Genus 8 review and download

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Chained Reaction by Kjartan Arnosson

At first when you see that naked anthro bull being tortured by a female cat you think one thing, when actually it’s a sex game. Nothing that exceptional 3 out of 10

Rough Housing by Brian Sutton

I am being to think sex role playing must be the theme of this issue. Male wolf plots and plans a conquest, until this woman shows up.

Pink Soft Cream by Tabitha R. Jones and James Hardiman

A good case of lesbian rescuing lesbian, with a lesbian having a mad plot 2 out of 10

Ringing up Baby by Cindy Crowell

A reprint from the previous issue but still a good poke at relationships 9 out of 10

Art is nice, fair quality nothing exceptional.

You can both view and download the issue here

Chaos Fountain – Book 1 of The Chronicles of Ascension by DCBallard in the works

To quote Royalroadl.com

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The story of Kyle Durlow and how he goes from Joe Nobody, to anything but. All because of a chance encounter on the streets of San Diego. From simply trying to convince himself that it was all some elaborate prank; to being convinced that this world he finds himself in was as real as the bank account his ex-girlfriend emptied for him. Kyle finds himself a fugitive from intergalactic justice, first running, and then turning the fight back on them. The Chaos Fountain is written from his perspective as he tries to get a handled on all he has been through, and what he has become after accepting the seemingly innocuous offer of a beer.

The story can be found here

There has been an update check out D. C. Ballard’s official site for availability

Midwest FurFest 2016 Con Video – Back and Forth

We all are Philosophers by Perri Prinz

I notice that other philosophers either don’t know about me, or take no interest in me. So I looked in on one of the prominent modern philosophers on YouTube to see just what goes on with the philosophers who actually got to get a proper education in the field, and I see there is actually a world of difference between what they do and what I do.

But the main thing I observed is that, in the modern world there is a vicious battle going on between the supposedly practical thinkers (Atheists, philosophers, patriots, trolls and such) and the old school folks like myself who put a strong emphasis on emotion and dreams.

This philosopher I’m watching on YouTube hates Baby Boomers. He thinks they ruined the world with their impractical ideas, while at the same time he worships at the alter of Capitalism. He thinks the salvation of the world can somehow be found in the worship of money. He puts forward that it is not money that has brought the world to its current state of ruin, but simply that the money is in the control of the wrong people. And so the solution to all our problems is anarchy with money, and no beating our kids. Basically just letting everything run wild while continuing the worship of the root of all evil.

Needless to say, I’m not terribly impressed by these ideas that promote sterile, emotionless, dreamless societies. I don’t think humans are anything of value at all without their dreams, and if they are not working together to achieve common dreams, nothing they build is going to be of any lasting value.

Modern philosophers seem to be embracing the Randian notions of self interest, but I see the folly of self-interest, as nothing I build purely because I want to build it is of any value to me if others don’t appreciate it. And things I do purely to please myself are invariably not embraced by validating throngs of people. Thus I find self-interest, like money, to be an empty thing full of false promise.

I miss like hell the times when all music and movies played to the emotions and dreams of the viewers, back when common human emotions were well understood and valued. Back then everyone searched tirelessly for themes that resonated with the heart. This is why Disney music tends to be more Tchaikovsky than Stravinsky. But nobody respects Tchaikovsky anymore. What good is Tchaikovsky in an age where nobody cultivates a heart?

The modern philosopher says the ways of the heart are folly. Work not for the common good. Work for selfish aggrandizement. Seek public validation for all rude and inconsiderate behavior. Let the individual feel empowered to condemn all others for not living as they would dictate. And let all dictates be backed with anger and self-righteousness. Let respect be demanded without being earned.

And thus we have come into a world of dreamless sleep, where no one is fully awake to reality, attempting to function without the full capacity of the human heart and mind, and consequently never developing them to their full potential.

Things are not better in the modern world. Sure there is more technology that makes tasks easier, but that is not an excuse to stop thinking and feeling. This is no substitute for that feeling folks used to get when an emotionally charged solo made the hair on the back of their neck stand up in a moment of sympathetic resonance.
Humans are not naturally selfish creatures. We are a collective species, ever seeking contact, sympathy and oneness with each other. The attempted mass suppression of this nature is far more harmful to the species than anything governments or politicians might be doing at the moment. Indeed, it is this very lack of empathy that allows such entities to get away with murder.

