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Denene Millner on the Personal Story Behind One Blood

One BloodPotent, poetic, powerful, told with deep love, and spanning from the Great Migration to the civil unrest of the 1960s to the quest for women’s equality in early 2000s, Denene Millner’s beautifully wrought novel, One Blood, explores three women’s intimate, and often complicated, struggle with what it truly means to be family.

Continue onwards to read Denene’s beautiful and heartfelt note in honor of National Adoption Month.


Dear Reader,

I discovered my adoption certificate at age twelve, while snooping in my parents’ private papers. Asking questions about it wasn’t an option; I was too shocked and scared to say anything because, well, I had no business peeking into that metal box, for one, and two, saying it out loud would make it an alternate reality I wasn’t ready to dissect or accept.

My parents had kept it a secret. They didn’t intend to tell me about it and leaving it that way just made sense for them, so I made it make sense for me, too. I pushed it deep into the recesses, past thick skin and blood and heart muscle—memory—and became the very fabric of the Millner clan. For the longest time, that was beyond enough.

That changed, though, when I got pregnant with my first baby and the questions started: “What’s your health history?” “Do healthy pregnancies run in your family?” “What’s in your blood?” My doctors wanted details. I couldn’t give them. Suddenly, the information I thought wasn’t important actually was. What and who is in your blood?

That’s an answer I’ll never truly have. The night we buried my mother—she died without knowing I knew about my adoption—my father gave me a small piece of my story, the only piece he knows: Someone had left me, a baby, on the stoop of an orphanage, and four days later, he and my mom went looking for a little girl and found me in a corner crib in the basement, arms outstretched, ready to go. That was the beginning and end of my “birth” story.

Over the years, I’ve used my imagination to fill in that story with color and light and grace: Maybe my birth mother was young and scared and couldn’t fathom raising a baby on her own. Maybe she was forced to leave me on that stoop by a family that refused to support her and her child. Maybe she was in an abusive relationship and feared her baby would get swooped into the violence. There are so many ways that it could have ended badly for me, a defenseless baby. But instead, this woman, this angel, gave me life, and then gave me life again by giving me away.

It was a decision—a beautiful, selfless decision steeped in pain, heartbreak and, yes, love—that I can only understand because I am now a mother who carried her own babies in her womb and couldn’t fathom the strength and courage and resolve it would take to leave my children, my blood, the very beat of my heart, on a stoop for someone else to have.

It is the ultimate sacrifice. A miracle.

It was my mediation on miracles, adoption, motherhood, Blackness, Black womanhood, choices, and blood that led me to One Blood, an epic, fictional story told in three parts, about the connection between three women: a birth mother who had her child taken away; the adoptive mother who raised that child; and the child who is the literal product of the two. In One Blood, I’m exploring how race, culture, history, gender inequality, respectability, marriage, mothering, DNA, hate, and, ultimately, love inform the lives of three women intricately connected by the blessings and curses of motherhood—specifically Black motherhood. This sprawling story, set in the American South during the Great Migration, in New York during the Civil Rights Movement and the fight for the Equal Rights Amendment, and in Brooklyn during the ’90s and early 2000s, with the struggle for work/life balance as its backdrop, is an opus to adoption, birthing, African spirituality, Black healers, Black babies, Black motherhood and Black femininity, and how each of these things can either destroy us or set us free.

I wrote this story because I have many questions and zero answers about my past—because I am curious about it, but also scared of what I will find. Of who I will hurt. I write this story because my birth mother and many more like her deserve context—deserve some color in the stark black- and-white judgment we reserve for women who give their babies away. I write this story for my mother and the Black women of her generation, who were led to believe that their very survival was wholly dependent on their being mothers and wives, and that this should be the sole source of their ambition—even as American racism conspired to stop Black women like my mother from succeeding at those very roles.

