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Benefits of Breathing by Christopher MeeksThe Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks


Publisher: White Whisker Books (May, 2020)
Category: Short Stories, Literary Fiction, Women’s Fiction, Relationships
ISBN: Coming Soon
Tour Date: May-June, 2020
Available in: Print & ebook, 238 Pages
The Benefits of Breathing

Description Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks


In The Benefits of Breathing, his third collection of short stories, Christopher Meeks dives again into the human condition, particularly within relationships.  As one reader wrote on Amazon, “Some authors need a lot of words to describe their worlds and their people. Christopher Meeks says a lot with a little.” The Los Angeles Times has called his stories “poignant and wise.”

In this volume, “A Dog Story” captures a crumbled marriage and the love of a dog named Scrappy. “Joni Paredes” shows the birth of a new relationship that starts at a daughter’s wedding. “Nestor by the Numbers” follows one man’s often hilarious online dating experiences after he finally accepts his wife is gone. “Jerry with a Twist” shows an actor on an audition while his pregnant girlfriend helps him through a crisis. These and seven other stories will bring you into the special world of Meeks.

As reviewer Grady Harp notes, if you’ve previously “discovered the idiosyncrasies of Meeks’ writing style and content, rest assured that this new collection not only will not disappoint, but also it will provide further proof that we have a superior writer of the genre in our presence.” Try this book. You’ll have a lot to think about.

Advance Praise Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks


“Chris Meeks is a descriptive writer whose style paints a clear picture of everyday real life traumas. This story is about ordinary people and common problems; including how effective communication is so difficult to cultivate, especially when working through an emotional situation like a divorce. The reader can easily sense the strain of the failing relationship.”-T.M.S., Amazon

“Thoroughly enjoyed this short but bittersweet divorce story. It’s impossible to read anything Chris writes and fail to see pieces of yourself in the lines. Hope you keep them coming, Chris!”- Ksinteriors, Amazon

“I’ve read much of Meeks’ work. His attention to detail and ability to show rather than tell is unique and engaging.”-Kevin Gerard, Amazon

“While James Joyce was a trailblazer in the genre of literary fiction, Meeks surpasses him with crisp plainspoken prose abundant with brilliant humor and wit. Chris Meeks is one of those rare prolific and masterful writers whose stories and novels leave his audiences with a sense of satisfaction and enriching views of the human condition and humanity.”- James V Jordan, Amazon

Awards and Recognition for Christopher Meeks


Book of the Year Bronze Award from ForeWord Reviews (2017): ‘The Chords of War’

ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year Finalist award (2011)- ‘Love At Absolute Zero’

Three book critics’ Ten Best Books of 2011-‘Love At Absolute Zero’

Three book critics’ Ten Best Books of 2009- ‘The Brightest Moon of the Century’ 

Guest Post Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks

THE ART OF THE SHORT STORY

By Christopher Meeks

One of my favorite short story writers, Lorrie Moore, calls the short story “a noise in the night.” In the introduction to the new, incredibly thick 100 Years of the Best American Short Stories, Moore mentions that the form is “a record of rebellious human consciousness … second to none in power and efficiency.”

When I flash on some of my favorite short stories, such as those by Flannery O’Connor, Jhumpa Lahiri, Tobias Wolff, T.C. Boyle, Lorrie Moore, and many others, their stories beat inside me. I have internalized their tales as an experience. I was there. I was in Vietnam with Tim O’Brien in “The Things They Carried.” I felt the bullet lance through a human brain in Wolff’s “Bullet in the Brain.” I saw a life as if on a movie screen in Delmore Schwartz’s “In Dreams Begin Responsibilities.”

The best stories resound with “This is Life. This is how it works.” We gain a sense of pain and peace, a sense of chaos and clarity. After all, we only have one life to live, and short stories let us live other people’s lives for a little. Perhaps we sense “I better not do that” or “So that’s good to know” as we steer down our path that might lead to two roads diverging in a yellow wood. We know instantly which road to take. After selecting, we do not focus on what if we’d taken the other road because we can only go down one road. Perhaps, though, we saw the other road in a poem or short story.

I write this as the globe is hunkered down to avoid the coronavirus. It’s a time where many people feel isolated as if in a dome on the planet Tralfamador (to bring up an image from Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five.) You need to get out, so perhaps you take a walk. Maybe you even have a dog that forces you to get out and walk. If you see someone on a sidewalk, you step into the street, facemasks affixed. We wonder where we are walking.

Our attention spans have been zapped like invaders from Mars. Perhaps they were first shortened by our smart phones. When the phone rings, we answer, forgetting what we’re doing. The phones, too, can take us away from people in the name of connection. It wasn’t long ago when I was at a restaurant with friends (remember restaurants? Remember friends?) and everyone at our table was tapping away on his or her phone, including me.

