Saturday, April 7, 2012

Free Story

Here's a free one from my collection, Shoebox Train Wreck.  If you enjoy it, please consider picking up a copy.  Links to buy are here.

Originally published at Thuglit.


HALLOWEEN COMES TO COUNTY RD. SEVEN


Doug settles back down on the couch with a fresh beer, as Martin starts another porn flick. Doug doesnt say anything, opting to drink his beer in silence while Martin adjusts the volume. A girl saunters onscreen, her silicone implants rigid, her shorts so tight they might as well be painted on.
            The sex starts without preliminaries. Its cruel and mean and soulless. Doug focuses on the trees outside Martins trailer, and thinks today might be the day to leave.
Two weeks ago, Doug was fired from his job at the Honda plant because the shift foreman smelled alcohol on his breath one time too many. When his wife found out, she told him not to bother coming home until he had another job. Hes been with Martin ever since.
He looks over at Martin, high as the cow jumping over the moon, grinning stupidly at the television. Martin, whom Doug has known since grade school, lost his job three years ago and just look at hima sack of shit, true, but a happy sack of shit. He lays around most of the day, taking hits of crank, then doing something asinine like shooting a hole in the side of his trailer or running laps around his above-ground pool. Sometimes, after a few hits, he just sits and picks at his toenails for hours, mutilating them until they look like tiny, bloody faces, leering back at him. Once he got scared and tried to cut them off, but Doug managed to talk him down. Mostly, though, Martin just sits on the couch, watching porn, raving about some whore hes done or wants to do, waiting for the doorbell to ring. The doorbell rings, he gets up and answers it. Trades little homemade baggies for government-issued green. Saturday nights, he might shower, go to a bar, pick-up a twenty-three-year-old in high heels and a mini skirt looking for some free crank.
Doug and Martin have an agreement. Doug can stay indefinitely as long as he is willing to help out when some fellow named Snakeskin shows up. Doug isnt even sure if Snakeskin is a real person or just another one of Martins drug-induced delusions.
            Snakeskins going to be by one of these days, and when he comes, hes coming to kill me,Martin told Doug a week into his stay.Thats when youll earn your keep, Dougie. Youll know its him by the sound of his truck. Its geared low, so youll feel it in your gut.
            Unable to deal with more porn, Doug leaves Martin alone and escapes through the back door to light a cigarette on the tossed-together deck. The air out here smells good. Another downside of living with Martin: his trailer smells like chemicals and stale beer. Not that the happy bastard ever notices. Doug glances back over his shoulder and is grateful for Martins darkened windows. Sheathed in black trash bags, the windows remind him of something. Today is Halloween. He thinks about his daughter, Maci. Is she old enough to go trick or treating? Probably not, maybe next year.
He stands, watching the afternoon sky. Theres a good breeze, but its cold, too cold for late October in Alabama. Winters coming and its going to be a  bitch. Especially without a place to stay or a job. He tries to convince himself that he can find work again. Tries to believe he can patch things up at home. Tries to imagine how next Halloween will be: Maci waiting for him to come home from work. Shell be standing in the driveway dressed as Tinkerbell or some princess. He likes this image. He wants to go back home.
As he starts back inside for a beer, he stops, frozen by a loud rumbling out on the road. He waits, hoping it will pass. When it doesnt, he feels torn between going back inside or taking off for the woods where his truck is parked.
The trailer shakes as the truck eases up the gravel drive.
            Doug. Hey Dougie boy,comes Martins voice from inside.Its show time.
            He could run up through the woods and be at his house in no time. He could convince his wife to take him back. He could help Maci make a costume and together they could go trick or treating.
Where would they go?
He laughs at the prospect of coming to Martins door. What would he put in Macis bag? A joint? Its not funny, though he has to laugh anyway.
            And just before Martin swings the door open, Doug feels it. A burning inside of him to get the hell away from Martin. Back in school, Doug always managed to get wrapped up in Martins stupid schemes. The door is open. Martin stands at the threshold.
Shake your thang, man. Its time.
Doug hesitates, maybe even steps away from Martin.
Martins smile vanishes.You arent thinking about bolting, are you?
Doug doesnt speak, his eyes down.
Hey, theres nothing to it. I need your help, Doug. Just like you needed mine.
            Doug steps back inside.

