More Wide, More Open

As the publication date for Wide Open approaches (March 13th!  Less than two weeks away!) there are things going on in different places on the web: polls, giveaways, reviews.  I won’t post links to everything, but I’ll try to put up polls and giveaways.  Oh, and interviews and guest posts.  And some of the reviews.  And I’ll put them all here, on the website with the occasional pointer on Facebook or Twitter.  You can look or not.  Click or not.  It’s all up to you.

Going on now:

Tor/Forge Spring Fantasy Collection SweepstakesTor/Forge is giving away a whole bundle of books, including Wide Open.  You subscribe to their newsletter to enter.

Bookreporter Spring PreviewWide Open is one of the featured books.  There will be giveaways of Wide Open and the other featured books through March 20th

RT Book Review March Cover PollWide Open is one of the top covers for March.  There’s a poll where you can vote for your favorite.

Cornell Alumni MagazineWide Open gets a mention in the March, 2012 issue

 

 

Wide Open Deleted Scene #1

I was thinking about some fun posts to put up here in the weeks surrounding the release of Wide Open.  And while I was thinking about it, I happened, for one reason or another, to go back to an old draft, which contained several scenes that are no longer in the final version of Wide Open.

I thought, why not put up a few (relatively) non-spoilery deleted scenes?  So, I am!

For the next three weeks or so, I’ll put up one short scene a week.  I hope they’ll give you a bit more of the flavor of Wide Open, a sampling of the setting and the characters, and a glimpse at a slightly alternate universe version of the story.

An hour and a half later, Hallie hit the strip off I90–lights and parking lots and IHOP restaurants.  Another mile and a half, a turn off the strip onto a business route, the Viking sat at the end of an old strip mall.  It’d once been a chain motel, sold locally and still rented about thirty-five rooms–not that Hallie’d ever stayed in any of them, though half her high school graduating class probably had.

There were a dozen cars in the lot, a good number for early Sunday evening.  Hallie spotted Brett’s silver Honda up near the entrance.  She locked the pickup; tinny strains of music drifted across the parking lot.  Not a band, not on a week night–radio maybe, some kind of recorded music, anyway.  As she put her hand up to open the door, two airmen from Ellsworth tumbled out, laughing like they’d just heard the funniest joke in the world.  They recovered quickly and grinned at Hallie.

“Hey sweet–”  one of them began, but Hallie brushed by them into the bar.  She’d been to Afghanistan.  She saw ghosts.  She didn’t have the time of day for Ellsworth boys anymore.

“Hallie!”

Brett’s voice wasn’t loud, but it carried.  Maybe a half-dozen tables in the entire room were occupied.  The bartender was wiping glasses and watching a football game on the television at the end of the bar.  “Lorie’s in the restroom, I think,” Brett said as Hallie sat.

The waitress was already there, laying a cocktail napkin on the table and saying, “What’ll you have?”

“I don’t know,” Hallie said.  “Bring me whatever.  Beer.”

The waitress sniffed like she expected smarter people, though Hallie couldn’t imagine why.  It wasn’t as if the Viking was anything other than a dark old bar with old smoke soaked into the table tops, red glass hurricane candles, and spindle-backed chairs with the arms worn smooth from thousands of hands.

“I’m so glad you came!” Lorie’s voice coming from behind her, startled Hallie so badly that she almost knocked the beer out of the waitress’s hand.  She covered running her hand along her chin and around the back of her neck, but the waitress glared at her and she figured she’d be lucky if she got any kind of service at all the rest of the night.

Lorie swung around to the other side of the table, signaling to the waitress, who ignored her.  She said, “Excuse me,” and went to the bar, where she flirted with the bartender for a minute or two before coming back with a soda and a basket of popcorn.

“Hallie–” Brett began, but before she could get farther than that one word, Hallie cut in.

“Look,” she said, “I could use some help.”  She’d been thinking about this on the way over, about how to control the conversation, to talk about what she wanted to talk about, not the psychological ramifications of Dell’s death or her time in Afghanistan.

Lorie leaned forward eagerly.  “You want us to find out about that deputy?  You two would be perfect for each other.  I know he’s a little uptight.  I mean I don’t know it, but people say…”

“Lorie, let her finish.”  Hallie could hear a low-key tightness in Brett’s voice, like she was worried where the conversation might be going.

Tough shit, Hallie thought.