And so I rebel against the modern Randian philosophy. Selfishness has never been and never will be a good thing, nor is anarchy an answer to anything. As usual, humanity has got it all wrong, and nobody cares, because philosophy is a clinical science loaded with antiseptic to sterilize all the good Bactria that are necessary to the function of a healthy living soul.

I’m glad I never went to school to learn this evil science, and that what I create is geared to appose it by promoting feelings of empathy and compassion, may the world come to value such things again someday when this long, non-productive era of bread and circuses has passed to its well deserved oblivion.

Kiba’s Furpocalypse 2016 Con Video (FP2016)

Author Spotlight: Bill Kieffer by Scott Coatsworth

As originally posted on jscottcoatsworth.com

First of all I got to say J Scott Coatsworth does an amazing job. I really encourage my readers to check him out HERE unlike me, he goes out and hunts for interviews, reviews, reviews of other blogs. All top notch and very professional. Unlike me who most of the time plays it by ear. So really check him out.

Bill Kieffer has become a Facebook buddy and one I really trust, and hope he does well with his writings. The following interview is great and gets into more detail than I think I could ever get into. Since he actually helped me with my interview questions.

By J Scott Coatsworth
Welcome to my weekly Author Spotlight. I’ve asked a bunch of my author friends to answer a set of interview questions, and to share their latest work.

Today, Bill Kieffer – Bill Kieffer was born in Jersey City, NJ. He never fully recovered.

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J. Scott Coatsworth: When did you know you wanted to write, and when did you discover that you were good at it?

Bill Kieffer: I remember dictating stories to my mother before I was in kindergarten. I filled one of those composition notebooks before I could read. I was always fascinated by words and I was appalled that people cursed or used words without meaning what they said. Not the lying exactly, but the logical contradictions of largely uneducated people. I felt like I was surrounded by mad people.

And it didn’t help that I had some diagnosed brain damage from an accident. It made speaking clearly hard. I had to concentrate on so many choices to get the words out.

The real world made me anxious. I found relief in fiction.

When I took up writing in high school, it was a relief. I could write with the complexity and the assuredness my speaking voice denied me. It seemed like destiny. I knew I was a good at writing by the most unusual metric… my high school allowed me four study halls in a row so I can write. And the librarians gave me an unused office so I could write in.

Maybe that just made me a good student.

I knew I was getting close when the editors began sending me back hand written notes on the rejection letters. I felt thrilled when Bob Greenberger of Marvel Comics called my submission mean. When Astounding wrote back that he’d like to see something shorter, I was dancing for the week.

Or maybe it was when Weasel accepted The Goat: Building The Perfect Victim after only four days. Yeah, that was an excellent ego boost; although I am probably spoiled for life.

JSC: How would you describe your writing style/genre?

BK: My wife says my style allows the reader to do the heavy lifting; which is to say that I let the reader fill-in some blanks. Part of that is because I suffer a bit from face-blindness. For example, all my white, heavy bald-headed friends all look alike to me until they move. Which is a problem, since as I get older, my collection of bald friends keep growing at an alarming rate.

In my writing group, Furry Writer’s Guild, my style is described often as dark and dense. It’s unusual in a niche like Furry, I suppose, where most people are there to escape the harsh reality. I just want to evoke feelings and that includes the “bad” feelings.

My genre is Anthropomorphic Fantasy — or Furry, if you will. I love the allegorical aspects of Furry. Plus, I think animals are cool and its easier for me to tell animals apart then people.

I’m also a Transformation writer, so the horror and SF come into the mix easily. They are both great platforms for discussing humanity… how you lose it, how you keep it, and, sometimes, how you regain it.

JSC: What was your first published work? Tell me a little about it.

BK: The first published work that I got paid for under my own name was a short comic book story in Tipper Gores Comics and Stories #3. I had gotten Tipper Gore #1 and I wrote to Todd Loren via snail mail because it was 1989 and that was the only way to do it. I asked for his guidelines and, in my very charming way, I told him I could do better.

He wrote back. He had no guidelines; he just pretty much told me how much he paid and dared me to try to do better. So, I typed up a script and sent it to him and six weeks later I had a contract in the mail.

Getting a check out of him was also an education, but that’s another story. I did get paid and I sold a few stories to him and he assigned me to write a series, Great Morons In History. Todd died before the 1st issue hit the stands, but at least I get to brag that I wrote the definitive Dan Quayle Biography.