Telling this story in this way allows me to air out what all my life has gone unspoken, with the intent of honoring the stories—indeed, the lives and plights—of the Black women in my own life, who represent in no small measure the lives of Black women in general. That my mothers—and Black mothers like them—fought through this gauntlet of heartache, loss, subterfuge, patriarchy, and pain and came out on the other side of it is a miracle. A miracle that warrants exploration.

The word “miracle” is a most appropriate descriptor when I think of my own adoption and certainly the writing of One Blood. Consider the miracle of birth—what it takes for sperm to meet egg and egg to attach to womb and for womb to maintain the absolute perfect conditions for new life and for new life to find its way to loving arms. Now consider the miracle of my particular adoption—what it took for my birth mother to get pregnant and give birth, but also to take this new life and make it so that it could find its way to loving arms. My parents’ arms. The arms of a mother whose blood was not my blood but whose heart connection was so deep, so expansive, so unconditional, so incredibly full, that it created the most perfect conditions for me to be . . . me. Safe. Successful. Happy. Deeply loved. Not by just one mother, but two.

This is a lesson I’ve been learning bit by bit since I was that little twelve-year-old girl stumbling across her adoption papers and keeping the secrets and learning to love wholly, fully, like a mother. I have two moms who adored me. I don’t doubt for a second that I am the lucky one.

Still, I’ll always be led to that burning question: Who is in my blood? How much does it matter? Could those answers get me, a Black woman, free?

This, indeed, is the intent of One Blood: to help us get to the miracle of freedom.


One Blood is available now!

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Love & Wolves: TJ Klune on Writing the Green Creek Series

opens in a new windowwolfsong by tj klunePlans often go awry. Most werewolves understand this, as do most authors. Today we’ve got TJ Klune here to discuss the initial direction he plotted for his Green Creek series, and explain how reimagining that story with wolfish creatures helped him connect with its very human characters.

Check it out!


In 2014, I set out to write a big story, one that would cover many years following the same people, and the angst and drama of growing up in a small mountain town in Oregon. It wasn’t fantasy—no, this was going to be real and hardcore with tears and heartbreak and whatever else I could throw in.

It was…meh. I got maybe a quarter of the way into it, but it wasn’t setting my world on fire.

As sometimes happens, my brain decided I was going about it all wrong. It wasn’t working. It wasn’t going in the direction I wanted it to. I couldn’t figure out why.

Until my weird brain said: Okay, but what if they were werewolves?

I scoffed. Werewolves? I don’t write about werewolves. I am a serious author with serious ideas!

(Yikes.)

Eventually, I got over myself and decided: What the hell? The worst that could happen would be the story was a mess and wouldn’t go anywhere. It’s happened before. It’ll undoubtedly happen again.

Except the story became something more than I expected. Yes, there are werewolves, but in the pages of Wolfsong, I found a home with a pack of ridiculously wonderful people who make bad decisions for mostly the right reasons. They’re so painfully human, even when they’re not. They make mistakes, they grow, they learn, they win, they lose, they suffer, and they fight for themselves and each other.

Wolfsong is the first book in a four-part series about how far people will go to protect the ones they love. There is love and romance and danger and action and a fandom who loves these characters as if they were real people because they are packpackpack.

Welcome to Green Creek.

This isn’t going to go how you think.

TJ Klune

TJ KLUNE is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling, Lambda Literary Award-winning author ofThe House in the Cerulean SeaThe Extraordinaries, and more. Being queer himself, Klune believes it’s important—now more than ever—to have accurate, positive queer representation in stories.

Pre-order opens in a new windowWolfsong Here:

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Cory Doctorow on Writing Silicon Valley’s Greatest Forensic Accountant

opens in a new windowRed Team Blues by Cory DoctorowAnyone on the Internet (hi! if ur reading this now, ur here) knows that this place is scary. The wild digital west—where some of humanity’s most lucrative heists, among all manner of other shady business, are executed at the tap of a clicky keyboard. It’s a tried, true tactic in the fraudster’s playbook to leverage lack of knowledge of the virtual landscape to turn the fun place where we read blog posts about books into dangerous financial snares. To that end, Cory Doctorow, who knows a lot about tech things, has dedicated his writing career to bridging that knowledge gap with his readers by way of page-turnin’ techno-thrillers.

