I’d like to give a warm welcome to talented writer, Michael A. Kechula
Michael A. Kechula is a retired tech writer. His fiction has won first place in eight contests and placed in six others. He’s also won Editor’s Choice awards four times. His stories have been published by 108 magazines and 30 anthologies in Australia, Canada, England, India, Scotland, and US. He’s authored a book of flash and micro-fiction stories: A Full Deck of Zombies–61 Speculative Fiction Tales. eBook available at www.BooksForABuck.com and www.fictionwise.com Paperback available at www.amazon.com.
I’d like to discuss the origins, the process and the early days of your writing.
Where do you think your writing comes from?
Maybe it was passed through the genes from my mother’s side. Many of my aunts, uncles, and cousins are good writers. Several have made their living as technical writers.
When and why did you begin writing?
When I was seven and in the third grade in parochial school. That was the Fall of 1946. Our teacher, a nun, asked me to write a new play every week. The idea was that my play would be presented to the class in what she called the Storyteller’s Club. So, I did it. Plus, I selected the kids who would act out the stories. I wrote each character’s script. These little plays ran for about five to seven minutes.
How do you come up with your ideas and settings?
Ideas come to me all the time. Consequently, I keep three tape recorders at strategic places around the house and one in the car. That way, I can capture new story ideas as they occur. I often wake up in the middle of the night with story ideas. In fact, I got three of them last night. I grabbed the recorder I keep on my night stand and began to dictate.
By the way, my use of voice recorders goes back three decades. I found them extremely useful when I was a technical writer and course developer for the IBM Corporation in Silicon Valley. When I switched to writing fiction, which didn’t happen until well after I retired, I continued using recorders.
Here’s an example of a time when I woke up with an idea and used my tape recorder to develop it. I woke with the words ghost bugs in my mind. Talk about unusual intrusions by the unconscious mind! Freud would’ve had a field day with that one. Anyway, I grabbed the tape recorder on my night stand and asked myself out loud, What on earth is a ghost bug? Well, I started dictating, and it turned out to be one of the funniest times I ever had when developing a new tale. When I listened to the hour’s worth of dictation, it was loaded with my laughter. Nevertheless, between the guffaws, I had the essence of a really bizarre piece of humorous speculative fiction. I completed the story the same day, called it Ghost Bugs, and submitted it to Alien Skin Magazine. This highly regarded online publication used to give writers very quick turnaround. They bought my story within 24 hours. To this day, it remains one of my favorite tales.
It’s been reprinted several times.
What is your process? Do you have any rituals? Do you adhere to a writing schedule?
I don’t have any rituals, nor do I adhere to a writing schedule. However, I write daily and always in the morning when my mind’s fresh.
What motivates Michael A. Kechula?
The need to create. Seems I was born with the ability to write. I’m retired and have lots of time to devote to writing and submitting. In fact, since January through May 25 of this year, I’ve submitted 104 stories to magazines, anthologies, and contests. So far during May alone, I’ve been lucky enough to get 43 stories accepted by magazines. One of them even won first prize in a writing contest. This acceptance rate for a single month surpasses my previous record which I set in December 2007 when 35 of my stories were accepted. I’ve been told by Pam Casto, a flash fiction guru, that I may have set some kind of record.
Since I’m talking about acceptance rates, in the past four years, over 400 of my stories have been accepted by 108 magazines and 30 anthologies in six countries. In addition, I’ve won 1st and 2nd prizes in 14 writing contests, including those sponsored by magazines in foreign countries. Finally, my work was selected as Editor’s Choice four times. These successes tend to reinforce my creativity and drive me to write even more. I’m almost 70 years old and I’m having the time of my life. I didn’t begin to write fiction until I was in my 60’s. Now I wonder what my life would’ve been like if I’d started writing fiction during my 20’s.
Tell us about the early days in your writing career. What was the first piece you wrote? What inspired you?
As I mentioned earlier, I wrote short plays to be performed for my third grade classmates. After that, every school year until I left that Catholic elementary school, the nuns gave me creative writing assignments. For example, they asked me to develop radio shows for weekly presentation to the class. I created fifteen minute quiz shows, which imitated real radio quiz shows of the time. Remember, this was back in the late 1940’s. I also wrote commercials for my shows. That showed I had a flair for satire. I recall the first commercial I wrote, which included a theme song. This was for an imaginary product called Swiggums Milk. Three girls in the class sang the lyrics I’d written. I’m reminded that one of the girls who sang my commercials recently told me the lyrics have stuck with her to this day. She said she sang them to her grandchildren. That goes to show how things we write can impact people in ways we can’t possibly anticipate.
What do you read for pleasure? What’s the book sitting on top of your to read pile?
I don’t do very much reading for pleasure anymore. That’s because I use the time to read and critique lots of flash fiction tales every week on a number of sites. Also, I’d rather spend my time writing flash fiction, instead of reading novels.