With Trump the President Elect, I really wish this series was still around.

JSC: What’s your writing process?

BK: Until recently, my writing process was either write a pun-ish title and then write a story to go with it or get the story concept version of an earworm and just write it out until I was exhausted. I was a compulsive writer. It was a stress reliever and writing was cheaper than therapy.

With The Goat, I started with the ending and kept adding to the story, and then taking out a bunch of explicit sex scenes. Then I would go back and write some more. I was writing a lot of abuse which I’m against… but I kept adding erotic elements because Glenn was written for my online boyfriend. So, the whole thing was organically conflicted from the start. I like to think that shows. Even abusers deserve love, but victims don’t deserve abuse.

For Brooklyn Blackie and The Unappetizing Menu, I used an outline. I had never used one before outside of a class assignment. But I had an idea for a noir type mystery and I’d never succeeded in writing a proper mystery. It worked really well. Having an outline carried me through the parts where compulsion failed me and when impulses threatened to side track me.

I use outlines more often now but there are still a few stories that just want to flow out me organically. I’m grateful for those when the mood takes me.

JSC: Tell us about a unique or quirky habit of yours.

BK: I have a Tea Queue.

I love tea. Love. Love. Love.

And I like buying new flavors. Esp. weird ones like Earl Grey with Lavender or Chocolate Chai. And for a very, very long time I would impulse buy whatever weird tea I saw. So, by the time I was 45, I had a lot of very expensive but very stale tea leaves. So, not that I’m a control freak or anything, I set up a tea queue in my pantry.

I have room for four boxes of tea and I only open one box of tea at a time (unless company wants one of the other flavors) and drink that tea every morning until its gone. Then I can buy ONE NEW BOX OF TEA… because there’s room.

In the winter, Trader Joe puts out their lemur tea and then I stock up on that. Vanilla Cinnamon Black tea! Nom! Nom! Nom!

JSC: If you could sit down with one other writer, living or dead, who would you choose, and what would you ask them?

BK: Al Franken
You saw this train wreck of an election year. I never believed in the Anti-Christ until Trump was elected. “Al,” I would ask, “What the fuck do we do now? Just what do we do now?”

I really thought reading Stephen King and Dean Kontz most of life would have prepared me for this, but not so. Not at all.

JSC: What action would your name be if it were a verb?

BK: Well, my middle name is TMI, so I can’t use that. Plus technically, not an action word.

I asked my wife. She said, “You’re not a Verb type of guy. You’re an Adjective.” Well, she was an English teacher, so she would know.

My friend Brian pointed out the word Bill is a verb. “to enter in an accounting system : prepare a bill of (charges)” On the other hoof, I’ve been told that there’s no accounting for me.

JSC: What kind of character or topic have you been dying to try to write, but you’ve never worked up the courage?

BK: Until recently, I would have said Private Detective, but I got one of those under my belt now. And before that, I wanted to write a story for my boyfriend with magic and BDSM, which I did with The Goat: Building the Perfect Victim (the hard part actually turned out to be having the courage to submit it).

I think the next hurdle is writing a soft and warm story of hope and happiness with hidden depths and complexities. I see writers do that and I am amazed to see it pulled off. I must be too cynical to do it… or maybe I am just too damaged. I tried to write a story of brotherly love and… the damn thing turned into a blood bath.

So, yeah, there’s something about love and happiness that frightens me… maybe it’s because I’ve hurt all the people I love.

JSC: If you had the opportunity to live one year of your life over again, which year would you choose?

BK: Oh, I wasn’t looking forward to this question when I started this.

The year after I graduated, my girlfriend died from CF. I made promises to her that I wouldn’t let her die a virgin or unmarried. But she did. And not coming thru for her, just messed me up. But I was having so many conflicting thoughts, and I hadn’t accepted my bisexual self yet and… well, things were confusing for everyone.

So, I would relieve 1983 over, although knowing that she was dying would hurt. And I would keep my promises. Her parents would hate me, but it turned out they hated me anyway and didn’t invite me to the funeral.

And then there’s my friend, George, who I now know was suffering with his own questions and loneliness. That after Debbie’s death he would never have another female friend, that he would explore our small town’s gay scene until he caught HIV and then developed AIDS in quick order. In what I know know was a weird prolonged suicide attempt trying to make a connection with another human.

