The Next Great …
We all want to be the one. Some where deep in our hearts, no matter how altruistic we might feel our works,

Nobel Prize Baby!
Maybe it is just me. Maybe I am the lone dreamer left out there in the crowded literary landscape, one lone wolf among millions of trudging, do it for the dollar, dime store hacks. But, I doubt it. I have had the privilege of working with some stand out talent recently and I can not afford to be so self centered that I believe I am the only one writing for the bloody recognition. I want two things personally, a Nobel Prize for Literature and a Doctorate. And, the truth be told, I will trade the Doctorate for the Nobel Prize in a spittin’ second. I don’t know about you my dear Friends and Fans but I want to write a classic, or a “next great”, or a best seller. I want my literary prowess to be known far and wide and I know you do too.

Well, with that high handed idea in mind, and because I am such a nice guy, and such a busy Jr. Editor, I will step out and give you some more of my patented, “How to get published with Open Heart Publishing” tricks and tips. Last time we discussed this I gave you three steps on how to win us over. Now I am going to give you a few ways to jump from the short list to the finals.
My FIRST Word of Advice: Take the recommended changes to under careful consideration. Nothing worse than putting your creative foot down and finding yourself excluded entirely from the final published few. There are, believe it or not, some very good reasons for the suggestions your editors make. I used to have the defensive stance when it came to my work and, I can promise you, it wasn’t until after I gave a little that I started to gain a lot.
My SECOND Word of Advice: Show interest in your works success. I mean, come on, this one should go without saying. It’s your work and I know you are proud to see it in print. Don’t settle for being published. I know you want people to read your work and the work of the brilliant writers that made the cut along side you.Share your success. Take interest in the contest and work hard to be the winner of the coveted Open Heart Publishing book deal. The competition is stiff and I can tell you, the only way to win is to keep pressing forward.
My FINAL Word of Advice: Relax. Seriously, this may not be the first story you’ve had published and if it is the first it won’t be the last. Take this opportunity as a chance to learn how the be a better writer. Use it as an opportunity to hone your craft and pad your resume. Use this opportunity to grow your brand and get your name out there. And have some fun with it. Take the chance, do the work and prosper.
I want to be the “Next Great” and I know you do too. Don’t hesitate any longer. Send us your stories and let us see your talent. But Please, follow the Guidelines. Until next time.
Merry Christmas.
Remember us?
Hello friends and fans. There are some great things going on and some great things coming up soon for us. With the Holidays coming up we wanted to take a quick moment to remind you what we have available for you on our book shelves. An Honest Lie Volume 1: Encouraging the Delinquency of Your Inner Child and AHL Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance of course are available. But don’t forget our great children’s book A Childress Book of Necromancy and our book written for children by the Jr. Church of the Center for Spiritual Living Dallas called The Cave of Colors. And last, but not least, our newest addition All Along the Pacific written by C.B. Calsing. It was released on December 2nd so get yours first! You can find all of them in our shop.

We are currently also accepting submissions for An Honest Lie Volume 3: Justifiable Hypocrisy. We’ve been receiving a great many fantastic submissions so many we’ve brought in extra help. But, with the extra eyes we could stand to receive a great many more. Come on writers get on board. We’re looking for …
… the ironies in life
… the serendipity of it all
… the epitome of adventure
… the power of imperviousness
… the pull of naivety
… the view from a different angle
… the mix of mood, moment, and movement
… the wretched truth
… a clever lie
… the humor inside
… the mockery of it all
We’re looking for the perspective. The subject is up to you. You can find our submission guidelines here. We are looking forward to reading your work. Submit Here.
Let’s Take a Ride
All Along the Pacific with C.B. Calsing