Take this gun,Martin says, opening a drawer that contains several dirty needles, a pair of womens underwear, and the biggest handgun Doug has ever seen.Go to the lab and—”
            Lab? I—”
            Martin holds his hand up.The fucking closet.He motions to a door with the gun.Flip the vent up so you can see. If Snakeskin makes a move, shoot him right between the fucking eyes.He holds out the gun.
            Doug looks at it but nothing else.
            You think Im fucking with you, Doug?Martin shoves him hard in the chest.You think Ive just been letting you lay on my couch and drink my beer for free? Take the gun. Now.
            Doug hears someone outside fiddling with the gate. A coldness grips him, and all of the beer he drank today feels like its in his bladder. He reaches for the gun.
            Doug doesnt know guns. The one in his hand is so heavy, the barrel so thick, he is sure it can destroy a man, obliterate him, change his face to pulp, from something thats recognizable to something that isnt.
            Thelabis dark and smells like ammonia. He finds and opens the vent enough to see out into the room where Martin is taking a final hit before facing Snakeskin.
            Doug doesnt want to shoot anyone, but the second Martin opens the door and Snakeskin walks in, he knows that he may not have a choice.
            He wonders sometimes if he has ever really had a choice. Martin reminds him of better times, and better times is all hes got. He wishes he could forget Martin completely, but he feels powerless to do so. His life seems like a series of inevitabilities, like he is rolling down a hill, continually picking up speed. One of these days, he knows that the bottom will come and when it does, all those inevitabilities will crush him.
            From the open vent, Doug watches Snakeskin come in. He is a small man, but muscular. His complexion is dark, as if he has spent many days in the sun. His dress is minimala white tee, blue jeans that fit tight around a trim waist, a pair of shit kickers that look at least a size too big. Doug unconsciously raises the gun to the open slat.
            There are hundreds of men just like Snakeskin all over the county. He looks not unlike Doug himself, perhaps a little more muscular, his clothes a little tighter. The real difference is in the eyes. They look wild. Reckless. Doug knows those eyes. They belong to men who have stopped caring a long, long time ago.
            Snakeskin exudes a confidence that sets Doug on edge, and he grips the big gun a little more tightly, lifting it closer to the open slat.
            Behind Snakeskin comes a tall razor blade of a man. Hes younger than Snakeskin, but only his flesh shows it. His eyes look tired, so lazy that they are intense, so unconcerned that they are hard.
            Snakeskin asks Martin how hes been doing.
Martin, nervous, jumpy Martin, manages to say,Lifes good, man. Whos your friend?
            Snakeskin frowns at the floor. Then thrusts a thumb at the tall man.This is Rodney. Rodney, this is Martin.He looks at Martin eye to eye and adds,The one I told you about.
            Rodney barely glances at Martin and says,The one that sells good shit or the other one you were telling me about?
            Snakeskin says,The other one, man. The other one.
            What I thought,Rodney says.
Martin glances quickly at the closet door and says,Fellas, Im just trying to run a lab here. If it aint about crank, you probably got the wrong guy.
            Oh, I think we got the right guy.Snakeskin pulls a switchblade from his back pocket. He nods at Rodney.Go get her.
            Rodney bobs his head as if to some unheard music and says,Hell yeah.
            An awkward moment passes as Snakeskin keeps his eyes trained on Martin, and Martin shakes and fidgets like he needs a hit of something bad.
            Rodney returns with a young girl, maybe seventeen. She walks in front of him, and he stares at her ass, barely covered by a pair of tight cut-offs. Prime jailbait, the type of girl whos been living a life unfit for any age, much less seventeen, the type of girl who wears her sadness underneath hard looks and snarled lips. She doesnt meet Martins eyes, and Doug knows why Snakeskin is here.
