Wednesday, March 25

Pardon The Dust: A Collection Of Essays


There are changes in the air and plenty to share. 

Late last year, I successfully launched a new author site, byRichardRBecker, which has even more focus on my books than I sometimes share here or a Copywrite, Ink. The new author site included a blog, but I was very leery about starting one (given that it meant starting another one). Until, well, today. 

I've been playing with an idea my son and daughter gave me a few months ago. They wanted me to write something for them, specifically related to life lessons, memories, and things of that sort. 
So I've been thinking about the request, on and off, since then. I mean, it made perfect sense, given that Screen Door, the Wisconsin story in "50 States," is closer to real life than fiction. A few others do, too, maybe. Except, which ones at what times and how much will always be the mystery. 
Anyway, just this morning, I took a break from WIP (work in progress) to pen the first one. Sometimes writers have to write when inspiration strikes. It certainly struck me this morning. And then, shortly after I was finished, I had no idea what to do with the essay because it didn't really fit here. But it was the kind of thing that might fit over there
So that's what I did. The first lesson, aptly titled "The First Lesson," is about the first real lesson I learned in school as a poor kid struggling to read in the third grade and about to be failed forward into fourth. That's what they did back then. And sometimes some people tell me they still do today, too. 
Interestingly enough, as much as I love it, I almost didn't publish it. But then the universe sent me a little message. The essay I wrote contained a reference to Bass Reeves. And right after lunch, while I was debating whether to publish the essay, I picked up the book I was reading only to discover that the next chapter opened with a reference to Bass Reeves.
Message received. This new collection of essays can be found on my author site as I write them, even if a few people might remember that the first couple of sentences were originally penned on this one almost 20 years ago. I had shared a piece of my life to open for a promotion, but never really paid the story off. 
There were blue tickets, and there were red tickets.

Blue tickets for the kids whose families could afford a 30-cent lunch. Red for those who could not.

[read more]

The new essay pays it off. At least I like to think so. Maybe you can tell me. 

As for the rest of the news, please pardon the dust as I make changes. I've been slowly realigning my online presence to match the scope of my work — as a communicator and as a literary author. Mostly, that means you'll find more posts about writing and communication here, and more author-related things like  short essays there, and short parts and pieces of fiction if you subscribe to my author newsletter, which may also be undergoing some changes, too. 

Good night and good luck! 

Monday, December 29

Lasting Impressions: 5 Memorable Books in 2025

Many writers are readers, and I am no exception. I read 56 books this year, which was eight more than my modest 48-book goal. Collectively, they totaled 20,082 pages read, with the shortest being "Common Sense" by Thomas Paine at 104 pages and the longest "The Guns of August" by Barbara W. Tuchman at 710 pages. Head over to GoodreadsBookBub, or TheStoryGraph if you are interested in seeing them all. 

So, like I do every year, I decided to call out five titles (plus one indie book) that surprised me this year. This was no small feat, given long favorites like "The Lord of the Rings" and "Chapterhouse: Dune" were in the mix. (Interesting side note: "The Return of the King" was the highest rated of all the books I read this year on Goodreads while "Fourth Wing" was the most shelved.) I also added in a few classics like I do every year: "Winesburg, Ohio" by Sherwood Anderson, "Grapes of Wrath" by John Steinbeck, "This Side of Paradise" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and "Nostromo" by Joseph Conrad, among them. And I also made sure to include a few favorite authors, like Peter Heller, James Slater, and S.A. Cosby. 

My admiration for many of those titles will never change (I've read Lord of the Rings at least five times), but the measure I set forth today was which titles were memorable — those I've been reflecting on long after the book was finished. And these were the ones I've settled on for that reason.

American Spirits by Russel Banks. This collection of three shorts is a work of emotional and intellectual heft, solidifying Banks as one of my favorite authors. He has a profound influence on my own journey as an author, despite discovering him late.

What makes “American Spirits” exceptional is Banks’ refusal to lean on stereotypes or easy characterizations. His characters are not caricatures of rural America, nor are they reduced to simplistic archetypes of struggle or redemption. Instead, Banks dismantles preconceived notions, presenting individuals who are complex, flawed, and achingly human. In the three stories discussed here, Banks explores themes of loss, identity, and the collision of personal and societal forces, all while peeling back the layers of American mythology to reveal the messy truths beneath. There are no heroes.

