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The Subway Test

~ Joe Pitkin's stories, queries, and quibbles regarding the human, the inhuman, the humanesque.

The Subway Test

Monthly Archives: February 2024

Exclusive Interview: “Exit Black” Author Joe Pitkin

20 Tuesday Feb 2024

Posted by Joe in Advertising, Book reviews, Exit Black, Lit News, Musings and ponderation, My Fiction, Science Fiction

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

exclusive interview, Exit Black, Paul Semel, paulsemel.com, sci-fi, sci-fi thriller, Science Fiction, science fiction reviews

It’s publication day for my latest novel, Exit Black, and I was happy to see that the excellent and tireless arts and entertainment journalist Paul Semel chose today to publish our exclusive interview about the book. You can read the interview here: check it out to see why space tourism is the perfect metaphor for economic inequality, as well as who I would cast in an Exit Black movie! I’m still a little tickled that Paul calls it an “exclusive interview”–I mean, it is an exclusive interview, but he makes it sound like I’ve been playing hard to get all these years.

Hard to get?

Exit Black launches Tuesday!

18 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by Joe in Advertising, Exit Black, Lit News, My Fiction, Science Fiction, Stranger Bird

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Blackstone, books, sci-fi, Science Fiction

My newest book, Exit Black, launches on Tuesday. That would have been my father’s 88th birthday–I would give a lot to be able to hand him a copy.

Right now, the strangest and loveliest part of the process has been watching the fine team at Blackstone, my publisher, promoting the book. They are way better at it than I would have been, thank goodness.

I self-published my first novel, Stranger Bird. That was an experience that I will always treasure: the feeling of putting a book together with a tiny group of friends and family, mostly newbies, doing our own copy editing and picking typefaces and buying ISBNs and learning how expensive it is to publish a book. I imagine the feeling is analogous to playing in an independent-label band, driving around the country in a van and playing a hundred bars and grange halls. And I know that even now, with a traditional publisher putting my book out, I am still a tiny fish in the big publishing ocean–I’m not the kind of writer who is ever going to win a Hugo (good thing, maybe, considering the latest scandal) or be on Reese’s book club list. But, even though I am most definitely small potatoes, I’m still a potato. And it is a sweet and oddly disorienting experience to have a team of people from a publishing house supporting your book. I couldn’t be happier with Blackstone, and I will have a good word for the folks there for as long as I live. Thanks to them, I am orbiting your reading list.

Paperback Writer

05 Monday Feb 2024

Posted by Joe in Advertising, Exit Black, Lit News, Musings and ponderation, My Fiction, Pacifica

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

books, Exit Black, paperback books, Paperback Writer

I’ll admit it: when I learned that my newest novel, Exit Black, was going to be published in trade paperback, rather than hardback, I was a little crestfallen. I grew up having inherited a whole raft of English major-y prejudices about what kinds of books are good and what kinds are trash. And, literally to judge a book by its cover, hardback books were the best kind of books.

I’ve written about this a little in Pacifica, which is in some ways a love letter to books, in my description of the semi-mythical Book Room:

Among good students at Sterne College, and even among lackluster ones, the Book Room was legendary. No acquaintance of Jude’s had ever reported having seen this inner sanctum of the library, where the leather-bound volumes of some donor’s bequest were shelved, not by Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress, but (according to college folklore) in the manner that had been used by Hypatia and Eratosthenes in Alexandria.

For better or worse, my real novels wouldn’t find shelf space in the Book Room. But, on getting the news from my publisher about Exit Black‘s being relegated to trade paperback status, I did at least feel like it was the right occasion to pull up an excellent old Beatles song, and one of my favorite Paul McCartney bass lines of all time:

So, dear Sir, Madam, or Mixter, will you read my book? It took me years to write; will you take a look?

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