            Martin, you know Emily?
            Martin shrugs.I think Ive seen her around.
            Seen her around.Snakeskin nods slowly.Seen her around.
He makes like he is about to stroke his chin in a thoughtful manner with the hand that does not hold the switchblade. The blade is still unexposed, and he is twirling it between his fingers as if this might just be a nervous habit, nothing more. Then suddenly and with great force he thrusts the palm of his free hand out, catching Martin hard in the nose. Martins head snaps back. He shakes it once and thick streams of blood pour from his nostrils.
            The switchblade is open and at his throat.You seen her around, huh? If by seeing her around you mean sticking your dick in her, then yeah, I suppose youve seen her around.
            No,Martin says. Hes crying.No, I aint never fucked her, Snakeskin.
            Oh, am I mistaken? Let me check my source.He turns to Emily.You and this fella ever do anything?
            Emily looks at Martin then.Well, yeah,she says.A couple of times. It was a trade. He gave me what I wanted. I done told you all this before, Snake.
            Yeah, but I needed to hear it again, baby.He looks at Martin.You knew me and Emily had a thing going right?
Martin doesnt respond.
Answer me!
Martin shrugs.She offered.
You should have said no,Snakeskin says and grins. A boyish grin. It makes him look younger, maybe less dangerous. This is only an illusion, a trick.Im not into sharing her. You think I get off on her being with another man?
Im telling you, it was a fair trade. I didnt make the offer. She did. I didnt know you two had a thing. How could I have known that, man?
Snakeskin turns to Rodney.You believe this shit? First he didnt fuck her. Now he fucked her but it was just a fair trade. Whats next? He going to ask me for a refund?
            While Snakeskins eyes are on Rodney, Martin looks in Dougs direction. He nods his head quickly as if to say, now or never.
            Doug already knows this, yet he feels no real obligation to Martin. He doesnt even like him. Maybe he did once. A long time ago, when they were young. When the world was different. Somehow, Martin reminds Doug of that place, that youth, that happier time. Yet, he still considers briefly just letting Martin get what is coming to him. If he could get away with it, he might, though he realizes that the situation is more complicated than that. Snakeskin will likely cut Martin. In which case, Martin will scream for Doug to shoot them. In which case, they will come for Doug too.
            So, it really is now or never. Martin glances nervously over at Doug again, his lip trembling.
Snakeskin says to Martin,Rodney, we got us a little weasel here. A lying weasel. Know what that means?
Rodney shrugs and scratches his ass.
Means Im going to have to cut—”
            The sound is deafening, the recoil sudden and harsh and for an instant Doug thinks that the gun has misfired and he has been the one shot instead of Snakeskin. He sees Snakeskins body jerk back, sees the blossom of blood soak through the white t-shirt, and Doug knows that the bullet has hit its target. Its like somebody presses a slow motion button. Snakeskin grimaces and lurches, tries to find where the shot came from. Doug feels like vomiting, but grips the gun tighter and squeezes off two more shots. One sails over Rodneys head. The next one collides with his mouth. For a second Rodney twists his face up as if he has only swallowed a bitter pill instead of a bullet. His mouth begins to leak blood. He falls down hard. Doug drops the gun, doubles over, and pukes on the floor.
            Emily is screaming.
            The next thing Doug knows, Martin is standing over him, ordering him to get up andshoot the bitch.Doug shakes his head and throws up again between his knees.
            Martin reaches into the puke, retrieves the gun. Doug hears the front door bang shut behind him. There is another blast from the gun.
