or look for the online launch the same day!

(Click the poster to go to the Facebook event for more details)

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I will also be signing Furr, along with my other books, at Indigo Signal Hill on October 28, from 6-9pm.

And stay tuned for news on how YOU can get your eyeballs on Furr (or Furr in your eyeballs… I ain’t judging, man!) in the upcoming weeks!

#Furr Cover reveal! Launch date!

Hiya gang!

furr_front_final

If you are a member of the Got How crew email list, you’ve already seen this news (and gotten exclusive news on my next project, which I can’t announce anywhere else for at least six weeks!)

If not, here’s your first look at the cover for my new novel Furr, coming next month from Tyche Books! It has been described as a “modern gothic fairy tale”, “a slick stylish werewolf tale that digs in its teeth and tears at your heart.and as the “weirdo Canadian love-child of Supernatural and Twin Peaks.

Drug lords and wizards and werewolf strippers, oh my!

Also here for your edification and hopeful attendance is the poster for the launch party – October 27 at Owl’s Nest Books in Calgary.

tyche-october-web

Come one, come all. There’s a costume contest, Trick or Treating, me scaring children,

children scaring me… The whole damned fandango.

And stay tuned here for news on how you can win a FREE advanced copy of the ebook!

#FURR cover sneaks!

My new novel Furr is in the final stages of production and launching October 27, 2016 from the good folks at Tyche Books

 Furr_poemJimmy Finn is having a real bad day. He woke up drunk and on the wrong end of a nightstick. He lost his job, and had to see his shrink. Now the cops are after him, he’s falling apart, and his only friend is a volatile drug lord. How could it get any worse?

As smoke envelopes the city, he finds himself on the run, and out of time. He’s either losing his mind, or becoming a monster. Or maybe it’s both. Jimmy Finn has one last hope. A long-buried family secret, lost above a mysterious town in the mountains, full of bizarre shadows and a strange girl that haunts his memories.

“Populated by a collection of characters you definitely want to have a drink with, but then hide in your basement while you count your fingers and toes afterward, this tale does not disappoint.”
– Robert Bose (nEvermore, AB Negative)

“Axel Howerton pens a slick stylish werewolf tale that digs in its teeth and tears at your heart. Furr has a voice that speaks to the animal in us all.”
– Sarah L. Johnson (author of Suicide Stitch: Eleven Stories)

We’re talking an Urban Fantasy/Crime Novel/homage to Gothic Fiction with flavours of everything from Twin Peaks to Supernatural, Clive Barker to Neil Gaiman. We’re talking werewolf strippers; drug-dealing voodou mojo men; goth-rock card-sharp wizards; psychic weirdness; raisin pie; Celtic myth; psychological horror; clinical lycanthropy; and a crotchety old Kootenay Indian shaman named Bob Dylan.

And I have another extra special treat for y’all… A trifecta of tasty sneak peeks at the cover art by Sean Yang.  I’ll be releasing one each on Twitter, FB and Instagram today like they were goddamn Pokemons in the wild! SO GO ON OUT AND CATCH ‘EM ALL!

These are mere snippets of the cover, featuring two characters – Jules and Emma – and a little taste of the background imagery of their ancestral home of Bensonhall – the lair of the Strong Wolves. Put them all together on your screen like a jigsaw puzzle and “snap a selfie”, as the kids say… reply to the post on any of those platforms with the pic of you having caught the whole triad (hashtag it #FURR), and I’m gonna give you a free eBook copy of the just finished – not-for-mass-consumption, GOTHOW CREW exclusive UNO MOSS!