Hello dear reader, dear friends and fans. I know it has been a week since we last got together but I have had some, shall we say, difficult days in the last week or so. However I have been working diligently on your behalf, never the less. This week I want to take a short break from An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance to bring you something else we’ve been working on. You can still vote for your favorite author from An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance here and you can pick up your copy here.
In An Honest Lie Volume 1: Encouraging the Delinquency of your Inner Child we were treated to a haunting tale called “Gran’s Prophecy“ about horticultural prophecy and the birth of kings. In An Honest Lie Volume 2: Delusions of Insignificance we were treated to a darker story called “Martina Gets the Last Word “ about true love and it’s eternal depths. Both of these great stories were brought to us by one of my new favorite writers C.B. Calsing. Now she returns to us with an anthology of her own called All Along the Pacific. This is a collection of 10 stories set in and around San Louis Obispo. Spanning the years from 1835 until 2005 each story not only carries us into these time periods, but also does a wonderful job of ting the lives, families and cultures of the age together giving us a picture of our American history. But more about that later, first let’s meet Corina B. Calsing.
Hailing originally from San Louis Obispo, California C.B. Calsing now lives in and writes from New Orleans, Louisiana. Her passion for The Big O is only surpassed by her love for writing, cocktails N.O. sports teams’ architecture and really good food, all of which are in grand abundance in her adopted home city.
Her creative drive was encouraged by parents who were themselves “hard-working free spirits”. “My mother would draw children’s books just for me, and as I got older, the three of us would collaborate on projects: writing, drawing, binding. By second grade I had started writing with a goal for publication,” she told us. By the second grade she’d already established the goal of writing for publication. Her first effort was a musical play about two rival break dancing gangs which she cast with her class mates, none of which auditioned. Maybe that’s what drove her to her current profession, teaching middle school kids the dastardly craft.
Like the rest of us writers she often thinks of her chosen passion as entertaining though others often see it differently.
“Writing was entertainment for me. I did short stories, movie scripts, and novellas. A compulsion, some might say. An addiction others would call it. After all, it does interfere with my relationships and work, sometimes.”
But even so writing is a passion that cannot be ignored. She got lucky following Richard Fords advice in his “Ten Rules for Writing Fiction” when he said, “Marry somebody you love and who thinks you being a writer’s a good idea.” She has a very give and take relationship with her loving husband who supports her efforts, even bringing her dinner to the writing table and accepting responsibility for overlooking editorial mistakes prior to submission. But she gives him credit saying, “I don’t think I’d have accomplished as much as I have in the last decade if he wasn’t with me. A lot of my ideas develop with his input too. We spend a lot of time discussing “what if,” and if I get stuck on an ending, he always has the best solution.”
Her major turning point came in 2004 when she had a bad experience working with an alternative middle school for students that had been expelled from their neighborhood schools. Without the gory details, she quit and found herself with an opportunity to write full time. In that time productivity was an understatement. Corina finished two novellas, both of which are still “in the box” so to speak, and several shorts. Realizing she needed to move forward with her Masters of Fine Arts she applied with the Creative Writing Workshop at the University of New Orleans who accepted her by 2006. This was when she got serious about her writing, more serious than ever before anyway.
“During those workshop classes, I first conceived of the short stories that would eventually make up All Along the Pacific. Part of this came from a general dislike of contemporary, realistic fiction.”
“My writing heroes — Marquez, Steinbeck, Lovecraft, Dick, Gaiman, Mieville (you’ll notice no women there, and probably fault me for it) — didn’t settle for the ordinary, and I couldn’t let myself either,” she said. Corina started with Science Fiction and her advice is: “don’t turn in science fiction if you are not in a science fiction workshop.” Stuff she wrote that got panned in workshop sold to Sci-Fi magazines without any revisions. From there she tried historic fiction which went over better in class but her creative spirit wouldn’t allow her to play I straight. “I kept coming up with strange concepts for historical fiction — pickled heads in jars, midgets on trains, delusional car salesmen — and then I had this pile of stories.”
“After a little thought, I realized, “Why not a collection?” A little tweaking here and there, a few rewrites and some additions… After two years of workshop and revision I had All Along the Pacific,” Calsing told us.
The path we walk from where we begin a project to where they end can sometimes be a dark one. We may not know what comes next we can only light our way one story at a time. C.B. Calsing has illuminated our path with a tale about an outlaw, who is supposed to be dead, viewing his own head at a state fair, and a tale about a Chinese rail worker with much higher ambitions than anyone around him could imagine, and a tale about a common whore who really lives to protect herself and her “adopted” son. Though each of these stories are based in different time periods Corina Calsing has done a fantastic job of submerging us in these individual lives and leading us through time, showing us every step of the way the connections we all have to one another regardless of time and space.
All Along the Pacific is an anthology that is not to be missed and Corina Calsing is a writer that should not be over looked. Stick with us Friends and fans and we, I can promise you, will be bringing you the best of the best. In the end C.B. Calsing remains true to her creative roots and continues to experiment with her work.
“Since I’ve finished workshop, I’ve headed back into the realms of science fiction, and a little horror, but when I plan a big project, it still tends to be historical with a touch of magical realism. The work I’m finally returning to after about a year and a half off is just that — set in the bayou, during the Depression. An English botanist searching for a rare orchid falls into the trap of a backwoods giantess who distills sassafras moonshine and raises Cane Corsos. There are definitely elements of horror in it, but the story is more about mood and setting and detail than anything else.”
Most of the best stories are Corina, most of the best ones are.
Davin Kimble-Jr. Editor

