• Halloween 2017 IF,  Interactive Fiction

    Halloween 2017 I.F. – Instructions

    Į̺̩̥̻̠t͉̦̩’̸̭̝̱̲s̸͈ ̲̟̭͍t̨̗̣̖̰̱̣ͅh̩̼̹̩̙̠à͎͖̩͙t̨̲̲ ̝̤ṯ͕͖̞̖͎̖i̤̺̝m̡e͈ ̮̩̀ơ̮̝̙f̭͖̠͈̱ ̬y̘̰͝e̜͈͙̙a̼̙͞r̙͈̳ͅ ҉̺̲̯͓͕͉ḁg̛̪͖̭̱̭̘ͅa͙͖̰̤̥̟i̧͕n̠͓̳̤͓.̢̦͙ ̠̮͕S̶̞̗̖h̖͕a̮͇̼͉͈̰l͏̩̯͙l͈͈̤̻ ͉͇̜͈̰̦w̤̠͈̻̠͖ḙ͉͇̝́ ́p͎͉̪̰̯l͇͇͙̖̫̘͍ą̼͙̱̥͔͙y̢̝̻̝ ̖̻̥a͙̲ ̵̮g͢a̼̘͟m̴̩̮͍̟e̺̖̟̪̹̺̕?̲̦̤̤̬͎

    As with last year’s October story, Septimus and Sweet, I thought it’d be fun to celebrate Halloween together with a little bit of fun interactive fiction! This year’s fiction will be a m/m paranormal story about a young man who lives near to a known rift to the world that monsters come from.

    Here’s how it works:

    Tomorrow (Oct 2) I’ll put up the introduction to a story, describing the situation the character finds himself in. Then, you can click to reply to the post’s comments and leave a suggestion for what the character should do next! Basically, you’re an invisible audience shouting things at the screen–but the things you’re yelling will help influence the character’s actions.

    Examples of what suggestions might look like: “Examine the mirror” or “break the vase” or “Don’t give up!! Think about your family!

    Get your comments in by no later than 5pm PST the next day. Then, between 5pm-9pm PST (approximately; on some nights I have other commitments it might be a lil earlier or later), I will put up the next part of the story. A new post will go up every day until Halloween!

    If contradictory actions are suggested by different people (“Break the vase” and “take the vase with you”, for example), decisions on which to go with will be based on a) which gets more suggestions and b) which is more in line with the protagonist’s personality as established so far. ‘Think’ actions will usually never be contradictory and can include anything you want him to think about, with the exception of a) things he won’t know or b) if it’s in the middle of an action sequence since he might not want to stop and think about unrelated things right then. But in general, you can suggest whatever you want, even if it isn’t relevant. For example, “what do you look like, though?” could be a suggestion just as much as anything else—you are more than welcome to use your comment to learn more about the character(s) as well as advance the story.

    (If you want to see how it works, take a read of the first couple of parts of Septimus and Sweet).

    New people are completely welcome to jump in on the most recent post at any time–don’t feel like you have to be there from the start to play! Of course, if you’re jumping in late, I suggest reading the previous parts just so you’re caught up on what’s been done so far.

    Ready? If so, feel free to comment to this post with NAME SUGGESTIONS for the protagonist! He’s 20 and lives in a world much like our own, except for the monsters. (I can only use one name, so if people like an already-suggested name, please comment to repeat that name suggestion. However, additional suggested names may be used for other characters throughout the story).

    (The small text: I reserve all rights to this work. If I eventually get this published in any form and need to take this down, I will send copies of this online version, with comments people left intact, to everyone who contributed suggestions (if I am reasonably able to get in contact with them).)

    Please Suggest a Name

    [Completed Parts: Instructions | Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | Day 5 | Day 6 | Day 7 | Day 8 | Day 9 | Day 10 | Day 11 | Day 12 | Day 13 | Day 14 | Day 15 | Day 16 | Day 17 | Day 18 | Day 19 | Day 20 | Day 21 | Day 22 | Day 23 | Day 24 | Day 25 | Day 26 | Day 27 | Day 28 | Day 29 | Day 30 | Epilogue | Author’s Notes]

  • Sales

    LT3’s End of Summer Sale

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    My awesome publisher, Less Than Three Press, is having an end of summer sale from Sept 1-8  where all ebooks are 25% off, with preorders an additional 15% off! That’s so much sale.