What has influenced you the most in your writing career?
First were the nuns just mentioned. But the strongest influence came from a professor who showed up late in my life. I’m referring to Dr. Sherry Rosenthal, PhD, who teaches creative writing in Las Vegas. I signed up for her fiction writing class. Prior to that, I had a fiction writing block that lasted about 10 years. The block began when I retired from IBM, and decided to switch from nonfiction to fiction. Thought it’d be a piece of cake, because during my nonfiction writing career, I produced 28 books. But I couldn’t get off the ground with fiction. In fact, I couldn’t get a sentence on paper that was worth anything. Frustrated, I walked into Dr. Rosenthal’s class the first day of the semester and said the only way I’d stay is if she could break my fiction writing block. She said she would, and indeed she did.
As her student, I discovered I could write fiction. One of her assignments, which was to write a romance story, resulted in my authoring a 10,000 word tale. She said it was good enough to submit to the New York romance market. I did. Imagine my surprise when True Love Magazine bought it for $300. So, Dr. Rosenthal succeeded in breaking my block, and I haven’t stopped writing fiction since. Few educators have impacted my life like she did. How lucky I was to run into this master teacher.
What’s on your desk right now?
My “What If” file that contains over 150 story ideas. What If refers to the fundamental question many authors ask themselves when developing speculative fiction tales. By speculative fiction, I mean sci-fi, fantasy, and horror, plus their numerous subgenres.
What’s in your future? What are you planning to do next?
I’ve just sent a manuscript containing 50 of my speculative fiction tales to eBook publisher, Books For A Buck. All stories in this collection were previously published by magazines and anthologies in several countries, including Canada, England, India, Scotland, and US. A few won writing contests. The publisher is reviewing them now. I may even beef up the number before publication time. This book, which is not titled at the moment, should be released this year. It will be available as an eBook and paperback.
Meanwhile, I continue to develop flash fiction tales for publication. Maybe I’ll end up with a couple more paperback and eBook collections in the next few years.
I’ve also assembled a collection of flash fiction romance tales. Some are huggy-kissy tales, but others are peppered with elements of fantasy and horror. I may seek a publisher for these. Most were previously published by magazines in the US, Canada, and England.
Now I’d like to discuss A Full deck of Zombies – 61 Speculative Fiction Tales.
Currently, one my collections is available as and eBook and paperback. It’s called, “A Full Deck of Zombies – 61 Speculative Fiction Tales.” A low cost eBook version is available through www.booksforabuck.com and www.fictionwise.com. The paperback is available through www.amazon.com.
I think the best way to understand the range of stories in this collection is if I show the description I wrote for this book:
Not all zombies are fearsome and disgusting. Some sing, dance, play musical instruments, and even tell jokes. These loveable creatures like root beer, granola bars, and chocolate chip cookies. You’ll find these fun loving, cookie-munching zombies lurking between the pages of this book. But you’ll also read about some you’d never want to meet even if you were carrying a bazooka.
Not limited to zombie tales, this book includes a host of zany characters from outer space: ghost bugs; Martians who wear ten-gallon hats; Martians who stop commuter busses to take surveys; Martians who joyously amputate their own fingers to accumulate points for free Disneyland trips; and many more.
Then too are stories of ordinary Earth folks, like the guy next door who hugs corpses for a living, the gal down the block who falls in love with a zombie, your co-worker who snacks on alien finger sandwiches, your best pal who takes college courses with zombies, and dozens of other weirdos.
By now, you’ve guessed that most of the sixty-one stories in this book are humorous speculative fiction tales, a species not easily found. However, to keep you from busting a gut from laughter and incurring high medical costs, we’ve toned down the hilarity by including a few tales to make you cringe and hide in the closet. After reading them you may even want to seek the assistance of an exorcist.
All sixty-one stories were previously published in magazines and anthologies in Australia, Canada, England, and the US. Editors called them a hoot. Readers said they were hilarious. But the dark ones aren’t funny–unless the macabre makes you break out into uncontrollable laughter.
Now that you have an idea of what to expect, buckle up your seat belt, open the book, and enjoy the ride.
What is the premise of collection of tales? Tell us a bit about the it.
All tales in the collection are of the speculative fiction genre. None are related to each other in any way.
Did you know from the beginning how you would end the story? Are you a methodical plotter or do you let the story lead you?
Since I write mostly flash fiction tales of 1,000 words or less, my stories are necessarily plot driven. As to plot development, it occurs as I write the story. Something I want to mention here. I usually write multiple versions of the same story. This involves plot changes, adding and subtracting characters, and increasing or decreasing word lengths. I do this whenever I come up with a concept that fascinates me. This is not an idle exercise. It allows me to use the same core idea to develop several stories to meet guidelines for different magazines.
As to knowing from the beginning how I’ll end a story, that rarely happens. Once I create a grabber of an opener, the story writes itself.