At the same time, Banks’ ability to capture the human condition with honesty and compassion is unmatched, and his commitment to dismantling stereotypes ensures that his characters feel like people we might know, or even be. In every case, he sets us up to expect something but then delivers something different, perhaps challenging our own stereotypes in the process.

Being And Time by Martin Heidegger. Martin Heidegger’s Time and Being stands the test of time. While originally published in 1927, it is nothing less than a monumental work in existential phenomenology, reshaping how we understand existence, time, and the human condition.

At the heart of Time and Being lies Heidegger’s notion of living an authentic life, a concept that resonates deeply in a world often dulled by routine and conformity. Heidegger argues that most people live in a state of “everydayness,” a mode of existence where people live out their lives as part of the anonymous, collective norms of society. In this state, we drift, distracted by mundane tasks and social expectations, losing sight of our individuality and the deeper question of Being.

To live authentically, Heidegger urges us to break free from this inauthentic mode through a process of self-realization. This awakening is not a one-time event but a continuous effort to reclaim one’s existence as uniquely one’s own. Add to this idea that, according to Heidegger, we exist temporally (meaning our existence is shaped by our relationship to the past, present, and future) and this state is existential (and not merely chronological), and you'll begin to understand why it's hard to let some of his concepts go. I will never see the world the same way.

The Man Who Lived Underground by Richard Wright. The bleak opening chapters of police brutality will make anyone uncomfortable, especially those of us who have been unfairly accused or treated at one time or another. In this case, the illustration is extreme, so one feels it as if it is an alien planet where the novel takes place and not merely an alternative reality where it takes place.

Even so, there is no question Wright borrows from his own experiences of being falsely accused in painting a vivid portrait of race and injustice, as well as his grandmother's worldview as a Seventh-day Adventist. In Wright's reflective essay about his grandmother (which was included in the version of the book I read), Wright describes her as a woman “in this world but not of it." It was her religious fervor creating a psychological withdrawal from reality that fascinated and repelled him.

This novel is a masterclass in concise storytelling and offers profound insights into truth, justice, and humanity. It's the kind of book, in fact, that, despite how uncomfortable it can make you feel at times, deserves a second or third read.

Flesh by David Szalay. Despite surface readings that claim it is about masculinity, it's really a portrait of a man trapped in everydayness. István's simple, straightforward path veers upward toward success and then toward quiet tragedy.

Everyone else in the novel, and I mean everybody, writes his story. Without these outside narrators telling him what to do, István could barely be classified as human. He is so caught up in the everydayness of being, he trods along in a clipped, nonjudgmental prose that mirrors his emotional flatness. As a result, it's impossible to like him, given that he gives readers nothing to hope for or any reason to root for him. The best we can do is feel pity. Yet, the story is strangely compelling, even hypnotic, even if its deliberateness won't suit many readers.

In a late confession, he admits as much, saying that Helen, the Englishwoman he marries after a fleeting affair, was "the most important person" in his life. These words crystallize the void: he has no core identity, only borrowed fragments that expand his world briefly before collapsing into the insulation that bore him in the first few pages. It's the opposite of any character I might like, and somehow, I still find myself thinking about the absence it contained. It is a perfect expansion and contraction, attuned to the undercurrents of being ordinary.

The Winners by Fredrik Backman. This is a beautiful book that explores community — how small and big events ripple through our lives even when we don't know it. And, it is in this macro view that it differs from the original novel Beartown, which was much more grounded in its plot.

Told over roughly two weeks (although it will feel so much longer), Backman dashes headlong into several themes tied together by an overarching premise about the trajectory of many lives, how they nearly miss each other or collide, and the aftermath of those collisions and near misses. In the process, Backman convinces you to think about your own life and all those consequences, great and small, once a chain of cause and effect is set in motion.

At its heart, some will have you believe the entire Beartown series is about hockey and the love of a sport. It could also be that The Winners reminded me of my small-town experiences, growing up part-time in northern Wisconsin until I was ten: How everyone knows everyone or at least thinks they do. And how different one lake community could be from the next, despite looking the same to anyone on the outside.

Indie Pick Bonus: Club Contango by Eliane Boey. Eliane Boey's cyberpunk sci-fi story, Club Contango, is a fast-paced, character-driven tale that is sometimes too immersive for its own good. It's easy to get lost and drift along, taking in the imagery and stylistic prose. Yet, it's the writing and a few clever twists that set a high bar among indie books this year. 