    I’d love if you checked out some of my books below, but if nothing of mine strikes your fancy, please still check out some of the amazing new reads from other fantastic LT3 authors, because I certainly will be!

    So what books have I written?

    Beauty and Cruelty  ($5.24) – “What if god was one of us?” Except more like, “what if fairy tale archetypes were one of us?” The Evil Fairy is working at a coffee shop to make ends meet, getting by in the true millennial book-hoarding way. The archetypes are fading away into obscurity… until Sleeping Beauty decides it’s time they all saved themselves. Fairy tale endings? In this economy??

    • Mainly F/F, with some side M/M and F/F/M poly
    • Urban fantasy
    • Some sexual content
    • Polyamorous swan drama
    • Winner of Rainbow Awards 2016 – Best Lesbian Debut Book!

    The Cybernetic Tea Shop ($2.24) – Drifting, quiet, and calm. A robot running a tea shop meets a wandering mechanic. A short novella about love and learning when to let go.

    • Asexual F/F
    • Retrofuture Sci-Fi
    • A yelly robot bird
    • Warning: Robot Feels

    Empty Vessels ($4.46) PREORDER – A young man that sees monsters, the ghost that keeps him company, and the weird and haunted world of Others that Keith finds he needs to help protect. Possessed dolls, faceless ghosts, bone girls and horned boys, and things that go bump in the night.

    • M/M/M poly
    • Paranormal
    • Some sexual content
    • Misuse of bus etiquette


    The Pandemonium Series
    Some kingdoms are ruled by demons. Some are ruled by humans. And in others, demons and humans coexist. In all cases, there’s a lot that can go wrong.

    This series can be read in order or as standalones! They’re loosely interconnected in the same fantasy world with some characters reappearing in each.

    The Cobbler’s Soleless Son ($1.49) – A rowdy adult fairy tale adventure following the valiant attempts of Renart, the cobbler’s son, to outwit and trick his way into a Demon Prince’s bed. The game’s afoot!

    • Bisexual M/genderqueer
    • High sexual content
    • Horns, am I right?

    Behind Bars ($3.74) – Pel is part of his human-only city’s brutal anti-demon inquisition. His son, unfortunately, doesn’t share his opinions. And while Pel just wants to keep his human son safe from demons, when a stranger comes to town, Pel might end up needing a demon to help keep his son safe from humans.

    • Bisexual, M/genderqueer, with a side M/M ship
    • Some sexual content
    • Hot dads and demon cats

    Hair to the Throne ($2.24) – Merle is not expecting a good time when she’s kidnapped to the depths of Demon Prince Vehr’s castle, but instead she finds her long-lost best friend. So what’s Merle to do except try to make a new life with the prettiest girl she’s ever seen? Problem: demons.

    • F/F, trans
    • Some sexual content
    • Lots of eyes all over a person

    I’ve also got some stories in anthologies: 

    • Only Human, in Less Than Dead – Saul comes down with a magical malady, which is really depressing until he meets his new doctor’s secretary, Theo—who is super hot, just also, super dead.  
    • Debating the Dragon, in To the Victor – Lady knight May intends to slay a dragon and rescue a princess, but why do you have to fight the dragon? Can’t you sometimes just talk to the dragon? Maybe kiss the dragon?


    You can reblog my tumblr post (I’d love if you did!) or check out the main LT3 post
    here to help us get the word out! Happy reading and happy Autumn!

    For my most frequent updates, follow me on Twitter: @MeredithAKatz !

  • News and Announcements

    Empty Vessels Available for Preorder!

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    In the aftermath of a terrible accident, Keith is left with anxiety and depression. He’s also left with psychic powers, a ghost following him around, and the unwanted knowledge that not everyone in the world is human—some are something other. In the midst of all this turmoil, it’s the ghost, Lucas, who becomes his closest friend.