Is there a message in the collection you’d like your readers to grasp?
Not usually. I consider myself a storyteller first, and writer second. As a storyteller, I seek to entertain my readers not convert them into different ways of thinking. However, a few of my stories are thinly veiled political satire. For example, my flash fiction story, “First Day of School” pokes fun at some of our nation’s social engineering. This work is definitely not politically correct by any measure. In this story, the Board of Education of Santa Buffoona, a town I’ve invented for satirical spec fiction works, hires a blue gorilla as their newest kindergarten teacher. By the way, I’ve written over 30 versions of this tale. Several variations have been published.
Another of my satirical works pokes fun at lawmakers. In this one, a guy is arrested because when moving to Santa Buffoona, he was unaware of city ordinance requiring citizens to buy one pizza per week from a pizzeria owned by political interests. He’s in arrears for several hundred dollars for not buying and eating 30 pizzas. He refuses to pay up. He’s dragged off to a kangaroo court where he’s sentenced to a stretch at Santa Buffoona’s Pizza Re-Education Camp. And indeed he does get re-educated in ways that seem to tickle readers’ funny bones, according to feedback I’ve received. By the way, I have two different versions of this tale, and both have been published and reprinted. One version is called, “Thank You, Dr. Pavlov.” Another version is called “My Pizza, My Love.” Meanwhile, I’ve used the latter title for an entirely different story about an orphan who wants to turn into a pizza. When asked why, he says, “Because nobody loves me, but everybody loves pizza.” This satire examines the lack of affection in these harsh times. This story comes in several versions, and all have been published and reprinted several times. In one case, an editor saw a version in a magazine, and asked my permission to publish it in hers.
Where can we learn more about you?
I don’t have a web site. However, if anybody Googles my name, they’ll see 25 pages loaded with entries. Most of them list stories I’ve written for dozens of magazines and anthologies. Clicking on those entries will allow you to read many of my flash and micro-fiction tales. I’ve often wondered who posts these things under my name. Perhaps the magazines and anthologies do this.
Thank you, Michael, for an interesting interview.
Thanks for reading!
All the best,
Joyce Adair




Melody Knight
Award-winning author Danielle Ackley-McPhail has worked both sides of the publishing industry for nearly fifteen years. Her works include the urban fantasies; Yesterday’s Dreams, its sequel, Tomorrow’s Memories (Mundania Press), and the upcoming novella, The Halfling’s Court: A Bad-Ass Faerie Tale (Marietta Publishing), the anthologies, Bad-Ass Faeries, Bad-Ass Faeries 2: Just Plain Bad (Marietta Publishing), and No Longer Dreams, (Lite Circle Books), all of which she co-edited, and contributions to numerous anthologies and collections, including Dark Furies (Die Monster Die! Books), Breach the Hull, (Marietta Publishing), Space Pirates (Flying Pen Press), and the upcoming science fiction anthologies So It Begins (Marietta Publishing) and Barbarians at the Jumpgate (Padwolf Publishing).
N. D. Hansen-Hill
My external life has been uneventful and provides scant material for an exciting autobiography. I am of Anglo-Irish extraction and was born in 1950, at Watford in Hertfordshire, England. Except for a spell in Marin County, California, I lived in Hertfordshire until 1993, when increasing urbanization drove me away. My home is now a village in the Hampshire Downs.
Resa Nelson is a novelist, freelance journalist, and technical writer in Massachusetts. She is a graduate of the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop and has been selling short fiction professionally since 1988. 
Liam Stalls
Deborah Macgillivray
After being a straight-A student, Karina now cultivates Fs: Family, Faith, Fiction and Fun. Winner of an EPPIE award for best sci-fi (Infinite Space, Infinite God) and a Mensa Owl for best fiction (World Gathering), Karina’s writing takes quirky twists that keep her–and her fans–amused. From and order of nuns working in space to a down-and-out faerie dragon working off a geas from St. George, she juggles the stories from at least three different universes in her stories. Mrs. Fabian is President of the Catholic Writer’s Guild and also teaches writing and book marketing seminars online. 
CJ England credits her passion for writing to her second grade sweetheart, Steven, a blond haired cutie with dimples, who dumped her for a girl who could swing on the monkey bars. She wrote her first story about love and loss after that tragic episode.
Penny Lockwood Ehrenkranz has published more than 75 articles, 50 stories, two e-books, a chapbook, and her stories have been included in two anthologies. She writes for both adults and children. Her fiction has appeared in numerous genre and children’s publications and non-fiction work has appeared in a variety of writing, parenting, and young adult print magazines and online publications. Her writing blog is available at http://pennylockwoodehrenkranz.blogspot.com![Lockwood-Ghost-For-Rent[1] Lockwood-Ghost-For-Rent[1]](http://writingthedanger.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/lockwood-ghost-for-rent1.jpg?w=123&h=185)