Doug pulls himself up, wiping off his knees and hands.
Martin comes back in and tosses the gun on the couch. He pumps his fist in the air a few times and fumbles inside a chest of drawers for his stash of crank. He does a line, inhaling hard and shadowboxes the air, shuffling his feet, bobbing and weaving like some hick parody of Cassius Clay.
We got to clean up this mess and hide the bodies!He shouts and does a little two-step around the den.But hell yeah, Martin lives on! Dougie saves the day!
            Martin does his little jig, flailing around like a man who has just won the lottery. His face is flushed, splashed with tiny beads of blood and sweat; his nose is swollen from where Snakeskin hit him, and its still bleeding, staining his smile red. Doug sees the gun on the couch, blood and vomit around the trigger. Its time to act.
            He has it before Martin even stops dancing. He aims it at Martins head and waits.
            It didnt have to end like this. There were places, bumps along the journey where he could have jumped off the Martin train. He simply chose not to because the ground looked too hard and rocky and the ride was just too much damn fun. So he had held on for this.
            The gun is warm in his hand, his pulse like thunder.
            This could work. The bodies, the drugs. He could put the gun in Martins hand. He could be home in fifteen minutes, maybe less, leaving this part of his life forever. He could start over.
            Martin still has not noticed Doug or the gun. He is jiving to some soundtrack in his head, oblivious to everything except Martin.
            Hey, Martin?Doug says.
            The soundtrack ends. Martin shimmies to a stop. He turns, sees Doug, sees the gun, makes a face like he cant believe Doug is pointing a gun at his head. Then he scoffs, making some half-assed noise in his throat, making it sound like he thinks its funny Doug is pointing a gun at him.
            Stop playing, Dougie. We got some work to do.
            You shouldnt have gotten me mixed up in this, Martin. This wasnt any of my business.
            You got your ownself mixed up, Dougie. I didnt pull the trigger. You did that, man.
            Its true, what Martin says, and somewhere below all of Dougs anger and his shock, he realizes that the best thing to do would be to put the gun down and leave. But Dougs best is already behind him. He has reached survival mode. Here there can be no black and white, no right or wrong, just shades of gray, melting together to form something he can barely recognize.
            There is only one way out now.
            Doug pulls the trigger. The bullet hits Martin in the chest and he woofs loudly. Martin staggers and then collapses. Doug goes over and watches him gurgle and spit blood. Martin wants to say something, but there will be no more words from Martin. Doug aims again, this time at Martins forehead. He fires once and then twice, ripping chunks of flesh from bone, obliterating his friends face.
            He drops to one knee and carefully pries Martins fingers open. He almost puts the gun in Martins hand before realizing there is a better solution. Wiping it clean of blood and puke, he slips it inside the waistband of his jeans. On the way home, he will toss it into the river.
            He leaves Martins trailer. The wind has picked up, howling through the bare trees, banging the back door of Martins trailer. He steps over Emily, feeling sorry for her. Shes just one more piece of debris caught in the windstorm hes been plunging headfirst into his whole life.
            Out by the road, someone has thrown a pumpkin from their car, and Doug starts toward it, thinking Maci might like to have a Jack-O-Lantern to put on their doorstep. As he gets closer, Doug sees that the pumpkins been smashed, and the orange pulp lay in glistening strings against the blacktop. Its gone rotten and stinks. Doug turns away and circles the trailer, beginning the walk into the woods where he has parked his truck, hidden away from a world where things so often go to ruin.
            