    But when Keith starts having prophetic dreams about horrible monsters hunting Others down, he can’t remain uninvolved anymore. Against his better judgment, and with Lucas’s support, Keith begins to pursue the truth of what’s really out there, what sorts of people they are, and what his own role could be in this strange new world of spirits and monsters.

    I couldn’t be happier to announce my newest novel: Empty Vessels! This is a story of an literally-haunted anxious young man who steps up to help out the otherworldly community against a darker force. It involves possessed dolls, faceless ghosts, bone girls and horned boys and things that go bump in the night and, sometimes, smooching.

    It is available for preorder in ebook form from Less Than Three Press (print orders to be added closer to the release). Preorder to save 15%!

    Word count: 80,000
    Categories: Paranormal, Urban Fantasy, Gay, Bisexual, Poly (m/m/m)
    Release Date: November 21, 2017, at 7pm EST

  • Reviews

    Review: Peter Darling

    5/5 stars. Buy it at: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Less Than Three Press

    Austin Chant’s Peter Darling is a sequel to Peter Pan. After trying to force himself to fit into a life as “Wendy Darling”, a grown-up Peter can no longer reject his real identity, and flees his unaccepting parents in a return to Neverland—where he becomes embroiled in restarting his war with Hook, which quickly grows heated in more ways than one.

    By itself, it’s an amazing and exciting story, full of adventure, fun, drama, and romance. It stands on its own merits completely and would be a brilliant novel even if it anything Peter Pan-related were scrubbed from it. But as a new take on the universe of Neverland and Peter Pan? It’s genius.

    I’ll start with the one side of things and move to the other: as a story in its own, Peter Darling has some of the best pacing I’ve ever read, along with one of the most delightfully natural shifts from enemies to lovers in an EtL story. The bloodthirstiness of their battle giving way to the need to rely on each other giving way to their acknowledgement of each other’s reality was a honestly a pleasure cruise.

    The conversion of characters from archetypes to people as part of a story’s structure is obviously one I care a lot about and wanted to spend a lot of time with myself in my own book Beauty and Cruelty; seeing it happen here with such well-known figures was a real delight. The romance was rich and well-established, and the plot hinging on the characters’ understanding of real identity in the midst of escapism reflected and enhanced the themes pretty much perfectly. On top of that, the narrative was beautiful, both perfect for playing off the source material and enjoyable in itself. It’s incredibly quotable; my partner and I both read the book at the same time and kept sending each other bits in chat as we went.

    And as I said, when returning to the mythos of Peter Pan, Chant absolutely knows what he’s about and winds things together perfectly.

    When I first saw the promos for Peter Darling, I instantly grew hyped because it’s such a perfect idea of a way to relate to the source material. The first description we get of Peter in Barrie’s Peter and Wendy is the below (note that Wendy in Barrie’s work has not at this point ever seen Peter but just has an impression of him):

    “‘Oh no, he isn’t grown up,’ Wendy assured [Mrs Darling] confidently, ‘and he is just my size.’ She meant that he was her size in both mind and body; she didn’t know how she knew it, she just knew it.”

    Obviously, the connection this makes for a trans Peter works perfectly, and the way Chant moves it forward from that idea is absolutely stunning, because there is already a history of doubling of identities between the characters of London and those of Neverland. Quite often in performances of the play, the same actor plays Hook as plays Mr. Darling. While this was probably originally due to having a limited cast, it was stuck with as a trend throughout the years as both characters are the ‘cruel adult’ of their respective worlds. Since the main themes of the Barrie story focus on the necessity of growing up and what that means, the role being the same in both brings more information to the threat of Hook vs the threat of Mr. Darling (and his world). By taking the core of this idea and applying it in a new way to Peter/”Wendy” instead, Chant draws on a strong tradition while innovating it beautifully.