I loved several indie books this year, but I kept thinking back to Boey's talent as a writer and unique perspective as a Singaporean novelist every time I finished one. She is someone to watch, especially if you enjoy compelling characters in a vivid, dense world. For true cyberpunk fans, Club Contango is a must-read for its craft and originality.



Born on Monday by Richard R. Becker. This isn't a pick as much as a nod to the book I undoubtedly spent the most time with this year — finishing it, editing it, and polishing it until it was a ready for the publisher. And its inclusion in this post gives me a place to answer a common question: Why do I consider it a "literary" thriller? In part, it's because the themes I tackle within tend to transcend the genre, like the cost of secrets, the cycle of abuse and redemption, small-town insularity, and reliance amid trauma. Exploring these topics was as important to me as delivering a thriller with an effective twist. And to do it, I believe I've effectively created three characters who travel very different paths to find answers — a reckless, grief-stricken man who has sentenced himself to the everydayness of life, a trauma victim silenced by shame despite her foundation of strength, and an investigative journalist's passion for the truth in the town where the truth is as malleable as the people within it. 

Those were my five most memorable this year, though there were many more favorites that I won't mention here. You can find a running list of favorites listed on The Eclectic Shelf by Copywrite, Ink. at Bookshop.org or scroll down for The Second Shelf, Knowledge Shelf (non-fiction), and Writers Shelf. Feel free to drop some of yours in the comments or wherever we run into each other online. Enjoy! 

Tuesday, November 18

Intersecting Stories: Where Born On Monday Meets 50 States

I don't always put it out there front and center, except when it comes up in interviews. Where do ideas for my novels come from? Inevitably, the inspiration comes from my short stories. 

I wrote 50 of them at a rate of one a week while writing 50 States. I've written many more since then, although most haven't been published aside from secret sneak peaks for newsletter subscribers. All of those ideas fall from the sky, very much as David Lynch describes creativity

So, when it comes to Born on Monday, the simple answer is that it started with “Time Capsule,” a short story first published in my collection 50 States. Time Capsule is the first chapter of Born on Monday, though there are a few tweaks when compared side by side. The second chapter, by the way, first appeared in Ten Threads, which was a short 10-story digital companion to 50 States.

Some people find this interesting, but there is even more to it than that. All of the stories in 50 States intersect with each other. Sometimes those connections are loose, like the mention of the South Dakota story in my debut novel Third Wheel. It appears as a newspaper headline for the few readers who noticed. Of course, the Born on Monday connection to the 50 States universe is stronger. 

Where Born on Monday intersects with 5o States

In "Born on Monday," Dustin Fields and his dad visit bar named Crabby's in New Hampshire. Crabby's is the same fictional bar in Nashua that appears in the 50 States short story "Bad Things," which takes place within a year of Born on Monday. It's significant because Crabby's launders money for the Boston Mob.

"Bad Things" also introduces a brooding alcoholic named Rauly, a vet who served as a military advisor in Uganda. Rauly appears in another short story, "North Forty," which takes place in Vermont, a little more than a year after "Bad Things." In “North Forty,” he meets a teen who is in the same witness protection program he was placed in after whatever happened between 2018 and 2019. 

The teen, Rachel, was introduced in the Vermont story of 50 States, "Siren's Call." In the story, she goes by Carol because her family is already in a protection program. By the time we meet her in "North Forty," she is trying on new names at the safe house. 

The three stories do more than illustrate the strong and subtle connections I'm making across the 50 States universe. Sometimes they serve as a foreshadowing of things to come.  There is every indication that some future novel will further connect these three New England states, perhaps bringing someone like Andrea Kearny, a fan-favorite character in Born on Monday, face-to-face with Rauly or Rachel or both. 

When can that be expected, and what's on the horizon after Born on Monday?

As I recently mentioned in another interview, my next novel takes us back to Utah, where I'm continuing the fallout that happens in the short story “Dead Ends” from 50 States. This unnamed WIP is best described as a speculative thriller, blending and bending science, metaphysics, and something akin to the supernatural. 

Think of "Dead Ends" as a sneak peek at the next novel. And much like Born on Monday, you can find a second chapter in Ten Threads. Without giving any spoilers, this novel will shore up the links between 50 States stories like Utah, South Dakota, Kansas, and New Mexico, to name a few. But trust me when I say, it will connect the dots to much more than that. 

After this WIP, there may be another novel (set in the South) before we see Kearny and some others again, but you never know. Born on Monday has a lot of momentum. Maybe readers will convince me to change the order. Helping it hit number one on Amazon during it's release week was a great start. Happy reading!

 

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