We have him here today to chat about his upcoming novel,  opens in a new windowRed Team Blues.

Enjoy : )


I am literally a-tremble with excitement at the thought of people reading Red Team Blues because it writing it was amazing. I write when I’m anxious. During the lockdown, I wrote and wrote and wrote. Red Team Blues battered its way out of my fingertips in five weeks flat, *blam*, there on the page, the hard-boiled adventures of Marty Hench, Silicon Valley’s greatest forensic accountant, who has seen every tech industry money-scam in his 40 year career.

Marty was so much fun to write, because he was a perfect counter to the “shield of boringness,” scam economy’s way of making fraud plausible to devour your savings. Finance bros call it MEGO (“my eyes glaze over”) – a financial arrangement that is so dull, no one can read the fine-print without slipping into a coma.

For 20 years, my artistic and professional vocation has been figuring out how to make people understand complicated, dangerous things before those things destroy them. Those complicated, dangerous things are often embodied in spreadsheets, but while everyone else who discovered spreadsheets immediately started figuring out how to hide money with them, Marty decided he’d use spreadsheets to find dirty money.

The usual hard-boiled detective is a reactionary, yearning for the days when men were men and everyone else knew their place. Marty’s also melancholy for the past—but he pines for a time when making things and doing things was more important than manipulating balance sheets. It’s a feeling a lot of us share.

Sometimes, you can’t tell if anyone’s going to like the book you’re writing. Sometimes, you’re not even sure if you like it (see above, re: anxiety). But sometimes, you just know. I just knew when I was writing Little Brother and I just knew when I was writing Red Team Blues. If there was any doubt, it was incinerated when I woke up at 2 a.m. to find the bedside light on and my wife sitting up reading.

“Why are you awake?” I groaned.

“I had to find out how it ended,” she said.

Honestly, what writer could be mad about that?

I hope you’ll give it a shot.

Cory

Pre-order opens in a new windowRed Team Blues Here:

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How T. Jefferson Parker’s Dog Inspired His Latest Book

The RescueThe Rescue is a gripping thriller that explores the strength of the human-animal bond and how far we will go to protect what we love by three-time Edgar Award winner and New York Times bestselling author T. Jefferson Parker. And he found that inspiration through his own, lovable rescue dog.


By T. Jefferson Parker:

On a stormy November morning two years ago, I woke up and decided that my wife, Rita, and I, should get a dog.

We had lost our beloved family Labrador some years prior and had been a little afraid to get another one, given the years of love and affection that a dog can give and take, all the joy they are, and what absolute misery it is to watch them die.  Not to mention the general obligations and limitations when building your time and travels around an animal who depends on you for everything.

“What kind of dog do you want?” Rita asked me.

“I’ve been reading about rat terriers and I want one,” I said.  “They’re small and cute and ferocious on squirrels and gophers.”

We live in Fallbrook, north of San Diego – semi-rural, oak and avocado country loaded with these tree, bush and flower destroyers.

“I don’t want a purebred dog,” said Rita.  “I want a rescue.”

“Why?”

“Everyone tells me how grateful they are.”

“Hmm.”

“Let me check the Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary and see what they’ve got.”

What they had, front of their web page, was a “terrier mix” named Rhett, rescued as a puppy from the streets of Tijuana six months ago.  He was diseased, tick-ridden, malnourished and terrified.  Now he was in perfect health and ready for his first home.

A Mexican street dog, and damned cute.

“Rita, you have to understand that if we go down and look at that dog, we’ll be coming home with him.”

“Exactly!”

When we got to the sanctuary, 13-lb. Rhett wiggled over to greet us, throwing himself at us when we knelt down to size him up.  He looked somewhat terrier-like to me, but I saw more Chihuahua and whippet in him.  A bit of Jack Russell, maybe.  Short haired, cream with tan ovals and spots, and those distinctive button/rose ears that so many Mexican street dogs end up with.