I feel responsible for that. He tried to tell me, once, that he’d been watching an adult movie when “something” came poking thru the wall. And I laughed… and I didn’t ask him what he did or thought about it or anything. I just laughed because I didn’t think he’d be anything but disgusted.

I didn’t think that he could be a bit like me.

I didn’t think that we might be more than friends.

JSC: What are you working on now, and when can we expect it?

BK: Currently, I am still pushing my first novella The Goat: Building the Perfect Victim; trying to get sales and reviews. These days, selling a book doesn’t stop with the publication. I don’t know if it ever did.

I am also doing interviews with publishers for The Underground Book Review. They concentrate or reviewing Indy Writers and Publishers. That will start in 2017.

I am cleaning up a collection of short stories set in a Furry Universe I call Aesop’s World. Imagine if people came in 100 different species with thumbs… and then imagine that Aesop was their version of Jesus. That’s the basis if this world, and it’s far from a children’s storybook.

Four of the five stories feature Brooklyn Blackie, a bisexual dog/wolf hybrid private investigator. He’s cunning linguist with a thirst for justice. Too often, he has to settle for bloodshed, instead. He’s cursed with a dual nature, the dog and wolf, that I think a lot of people can relate to.

Cold Blood: Fatal Fables will be published by Jaffa Books sometime in 2017. There some M/M sex and romance and a little MFM menage-a-trios, too. But I don’t know how explicit the final version will be.

The Goat and now for Bill’s new book: The Goat:

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This is the story of Frank, a self-loathing gay/bisexual 40-something man, having a mid-life crisis ‘affair’ with his high school bullying victim.

Glenn is a Furry, human in real life but online, he plays a sexually active Goat in several Furry communities. Glenn not only allows Frank’s abuse, but he seems to encourage it in order to get what he wants.

Still, Frank is what our HS teachers would call an “Unreliable Narrator.” So, it’s up to the reader to decide who the real victim is in the story.

It’s set in an Urban Fantasy world where computers and magic exists side by side. iMacs and Werewolves. Muscle Cars and Shape Shifters. Micro Brews and Healing Potions. The society resembles pre-cell phone America and people are more afraid of the LGBT community than they are of werewolves. Well… some people.

The Goat touches on abuse, secrets, desires, shame, denial, and the agendas we sometime bring into a relationship.

Contains graphic bdsm content.

PentMouse issue 02 Review and Download

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Honestly I really didn’t know what to expect when I opened the very first issue of PentMouse I had ever seen. But what I found was drawings. ink and pen and that is really it, expect for 1 furry pubication review and that being Sleepers.

So what do you honestly get from artists Tygger, Robert Hill, Scott Alston, Paccrat, Bill Fitts, Steven Corbet, Terrie Smith, Jay Shell, Pelzig, Joesph Nye, Henry Gagne, Kevin Vetroneand Juan Alfonso. Furry porn, is it any good? it isn’t that bad and I think if your into it, you could paw off to it. Really I give it 6 out of 10.

View and download it here

Genus issue 07 Review and Download

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No Such Critter by Kjartan Arnorsson

Is a totally fun and furry take on what men and women find attractive, as the title says No Such Critter

The Feedstore Conversation by Donna Barr

Another GREAT comic is about these apes chatting at a feedstore about how men and women treat one another. Great satire on relationships.

The Big Surprise by Kjartan Arnorsson

A anthro female cat gets a surprise gift, a male anthro bull that is 3 times her size and the sex soon starts

Nikki The CHiPmunk by Dennis Clark

Oh brother what a take on the standard far of female cop, stopping lone male driver and sex soon starts. Not only does the cop gets better of the driver. Who only winds up with his own cum in his face.

Ringing Up Baby by Cindy Cromwell

A male anthro donkey looks for a easy woman, and winds up getting yelled at by her. The comment “And men wonder why we turn into lesbians”, Really makes a good point at the end.

First Time by Schirm

Ever see or hear someone using something else to describe something this comic is nothing but.

as well as artworks from Dusty Rhoades and Tygger

Very well done, very sexy

You can both view and download it here

Tonic Bar and Grill closing it’s doors

Some of you might remember that Tonic Bar and Grill was the restaurant that the furries saved, as it was near where Anthrocon took place.

Some site Tonic Bar and Grill closing due to a couple of factors, change in ownership, quality of the food, and prices.

They will be missed.