    The Peter Darling plot itself draws on two important points in the Peter Pan canon which are often overlooked—First, in Barrie’s Peter and Wendy, Peter forgets everything constantly in order to to be able to stay forever young, and second, that Neverland itself reacts to Peter’s presence:

    “Feeling that Peter was on his way back, the Neverland had again woke into life. We ought to use the pluperfect and say wakened, but woke is better and was always used by Peter. In his absence things are usually quiet on the island. […] But with the coming of Peter, who hates lethargy, they are all under way again: if you put your ear to the ground now, you would hear the whole island seething with life.”

    By taking these few basic details of how Neverland works, and how Peter works in Neverland, Chant creates a story that works beautifully in conjunction with the original, while breaking new ground in a delightfully enjoyable yarn of his own.

    I couldn’t recommend this story highly enough, whether you’re familiar with the original or not—I promise, it’ll be an awfully great adventure.  

  • Reviews

    Review: Glove of Satin, Glove of Bone

    4/5 Stars. Buy it at: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Less Than Three Press

    In Glove of Satin, Glove of Bone by Rachel White, Muriel and Enne were terribly once passionate women of action—an ex-wicked witch, and one of the enforcers sent to stop people just like her—who have since somehow lost the spark of passion. When they became lovers, they left their previous lines of work and began a business together repairing magical tomes, teaching a young apprentice (more like their adoptive daughter) the business after them. But something has gotten lost, and it’s not until the wrong book falls into their hands and brings with it all sorts of shadows from the past that they may begin to find it again.

    Rachel White makes a fascinating choice with this book by setting it after a “Happily For Now” and showing the complications of two very different people trying to turn it into a “Happily Ever After” instead. Muriel and Enne’s relationship has fallen apart; not only are they no longer lovers, it seems like it’s difficult for them to even relate to each other any more. Muriel likes fashion and drama; Enne likes practicality and predictability. Caught in the middle of this is their apprentice, their work, their feelings about their relationship to the Council—everything between them is getting hit from both sides by the darts of their frustration.

    Because of that, the overall sense of the book isn’t building their relationship for the first time but rebuilding by picking through the fragments of what’s fallen down and finding what’s still able to work. Before that, of course, the characters need to want to rebuild, which is the really challenging part. Helping (?) with that is a terrifyingly destructive grimoire, Muriel’s old lover and teacher in the ways of the wicked arts, and a tangle of conflict over why the Council might want this book repaired.

    The characters in this book are frankly incredible. Muriel is everything I want in a character—even if I can immediately identify that I’m far more like Enne myself. Leo is a delight and how annoyed the characters are by him is instantly funny, and I found myself rooting for the two archivists from the moment they appeared onscreen. The antagonists too are clearly defined and interesting in their own right, and it seemed perfectly done to have so much of the climax hinging around another woman who’s found herself in the place that Muriel used to be.

    There is a repeated theme of age which I admit I didn’t entirely understand the use of—the two lead characters were both barely thirty, and this was portrayed as the line where one Becomes Old and a great deal of the problem between them. I felt like it was aiming for a theme of Muriel fighting age tooth and claw, and Enne throwing herself into it too early, but the narrative itself seemed to agree that they were in fact Old At Thirty. I was never entirely sure if this was a fact inside the text (ie Thirty Is Old in this world) or if it wasn’t one and thus the characters’ approach to this milestone age was meant to be a mistaken overreaction on both their parts. I want to think it was the latter, but I didn’t notice any place in the narrative that established the cultural baseline to compare it against. It’s a minor issue but it came up so frequently (including in the antagonist’s speech at the climax) that I found myself wanting the clarity.

    The plot of the story is rather simple, but it doesn’t need to be more complex, in my opinion—the overall thrust is a character piece, examining the characters’ relationships to each other, their past, and their current chosen profession. The grimoire itself is nearly an afterthought, and I’m not sure I needed much more from it, except maybe to clarify what’s going on with the book and the council, and why they took it back when not fully repaired but it was implied they’d send the other books to Muriel and Enne next. The main plot itself seemed a little unresolved as a result; why did the council have the book, if it lured people with its power, was it safe with them, etc. 

    Then again, this might be a set up for the next book—if so, bring it on! I’d be excited to see how Muriel and Enne work on their relationship, and the ways they deal with their ongoing frustrations in the future.