Maybe in this lock-down time, we’ll ponder our lives a little more. Thus, the short story may be the perfect form to help you focus before the laser rays of distraction pull you down. A good short story lets you reflect in this reflective time.

All of the above is to say that’s what can be great about the short story, However, I find it impossible to tell myself to write something great, something that people will find and celebrate, something that might make it a century from now into The Next 100 Years of the Best American Short Stories. You cannot sit down and consciously write art.

What I do, inspired by the best short stories, is tell the truth as I’ve heard, witnessed, or experienced. I don’t write memoir because, to paraphrase Tim O’Brien in one of his stories in the volume The Things They Carried, fiction lets you cut out the chaff of life and reach the kernels most cleanly. Fiction for me isn’t made up. It’s distilled.

An initial draft of a story might be written in one passionate blast, but then it has to sit a while. I have to step away for days, weeks, months, or even years, so that I can read my own story freshly, as if I weren’t the writer. I can then feel what I can cut out or need to add. In the end, a story feels just right. I often like to leave the reader with an image.

My new short story collection, The Benefits of Breathing, came from story drafts old and new. Many of these have been previously published in literary journals. I crafted the book with a sense of what Bruce Springsteen does in creating an album. Some stories don’t fit. I took out three. Then, with editor Carol Fuchs, I worked on the order. Order is everything. Juxtaposition is a force of nature.

One story, “A Warm Front Appears to Be Moving from California and Deep into Minnesota,” I first wrote over thirty years ago. I’d rewritten it maybe every ten years, discovering it more, adding layers. It still wasn’t right until the editor said she loved it but maybe the ending wasn’t quite right. I told myself I could be like God and change my protagonist’s life. Soon, I had a whole new ending. The editor, Carol, loved it so much, she thought it should end the volume.

The title for the book came to me on the edges of a dream as I was waking up. We all know to breathe is to live. What else is living? That’s the essence of my book. I realized the title also needed to be the title for the story inspired by my father’s last months.

As I walk with my dog, a little spaniel, in a mile circle that connects to my house, she walks parallel with me. Sometimes, she just glances up with what seems to be a smile. That’s what it’s like to have a reader of your short stories. In a mile walk, we’re together in a silent connection.


About Christopher MeeksBenefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks


Award winning author, Christopher Meeks has five novels and two collections of short fiction published. The Benefits of Breathing’ is his third collection of short stories.

He has had stories published in several literary journals, and they have been included in the collections “Months and Seasons” and “The Middle-Aged Man and the Sea.” Mr. Meeks has had three full-length plays mounted in Los Angeles, and one, “Who Lives?” had been nominated for five Ovation Awards, Los Angeles’ top theatre prize.

Mr. Meeks teaches English and fiction writing at Santa Monica College, and Children’s Literature at the Art Center College of Design. He lives in Pasadena, CA.

Website at: www.chrismeeks.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Christopher-Meeks-212382392140974/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/christopher.meeks1
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MeeksChris

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Giveaway Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks


This giveaway is for the winner’s choice of print or ebook however, print is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ebook is available worldwide. There will be 3 winners. This giveaway ends June 27, 2020,midnight pacific time. Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Benefits of Breathing by Christopher Meeks

Lost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters MirelesLost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters Mireles


Thanks to Caitlin Hamilton Marketing & Publicity, I am giving away one print copy of ‘Lost in Oaxaca’ by Jessica Winters Mireles.

Description Lost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters Mireles


Once a promising young concert pianist, Camille Childs retreated to her mother’s Santa Barbara estate after an injury to her hand destroyed her hopes for a musical career. She now leads a solitary life teaching piano, and she has a star student: Graciela, the daughter of her mother’s Mexican housekeeper. Camille has been grooming the young Graciela for the career that she herself lost out on, and now Graciela, newly turned eighteen, has just won the grand prize in a piano competition, which means she gets to perform with the LA Philharmonic. Camille is ecstatic; if she can’t play herself, at least as Graciela’s teacher, she will finally get the recognition she deserves.

But there are only two weeks left before the concert, and Graciela has disappeared—gone back to her family’s village in the mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico. Desperate to bring Graciela back in time for the concert, Camille goes after her, but on the way there, a bus accident leaves her without any of her possessions. Alone and unable to speak the language, Camille is befriended by Alejandro, a Zapotec man who lives in LA but is from the same village as Graciela. Despite a contentious first meeting, Alejandro helps Camille navigate the rugged terrain and unfamiliar culture of Oaxaca, allowing her the opportunity to view the world in a different light—and perhaps find love in the process.