She tried to imagine them while she’d been gone–laughing, talking, riding in local summer rodeos and climbing into 4x4s with lean young cowboys in boots and hats that cost more than their pickups.  It hurt a little to picture that, because if the world had been fair, been far different than it actually was, Dell would have been there, Dell would have been riding that bay mare she raised herself, the only one who could give Brett a run for her money in the barrel races, the only one–

“I want to know everything you know about Pete and Martin.”

The images in this post are used under Creative Commons licenses:

  1. Prairie Flower and badlandsMykl Roventine (CC BY 2.0)
  2. Abandoned farm equipmentAshleigh Bennett (CC BY-ND 2.0)

Coming Soon

Wide Open will be out on March 13, 2012.

I’ll be doing a blog tour from March 12th through March 25th.  There will be guest posts, interviews, reviews and giveaways.  I’ll post a schedule here soon.

Wide Open has already been reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, Romantic Times, and Booklist.

Publishers Weekly says: …Coates makes her premise believable through her canny and credible depiction of life in a rural backwater where the normal and paranormal seamlessly merge.

Kirkus says: Coates’ debut novel scores from a reader’s point of view….

Wide Open gets a ‘runner-up’ mention in Kirkus’s 10 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books for March list.

And finally (for now!), Wide Open is one of the featured books for Bookreporter’s Spring Preview 2012.  Check it out for a chance to win a copy.

 

Something About The Book

I mentioned that it takes a month to make a habit.  Well, I’m trying to create a posting habit, to put up a new post at least once a week.  This website is  a place where you can find out a little about me and more about my books, so here’s something about the book:

Wide Open is the first in a three-book series.  Without giving much (anything) away, books two and three are also about South Dakota, Hallie Michaels, Boyd Davies and creepy paranormal happenings. Currently, book two is called Deep Down, though this can change.

Also currently, the first paragraph is:

Hallie Michaels had been up since six, running big round bales of hay out to the cattle and her father’s small herd of bison in the far south-west pasture.  She was heading back in, thinking about breakfast–toast and scrambled eggs and half a dozen slices of bacon–when a shadow, so dark it felt as if a curtain had been drawn, passed by on her right.  She looked up, but there was nothing, not a cloud in the sky, looked back down and she could see the shadow still, like a black patch of nothing on the ground, heading due south.

Of course, that could change too.

Wide Open

My first novel, Wide Open, will be published by Tor in March, 2012.

What it’s about:
Hallie Michaels has had a near-death experience in Afghanistan and since then she’s been able to see ghosts.  She’s still adjusting to this new reality when she’s called home to South Dakota to her sister, Dell’s, funeral.  Her friends and the sheriff tell her that Dell committed suicide, but Hallie can’t believe that.  It doesn’t make any sense.  Trailed by her sister’s ghost, she starts asking questions–of her sister’s friends, of the people Dell worked with, of a young deputy sheriff who keeps turning up where he’s most not wanted. 

Hallie soon discovers  there’s a lot more going on than just her sister’s death.  Things someone will do anything to protect.  Hallie’s threatened.  Her father’s barn is burned. Another young woman disappears.  New ghosts follow her.  Now, she’s going to need all the help she can muster in order to stop a villain with ancient powerful magic at his fingertips.

Where it comes from:
It’s been a long journey to a published novel and I’m really excited that Wide Open will soon be in stores.

The phrase, write what you know, is a common bit of advice for writers, and a good one.  We talk a lot about what it means, exactly, because writers are always writing about things we can’t possibly ‘know.’  We write about places that don’t exist, about people who never were, about pasts and futures that didn’t or won’t happen.  But at least part of what it means is to write what you care about.

I grew up on a farm in western New York State.  I went to college and I majored in Animal Science.  I went to graduate school and majored in Plant Science.  I researched forages.  I worked for an ag chemical company. I was a statistical consultant for ag researchers.  I moved into information technology, but I worked at a land grant university.

I moved west of the Mississippi, not because I wanted to, but because the job was there.   People–Iowans–asked me why I moved there, like they couldn’t imagine it, like no one ever did.  But here’s the thing, about Iowa and Nebraska, South Dakota and the rest of the short and tall grass prairie states.  They’re beautiful.  Really fantastically beautiful–hot and humid in summer, dry and cold (COLD!) in winter, vast and open and full of surprises.

I care about the prairie, about the big open.  I care about the lives people live out of sight of interstates and cities and suburban subdivisions.  And I care about the vast wonderful what-if possibilities of fantasy.

Wide Open comes from all of that.  And I hope it manages to do some of it justice.