Category Archives: Events

Book Signing for Troy Love Story

I will be signing copies of my latest novel, “Troy Love Story” at Market Block Books in downtown Troy on Saturday, October 26th. This will be coinciding with the Troy Farmers Market, which brings people in from all throughout the region.

The signing will take place from noon to 2pm. There will be a limited quantity of books available, so be sure to arrive early. I will be signing Troy Love Story, as well as any of my books that you may have, so be sure to bring them.

I will be wearing a funny hat. This is important for some reason. If you are interested in knowing the point of my wearing a funny hat, feel free to mention it at the signing. Also, I will tell you how tall I am.

I like to sell myself locally, but all of my books are available on Amazon.

Troy Love Story is Out in the Wild!

It has a few year’s of toil and journey, but one of my most treasured books, “Troy Love Story,” is available for purchase at Barnes and Noble, and on Tuesday, August 27th, on Amazon.

It’s a story about the overdose death of a cultural leader in the music scene of Troy, New York, a scene that grew up in a city that had been outgrowing them for years. It’s a story about gentrification, and the struggle to reclaim past glory in the face of new glory. It’s a snapshot of the nature of loss.

The release of this book was reflective of the experience of Troy, and other rust belt cities. I had originally signed this book over in 2021, overjoyed that soon, I would make my big break. This was the anthem of a world that has been both forgotten and celebrated in the American narrative: “The Rust Belt.” It sounds rough, the kind of place that might strike a tourist as the new Wild West. A place to test your mettle, if not a place you ever want to belong unless you’re stuck there.

It’s hard work for the simplest measure of survival if you’re just a cog, which many are because the golden knobs and diamond switches live in New York or LA or Dallas or any other big city everyone’s heard of, with the exception perhaps of Detroit. It’s a fierce pride, an exclusion of strangers, and an ongoing battle with those same strangers, who want to make things better at the gleaming blade of a bulldozer.

So it took years to get this book out, years of billowy dreams draped over the wire frames of harsh realities. And it has entered the world not with fanfare, but with a note on an envelope stuck to the bottom of a corroded mailbox. A most fitting release.

A New Start

My life as a writer, and as a person, is a never-ending swing dance of great intentions, ferocious energy, big plans, and no follow-through. I have this website to keep you abreast of what I’m doing as a writer, and maybe the sporadic nature of posts tells you everything you need to know.

Nevertheless, I’ve got a new book out. In fact, I have two new books out. There will be more to come on them, but I’d like to just show you so that you’re aware.

First book is called December PT11083: A Travelogue for Losing Someone. I lost my father to a tragic, traumatic accident in December of 2019, and, as a way to cope with the loss, I took notes of my grieving process, and the culture and customs of loss. I wish to get it to anyone who it may help, and the ebook is free (the print book is cost.)

The second book I have out is the third in the Jack LeClere series. It’s called “Miner’s Kill.” It’s a story about the top homicide detective in New Rhodes and the investigation into the murder of a high society pillar and the seedy underbelly he called a playground.

There will be more to come, but don’t expect miracles. I write this to “you” knowing that “you” are the void, and I’m catalouging my experiences for a posterity that likely won’t be there. But do text me, won’t you?

My Book Launch and the Back to the Eighties Night Party

DSC_0018(1)Yesterday was Pub Day for my new collection of short stories, Street Whispers (which you can now buy here.) And of course, part of the whole fun of having a Pub Day is having a book launch, typically done in a book store, sometimes in a writer-friendly coffee shop or bar. My last book launch was in a bar, and it wasn’t a big draw, though being asked to sign a patron’s breasts was “of note.”

Auditioning ActAnyway, Phil Sawyer, good friend and undeclared ambassador of the Capital Region, owns Auditioning Act Entertainment DJ Service, an interactive audio-video extravaganza that can just show up anywhere and unleash the rhythm and the blues, the jazz and the funk, the laser lights and the video stars. Well it just so happened that he was throwing the Back to the Eighties Night party at the Ukranian-American Citizen’s Club on my home island, in my hometown of Cohoes, and he said to me, “Sween, throw your book launch there! Chuck books at people. Draw dirty pictures of ’em on the title pages. Go nuts, do whatever the hell ya want, kid!”

Now, Phil’s a good friend, and I gave him a couple of fictional shout-outs in the book, so I was down with that idea. And I’m glad I did. This party was amazing. I mean, just hordes of mullets, motorcycle jackets, oversized rock T-shirts, leggings, and Aquanet coiffures rekindling the flames of rebellion against a backdrop of raw, winner-take-all Wall Street greed. The rockers, the misfits, the kids smoking around the corner of their high-schools, planning for the kegger on the tracks later on that night.

Phil had shit locked down, too. I can’t think of too many fine-ass eighties songs I didn’t have imprinted on my mind in that spot where I keep the voice of Ronald Reagan saying “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” The laser show was nuts; hell, I was abandoning IMG_1202my post here and there just to bathe in it a little bit. There were four bartenders and a revolving door of thirsty people fifty deep. Seriously, though, little Rubik’s cubes flying through the air, a smiley-face beach ball making its rounds foot-to-foot, unplugged microphones on stands with bandannas tied to them court people singing anyway cause it was all good. No cops called, but who’s to say they weren’t there? Everybody was there.

So yeah, I sold some books. I didn’t sign breasts, but I think that’s a one-off thing. Plus I wasn’t equipped with a Sharpie, or telling anybody I would. But I sold some books, and got to hang out with a ton of great people. I do have some books left, so if anyone local is reading this, I’ve got a few I can sign and send. But all in all, I am always going to try to launch my books inside a cool party when I can. And AAEDJS is number one on my speed dial for that.

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