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Hardcover Giveaway

I’m giving away two limited edition, signed hardcovers of Shoebox Train Wreck.  These are first editions, and extremely nice (see pics below).  These books originally cost 50 dollars apiece.



So what do you have to do to win one?  Just a couple of things.

1.    Friend me on facebook (this will be important for step three).

2.    Purchase a softcover or Kindle version of Shoebox Train Wreck from Amazon.com (you were going to do this anyway, right?  Right?).

3.    Provide proof of purchase to me (more on this below*).

4.    Write a substantive review of the book on Amazon (it doesn’t have to be positive, but if it’s not, I’m going to feel really silly for doing this--a risk I’ll have to take I suppose) .

*Proof of purchase: Amazon has a new feature that let’s you post your purchase to your facebook wall.  It looks like this:




Be sure to click share.

Once, you’ve completed all the steps, send me an email at johnpmantooth@yahoo.com.  I’ll go and verify the review and the facebook post.  If you are one of the first two to complete this, I’ll send you a hardcover ASAP (U.S. and Canada only).

I hope to give these away soon!





Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Release day

Today is the official release day for Shoebox Train Wreck.  It's a little anti-climatic considering the book has been shipping from Amazon and Barnes and Noble for about a week now.  It's been in stores too for the last few days.  So, the day I've been looking forward to for about a year now is finally here, and, well, it feels just like any other day.

Anyway, the book is out.  The book is being very well reviewed thus far. What are you waiting for?

http://www.amazon.com/Shoebox-Train-Wreck-John-Mantooth/dp/1926851544/ref=pd_sim_sbs_b_1

Oh, and look for an interview with me here (Mourning Goats!) on Thursday.  I'll be talking about the book, my writing group Snutch Labs, and the best writing advice I ever received.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

What's New?


It’s been a while since I’ve posted here, and I plan to make up for lost time over the coming days.  Mostly, I’ve been busy with the release and promotion of SHOEBOX TRAIN WRECK, my collection of 16 stories from Chizine Publications.  I’ve also been neck deep in a new novel, but as usual, the going is slow.  However, I think I may have turned a corner recently, though there is always the chance that I may have actually run off the road. 

What else… oh!  The new website.  If you came to this blog through the new website, then you’ve already, uh, seen the new website.  But if you found my blog the old fashioned way, please do check out the new site, here (design by the extremely talented Cesar Puch). And while you’re there, order a book (or three).  You won’t regret it.  Don’t believe me?  Check out some of the reviews, which have been very positive thus far.  I didn’t get a coveted star from Publishers Weekly, but I did get a positive review.  Booklist seemed to like it too, as did Rue Morgue.  All of this is covered over at the new site.  What’s not on the new site is the latest review from the Crow’s Caw.  It’s worth the read (hint, they liked it a lot!).

Going forward, I’m going to try to use this space more, and not just to talk about me (although there will always be copious amounts of self-love here).  I’ve recently read Holly Goddard Jones’s spectacular collection, GIRL TROUBLE, and I hope to post some thoughts on it soon.  And maybe after that, I’ll find something else to talk about (ahem, besides myself).

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Best Books I Read This Year

As always, these are the top five books I read this year (not necessarily published in 2011).  In no particular order:

1. Affliction by Russell Banks

This one started slow, but wow, what a finish.  My first Russell Banks, but definitely won't be my last.  There were some amazing passages in this novel, so amazing, I actually pulled out a highlighter for much of it (something I really don't think I've ever done before).

2. The End of Everything by Megan Abbott

Thanks to Paul Tremblay for the recommendation.  Abbott is a fabulous writer who grounds the reader firmly within the psyche of an adolescent girl.  The writing is image filled and gorgeous without ever losing the all important teenage voice.  The kind of book I'd love to write.

3. Refresh, Refresh by Benjamin Percy

This fine collection features the kinds of stories I like best: edgy, violent, sometimes creepy, but always grounded by muscular, starkly beautiful prose and an acute sense of place.  My favorite "The Caves in Oregon" begins with blood leaking from a freezer and ends with a married couple traversing the caves beneath their house.  I always love stories where the strange (the caves) intersects casually with real life (the couple's devastation over a miscarriage).  Plus, the freezer bleeds!

4. Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco Stork

This novel covers a surprising amount of philosophical and moral ground without ever becoming didactic.  It's a about a boy who teaches the people around him what it means to be a good person.  He's a high functioning-- aw, screw it.  I'm really at a loss of how to describe this one.  Just know this: it will defy your expectations, and when you're finished, you'll walk away from the novel with the realization that you've fallen in love the Marcelo and Jasmine.  And "the real world?"  You'll realize it's pretty damned overrated.

5. Joe by Larry Brown

I don't know why it took me so long to read a Larry Brown book.  I read two this year, Fay and Joe.  I liked them both, but I loved Joe.  The best thing about this book is the characterization of the title character.  He comes alive, and despite all his flaws (and he's got a ton), the reader can't help but root for him.  It seems like many of the writers I love, are able to pull this feat off.  Brown does it with a keen ear for language and some of the best dialogue this side of Elmore Leonard.  Do check out Fay, as well, but out of the two, I liked Joe better.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Sam Anderson (Tales From The Yellow Rose Diner And Fill Station)

If you’ve ever been fortunate enough to read one of Sam W. Anderson’s short stories, you know he’s a writer long on imagination and short on wasted words. His Money Run mythos is so inventive, so damned full of humor and pathos and (most importantly, I think) possibility that I can offer no greater praise than to say I wish I had thought of it myself.


Anyway, like me and the other four members of our little group, Sam wrote a tale for The Yellow Rose Diner and Fill Station. It’s one of my favorites in the book. It’s called “Hate Crimes and Therapy over Creamed Chipped Beef,” and it’s every bit as entertaining as that title suggests.


Despite this not being a Money Run Tale, all of the things that make those stories great are here: humor, pathos, an imagination as sharp as the edge of a straight razor, and that rarest of things in horror fiction—compassion. It’s obvious that Sam loves his characters, and I feel confident that the readers of his stories will too. Here’s a little taste from one of my favorite passages in the story. Check it out. You’ll see what I mean.


In his mind, he was there again, as if he could reach out and pull back the kid. He smelled the subway exhaust and dried urine; saw the grimy white and green tiles decorating the platform walls; experienced the eerie solitude of a Tuesday at two a.m. beneath the streets of Manhattan.


He’d been an NYC cop for less than a month and was working on a joint operation with the Transit Authority to crack down on subway system muggings. For the most part, it’d been pretty uneventful, but he was finally a cop. He’d survived the academy and the nonstop needling about his lack of size and fulfilled his promise. Pop would have approved. Everything in life was coming together.


Until he saw Eldrich Irons standing alone on the platform. The fifteen-year old was one of the suspects linked to the latest rash of muggings, and Darien had seen his picture a thousand times in the last month. The kid belonged to a group not organized enough to be a gang, but reportedly armed enough that they could have been.


Darien’s heart thundered and he put out his cigarette with his foot. The suspect hadn’t noticed. Instead he leaned out over the platform and looked for the next subway. His hands remained in a satin Yankees jacket and he fidgeted as if he needed a bathroom. He wore a black baseball cap, the bill turned backwards. Darien ducked behind a column. He’d wait until the train approached so Eldrich Irons would be less likely to hear footsteps.


A slight rumbling filled the space, but grew louder quickly. Darien quivered with a nervous excitement and anticipation he hadn’t felt since before his first track meet in high school. He slid from behind the graffiti-covered column and unholstered his firearm. The thumping in his chest grew so violent, it throbbed through his arms.


As the volume rose, Darien broke, his adrenaline pumping to the point he could almost fly. A set of headphones plugged the suspect’s ears. The train’s light illuminated the dark tunnel. Darien’s pace seemed to match the subway’s. As he reached for the suspect’s shoulder, the kid turned. His eyes opened comically wide, and he stepped back.


Darien missed with the first grab. As the kid fell, he reached again, but only pulled back the ball cap. A slight scream rose before the crushing of bones and the subway’s brakes.


The doors opened in unison with a loud hiss, but nobody exited the train. Did the driver not see the fall?


Darien stood with hat in hand, waiting for somebody to wake him. After a short eternity, the subway pulled away. Darien peered over the platform edge, the tracks too dark to see anything. He pulled free his flashlight. His hands shook so hard, he needed both to turn it on. When he lowered the light, he closed his eyes. He listened for any signs of life, but only heard the train in the distance. Swallowing hard, he opened his eyes and saw nothing. The body was gone. A pool of blood had formed between the tracks, and it streaked toward the departed subway.


His body went limp, as if it were he who the train had struck. He looked to his hand like the hat could bring the kid back. Through the forming tears, he saw the Chicago Blackhawks emblem.