Praise Lost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters Mireles


“Take a little romance (Mexican style), add enough suspense to string a reader along, pepper it with evocative language underscored by a writer who knows her way around music, and you have a novel as engrossing in its storytelling as in the cultural nerves it touches. On the surface, Lost in Oaxaca is the story of a woman, Camille, trying to unravel the mystery of her star piano student’s sudden disappearance. The title quickly shows itself to be a bit of a ruse, however, a clever setup for a journey that, in the end, brings catharsis to Camille and with it a chance to reclaim even more than she thought she was looking for.”―Deborah Batterman, author of Just Like February and Shoe, Hair, Nails

“Jessica Winters Mireles’s Lost in Oaxaca is a beautiful, moving, and timely love story that will tug at your heartstrings, along with your sense of right and wrong. Through the charming Camille and captivating Alejandro, you will leave this book believing that both love and music can rise above the inequities, injustices, and bullies of the world.”―Jessica Anya Blau, author of The Trouble with Lexie

“Travel and awakening combine in [this] delicate romance. . . .Lost in Oaxaca is a vigorous, sensitive account of crossing borders to reimagine what love looks like when it’s poured without reserve.”―Foreword Reviews

About Jessica Winters MirelesLost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters Mireles


Born and raised in Santa Barbara, California, Jessica Winters Mireles holds a degree in piano performance from USC. After graduating, she began her career as a piano teacher and performer. Four children and a studio of over forty piano students later, Jessica’s life changed drastically when her youngest daughter was diagnosed with leukemia at the age of two; she soon decided that life was too short to give up on her dreams of becoming a writer, and after five years of carving out some time each day from her busy schedule, she finished Lost in Oaxaca.

Jessica’s work has been published in GreenPrints and Mothering magazines. She also knows quite a bit about Oaxaca, as her husband is an indigenous Zapotec man from the highlands of Oaxaca and is a great source of inspiration. She lives with her husband and family in Santa Barbara, California.

Website: https://www.jessicawintersmireles.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jessicamireles

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Giveaway Lost in Oaxaca by Jessica Winters Mireles


This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on May 8, 2020 midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse DouglasTime With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


Publisher:  Broadback (January 13, 2020)
Category: Time Travel, Historical Fiction, Time Slip, Women’s Fiction
Tour Dates March and April, 2020
ISBN: 978-1671646032
Available in Print and ebook, 258 pages
Time with Norma Jeane

Description Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


A young woman is hurled back to 1954 to spend a week with Marilyn Monroe.  Together, they embark on their own personal journeys — one a coming-of-age — the other, Marilyn’s journey, a struggle to reconcile with her past and perhaps change the future.

My Thoughts Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


In 1998 Darla’s mother died and a year later her father remarried and she does not get along with her step mother.  Obviously, her father doesn’t either because they argue all the time. Today is Darla’s 16th birthday and her dad and step mother are arguing again.   Darla has to get out of the house.  She takes her camera and dog, Sonny and goes for a long walk.  The sun starts to set when she realizes she should get home but the path turns strange and all of a sudden she ends up in 1954. It takes her a while to realize this but when she takes a miss step, still trying to get home, she stumbles and falls down a hill and onto the edge of a road.  A car passing by screeches to a halt and the woman gets out to help.  When Darla realizes it is Marilyn Monroe, she realizes that she is either dreaming or she somehow went back in time.

Marilyn takes her in and they become fast friends.  Darla use to watch Monroe’s movies with her mother and is a huge fan.  She also knows Monroe’s fate and starts to wonder if she can save her.

I loved the way the time travel itself is written.  It is quite imaginative.  Elyse Douglas always writes excellent time travel novels and ‘Time With Norma Jeane’ is no acceptation!  They captured the time and place expertly.  They really made Darla and Monroe come to life and catapulted me back to 1954 with them!  There was a scene with a very young Johnny Cash that I adored! 

This is a book that is impossible to put down.  I cried when it ended because I didn’t want it to ever end.  I would love a sequel.  It probably wouldn’t make sense for a sequel with Marilyn Monroe but Darla could end up in another time with a different person. How about the man in black, himself? The possibilities are endless. I highly recommend ‘Time With Norma Jeane’ and give it 5 stars.

View Trailer Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas




About Elyse DouglasTime With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


Elyse Douglas is the pen name for the married writing team Elyse Parmentier and Douglas Pennington. Elyse grew up near the sea, roaming the beaches, reading and writing stories and poetry, receiving a master’s degree in English Literature.  She has enjoyed careers as an English teacher, an actress and a speech-language pathologist.

Douglas has worked as a graphic designer, a corporate manager and an equities trader.  He attended the Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music and played the piano professionally for many years.

Website: www.elysedouglas.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/douglaselyse
Facebook: www.facebook.com/elyse.authorsdouglas

Buy Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


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Giveaway Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


This giveaway is for the winner’s choice of print or ebook however, print is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ebook is available worldwide. There will be 3 winners. This giveaway ends April 22, 2020,midnight pacific time.

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Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas