Tuesday, November 15, 2011
No Rules: Thomas Pluck
THOMAS PLUCK is one of our newer shining stars in the field of short, hard fiction, a writer who's passion and anger at injustice pulse like hot blood in every word he writes. His work has appeared at Plots With Guns, Beat to a Pulp, Crimespree, Shotgun Honey, and other notable places.
Nowhere is Tommy's anger at social injustice and cruelty more evident than in the new anthology, LOST CHILDREN. But I'll let him tell you about it himself...
I want to talk to you about the most boring question in the world, which is Why Do You Write?
I write because I'm pissed off, that's why. I'm angry. The abuse of power drives me to a frothing, violent rage, and because I'd rather walk freely on the earth and not be caged among the marijuana smokers and scofflaws who can't buy their way out of prison like our aristocratic betters, I write about it instead of hammering railroad spikes through the skulls of my targets.
The abuse of power takes many forms. In crime fiction it's most often a crooked cop, or a shady politician or power broker, but politics is merely behavior writ large. The weakest among us are children, and the abuse of power over them is our vilest crime. To quote my friend Fiona Johnson, "Some children are lost before they have even started living. Some children are a throw-away commodity like a burger box that’s left to blow down the street in the wind and rain."
That's the cue she gave for her guest post at Flash Fiction Friday, and she ponied up £5 per tale to her favorite charity, Children 1st. I joined in and donated $5 per entry to PROTECT.org, and 44 writers answered the challenge. We donated over $600, but knew we could do more. So we took 30 of the best stories and collected them in an e-book called Lost Children: A Charity Anthology, now available on Amazon for Kindle, Barnes & Noble for Nook, and at Smashwords in epub, PDF, mobi, Sony e-Reader, Kobo, and viewable online.
All the proceeds- after the retailers take their cut- go to PROTECT: The National Association to Protect Children, which advocates political reform for children in the U.S., and Children 1st Scotland, who help vulnerable children and families in Scotland. PROTECT was co-founded by author Andrew Vachss, which is how I first learned of it. They've done a lot of good in the States. So if you're angry at the latest abuse- whether it's shower rapes at Penn State, that Texas judge whipping his handicapped daughter on camera, the 5,000 cases of abuse covered up by the Boy Scouts of America... this is something you can do about it. PROTECT fights to fund the laws that let these bastards get away with it.
If you're angry like me, you can write. But you can also donate and make a difference, and get thirty powerful tales from the likes of Ron Earl Phillips, Paul D. Brazill. David Barber, Luca Veste, Benoit Lelievre, Erin Zulkoski, J.F. Juzwik, Susan Tepper, and many more including Fiona "McDroll" Johnson and myself.
You can follow the donations at the book's blog, Lost Children: A Charity Anthology.
Stay angry,
Thomas Pluck
If anger is what fuels your writing, Thomas, then you must be really pissed because you write such damn good stuff. But even more than good writing, what you and your team have done with THE LOST CHILDREN is highly commendable and you are to be congratulated ... The fight, however --- as you well know --- is far from over. Persevere!
ReplyDeleteI heard that Pluck guy is eating razorblades for breakfast.
ReplyDeleteGood on you, Tom.
ReplyDeleteI bought the book yesterday and am looking forward to reading it.
It's good to turn that disgust into something other than impotent rage.
Seth
Ooo, I like that, hammering railroad spikes through skulls. Gives me a warm fuzzy. So cool that you're doing the children's charity, making your writing do so much more than entertain and inspire. Good on you dude!
ReplyDeleteExcellent post, man.
ReplyDeleteProbably better to channel that anger into writing, but I have to say, there are some out there who need a railroad spike hammered through their skulls.
You're my kind of angry, Pluck. Glad to be fuming with you.
ReplyDelete