Wednesday, September 30, 2020

An appreciation of G. S. Norwood

Please indulge me while I offer an appreciation of G. S. Norwood. Her new story releases today. Deep Ellum Blues provides a marvelous addition to her growing "Deep Ellum" stories collection. Read our post on The Weird Blog, and consider buying her stories!

Full disclosure: if you're new to "Artdog Adventures" you may not know that G. is my sister. She and I co-founded the fledgling small press Weird Sisters Publising LLC.


the cover of Deep Ellum Blues
Deep Ellum Blues cover art © 2020 by Chaz Kemp.


Making Deep Ellum Blues happen

The ebook goes live via Amazon's Kindle Unlimited today. I recognize that some of my readers resist buying anything from Amazon. Yeah, I get it. However, KU (via both page-reads and sales) offers better ways to maximize income from short fiction such as G.'s individual "Deep Ellum" stories.

Never fear. Once the fourth planned "Deep Ellum" story releases, we mean to collect all of them into one combined volume, and publish that collection "wide." Both ebook and a print version, available everywhere. And, since G. has a BFA in theater and is a masterful dramatic reader, excellent audio options await in the future.

Other appreciations of G. S. Norwood

Other authors also offer an appreciation of G. S. Norwood. Elizabeth Ann Scarborough read the two finished "Deep Ellum" novelettes and told us they're "some of the best stories I've ever read!"

Author Brad Denton (whose musical alter ego is "Bland Lemon Denton") wrote in more depth. He said, "G.S. Norwood’s Deep Ellum Blues takes the classic notion of “a deal with the Devil” and joyfully twists it sideways into a story that celebrates integrity, dedication, and artistry.

"The Blues have long been said to have more than a passing acquaintance with demonic power, and the tale of Mudcat Randall (and the immortal Miss Eddy’s concern for his fate) stems from that tradition. But Deep Ellum Blues reaches beyond the old stories to reveal that the true power of the Blues is rooted not in darkness and damnation, but in redemption and light.

"And along the way, it pays tribute to all the great artists whose songs have always, in truth, made the same point. Somewhere, Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker are smiling."

The frustrating years

I take special joy in helping G. bring her stories to new and expanding audiences. Only her critique partners knew how well she writes until last November. We published Deep Ellum Pawn, the first of the "Deep Ellum" stories, around her birthday.

Like me, she spent a goodly chunk of the 1980s and 1990s balancing other work, writing when she could, and attempting to get traditionally published. Her supportive writer-husband Warren C. Norwood began making more money in the late '90s. At his urging, she quit to give writing a full-time try. She finished several novels, but none of them sold.

I loved her books, and many editors did, too--but one thing or another always held them back. They would be hard to market. Her romances didn't quite fit the formula they were looking for (at the time, romance novels dominated much of the market).

I always figured they didn't sell because romance was the wrong niche. But what did I know? Her writing career seemed to end when Warren died. It was devastating, wrenching, and it forced her to find full-time work again.


the cover of Deep Ellum Pawn
Deep Ellum Pawn cover art © 2019 by Chaz Kemp.


A new opportunity

More than a decade later, we're selling her stories in a different way. She wrote the first draft of Deep Ellum Pawn in 2017. Then as far as I know she put it in a drawer and didn't look at it again till after I fumbled and bumbled What's Bred in the Bone into print.

In between her demanding concert and behind-the-scenes schedule with The Dallas Winds (she's Head of Concert Operations), she refined it into something we could publish. We really lucked out finding Chaz Kemp to do her covers.

That first story didn't exactly turn into a bestseller. But there's something awesome about being a published author. Especially with a story people out there in the world actually like and buy. Yes, indeed. Time to take another stab at a writing career!

A growing body of work

She definitely couldn't yet give up her day job! But she's been working on a delightful first-in-an-intended-series mystery novel (working title: "Sunshine and Ray"). She paused it to write Deep Ellum Blues, and then developed concepts for two more "Deep Ellum" stories.

Covid-19 lockdown put a serious crimp in the concert schedule. But it's given G. more time to write. To my delight, she recently dusted off one of those "not-to-formula" romances and gave it an overhaul. I just got a polished new update of the last novel she finished before Warren's death in 2005.

What's next?

The novel, Wrong Way Riley, tells the story of a young woman determined to live her own life, despite intense pressure to be something she's not. This book is no longer trying to be a romance novel (although the main character does enjoy one steamy romance), and it's all the stronger for it.

If you've read G.'s "Deep Ellum" stories, you've noticed a strong music theme. Riley stays true to that trend. It's deeply steeped in Texas folk music (we might get more setlists).


The covers for Deep Ellum Pawn, Deep Ellum Blues, and a portrait of G. S. Norwood and her dog Kata, by Chaz Kemp.
All artwork is © by Chaz Kemp. Be courteous. Re-post or reblog with an attribution and link back to this post and Chaz Kemp.


More appreciation of G. S. Norwood to come

All of this means the fun and the discovery has only just begun. This appreciation of G. S. Norwood offers a glimpse of what she has in store next.

She finished several other "failed romances" back in the 1990s. Those wonderful stories--and the "Route 66 novel" she hasn't yet finished--deserve to be updated and read and loved.

My little sister has a powerful voice. I can't wait to help her reveal it.

 

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