Just a note: there are a loosely estimated 18,000,000 street dogs living in Mexico without homes, medical care, regular food, or clean water.  They’re known as callejeros, “street dogs.”  They’re not neutered so they breed swiftly.  You see them everywhere, on beaches and in villages, cities, at the border crossings – mongrels begging for food, and sometimes willing to let you pet them on the hugely off chance that you’ll let them follow home.

At the Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary, Vicky told us about Rhett’s rescue from Tijuana.  She had video of him being lifted from the dirt road where he was curled up, resting with a look of resignation and misery on his flea-bitten face.  Vicky couldn’t really tell us too much about his life in Tijuana – how could she? – but she said he’d likely grow to about 50-lbs. and that he’d probably never lived in a human home for very long, if at all.  (Many callejeros are born on the streets.)

Now, here at the sanctuary, Rhett was a healthy, wriggling, goofy-eared dog that we happily snatched up and took home!

Over the next days I wondered long and hard – part of a writer’s job – what this little dog’s life was like in Mexico.  What was his story?  What had happened to him, both good and bad?  We renamed him Jasper for his high-strung, at times borderline neurotic behavior.

When two different DNA tests gave us eighteen different breeds of which Jasper is made – everything from the Korean Gindo to the German Shephard – it began to dawn on me that I wasn’t ever going to learn anything about Jasper’s former life than what his rescuers had told me.

There was nothing more to him to know than that ten second video clip of him being picked up from the street in Tijuana, and a couple of photos of him on a veterinarian’s table.

The more I thought about the first six months of his life, the more the mystery of it bothered me.

So, with only this wisp of a biography to work with, I did what any writer would do:

I imagined his story.

Here it is – THE RESCUE – a novel about a Mexican street dog who gets a shot at a new life in California.

And a whole lot more.


Click below to pre-order your copy of The Rescue, coming April 25th, 2023!

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On Giant Monsters and Having Fun, A Letter from John Scalzi

Cover of The Kaiju Preservation Society by John ScalziLast year, Renowned Burrito Expert and New York Times bestselling author John Scalzi wrote a really cool book about escaping from your old life to start a new job while also caring for giant monsters, and it’s called opens in a new windowThe Kaiju Preservation Society.

This year, it’s out in paperback 😎

Check out this letter he wrote about the book!


By John Scalzi

Hello!

The Kaiju Preservation is not only my latest novel, and a book I’m really proud of, but the book, of all of my books, that I am the happiest to have written. 

Now, I understand that this statement requires some explanation, so let me tell you a quick story. 

In 2020, I was trying to write a book. That book is not the book that you are looking at right now. That book was supposed to be a dark and moody political thriller, cynical and maybe a little downbeat. 

Turns out, 2020 was a really bad year to be trying to write one of those books. 

I literally couldn’t finish it. I tried for all of 2020 to write that book and just couldn’t do it. I finally had to admit defeat. I told my editor, look, I can’t finish this book. That’s never happened to me before, and I felt genuinely awful about it. But, again, welcome to 2020. It messed with a lot of creative folks.

He let me off the hook, and I went to take a shower. And during the shower, my brain said, well you’re not working on that book that really depressed you anymore so why don’t you try this story idea I worked on while you weren’t looking it’s got big damn monsters in it, and it downloaded all of Kaiju directly into my consciousness, start to finish. Seriously, the whole darn thing. 

I immediately got out of the shower, toweled off, and sent a email to my editor saying hey you remember how I wasn’t able to finish that book well I have a whole new book and it’s awesome and I’ll have it to you real soon now, and spent the next several weeks having the best and most fun experience I’ve had writing a book, possibly ever. 

Kaiju was a gift to me. The book I didn’t expect, and the book that I really needed at that point. It’s fun. It’s got great characters who enjoy each others’ company and are a delight to be with. It’s an amazing world with incredible creatures of all sizes. It’s fast and a blast to read. It’s meant to be nothing but fun. If the book I was trying to write in 2020 was a dark, Wagnerian opera, this book is a three-minute pop song. A really catchy three-minute pop song.

I hope that’s what Kaiju can be for you, too. A power pop novel, something that is immense fun for you to read, and equally to share and sell to people who are looking for a book-shaped escape, something to just plain enjoy after a long hard slog of recent times.

Plus, you know: Big damn monsters. They’re just the best. 

Yours,

John Scalzi

JOHN SCALZI is one of the most popular SF authors of his generation. His debut Old Man’s War won him the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. His New York Times bestsellers include The Last Colony, Fuzzy Nation, and Redshirts (which won the 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novel), and 2020’s The Last Emperox. Material from his blog, Whatever, has also earned him two other Hugo Awards. Scalzi also serves as critic-at-large for the Los Angeles Times. He lives in Ohio with his wife and daughter.

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Letter by Lee Geum-yi, Author of The Picture Bride

The Picture Bride“Your husband is a landowner,” they told her.

“Food and clothing is so plentiful, it grows on trees.”

“You will be able to go to school.”

Of the three lies the matchmaker told Willow before she left home as a picture bride in 1918, the third hurt the most. Never one to be deterred, Willow does all that she can to make the best of her unexpected circumstance. But it isn’t long before her dreams for this new life are shattered, first by a husband who never wanted to marry her in the first place, and then by the escalation of the Korean independence movements, unified in goal, but divergent in action, which threaten to split the Hawaiian Korean community and divide Willow’s family and friends.

Braving the rough waters of these tumultuous years, Willow forges ahead, creating new dreams through her own blood, sweat, and tears; working tirelessly toward a better life for her family and loved ones.

Read onwards to check out the poignant letter written by The Picture Bride author Lee Geum-yi!


By Lee Geum-yi:

In the early 1900s, around 7,000 Korean men left for Hawaii sugarcane plantations and became immigrant laborers. The women who got engaged to these Korean men after exchanging photographs were called picture brides. From 1910, when Korea became a Japanese colony, through 1924, when the American immigration laws banned further Korean immigration into the country, approximately 1,000 Korean picture brides bet their destiny and left home, each with a single photograph of her groom-to-be.

A hundred years ago, when Korean women were not even allowed to go outside of their own village, these picture brides were quite the adventurers and pioneers, having embarked on such a life-changing journey. I was overtaken with a desire to bring attention to these women, and showcase their unique narratives—beyond the vague history that they’ve been given. I wanted to show that these picture brides were individuals—as different as can be from each other—with dreams and desires, not just accessories to the male narrative.

The Picture Bride follows the journeys of three young women: Willow, who comes from a family of Korean independence activists; Hongju, whose husband died two months into marriage; and Songhwa, who was ridiculed—and occasionally stoned—by the children in her village, just for being a shaman’s granddaughter. Unfortunately, the social standing of these three women, who left their country and families with dreams of a new world, doesn’t change much in Hawaii. They lead harsh lives as immigrants—both Asian and female—which is to say, they were outsiders. They always felt in-between two worlds, marginalized. But despite their hardships, they help each other throughout the many hurdles that lie ahead, in admirable solidarity. The Picture Bride is not a story of these women’s success by any means, but of the trails they blazed, struggling to pave the way for future generations, step after challenging step.

Although they left their colonized motherland, their new home of Hawaii was also a colonized territory. The colonized and the colonizers still live together on the soil of America today. And that’s the cultural backdrop against which the women of The Picture Bride had started their new life—once again as outsiders, even though they were no longer part of their colonized motherland. Stories of these three immigrant women, I believe, will deeply resonate with American readers today. Amidst this unrelenting pandemic, we’re awash not just with the virus itself but with discordance, bias, and hate. Never has there been a time more in need of philanthropy and sobriety. I hope this story of three picture brides, written by a Korean woman writer, will contribute to enriching and diversifying the bookshelves in English-speaking countries in this time of much emergency.


Click below to pre-order your copy of The Picture Bride, coming October 11th, 2022!

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