C.B. Calsing was born and grew up in the small Central Coast town of San Luis Obispo, California. As a child, she spent long hours composing stories and plays. Half-way through her junior year in high school, she left to attend Cuesta Community College, where, after a few years of study, she received her associate of arts degree with honors. Following that, she transferred to Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. There, she completed her bachelor of arts in English. She took a year off, traveled to Indonesia and Ireland, and then decided to return to school to become a certified English teacher.
In 2002, fresh out of her studies, Mrs. Calsing and her future husband moved to New Orleans. Mrs. Calsing has worked in the field of education throughout the Greater New Orleans Area for the last eight years. In 2004, she married. Following her evacuation from Hurricane Katrina, Mrs. Calsing returned to New Orleans and began her master of fine arts degree in creative writing, fiction, at the University of New Orleans. She completed that in 2009. Now, she teaches middle school English, edits for a prominent e-book publisher, and writes when there is time.
“To Wade Alone,” a story from her upcoming collection All Along the Pacific, took second place in the On the Premises “First” contest in June 2009. Her work has appeared in college literary journals, guerrilla zines, and on Web sites, such as Crossedgenres.com. Her work also appeared in the anthologies An Honest Lie Volume One: Encouraging the Delinquency of your Inner Child and An Honest Lie Volume Two: Delusions of Insignificance, and Things We Are Not, a collection of queer science fiction.
Her two favorite genres to write are historic and science fiction, probably because both allow her to visit worlds different from her own. Up-to-the-minute information can be found at her blog, cbcalsing.blogspot.com.
A Secret

Okay. I am probably going to get fired for this blog Buuuut … here we go. I am going to give away the secret to bribing your faithful Jr. Editor into fighting for your story. Yes, yes, please, hold your applause and questions until the end please. Thank you.
Ahhem … In three easy steps you are going to come one complete third closer to becoming published. Again I do this fo you at the peril of my position at Open Heart Publishing. Appreciate this effort to get you published and … well …
Follow the submission guidelines. They are very simple and easily found here.
Step number two:
Please have something of a viable story. I know this might sound like I am just blowing my Jr. Editor horn here, but no, really if you haven’t followed step number one, and then you send your absolute first draft on top of it; well, son, the chances of your piece being accepted by us become next to impossible.
And we, here at OHP bring you the infamous 3!:
If you want our vote, the one thing you can do is personalize your self. I’m not saying beg and grovel. That will just break my heart and MAKE ME HATE YOU! Ummm … sorry. however,
If you, dear submitter, humanize your self to us, and do it convincingly I will become Amateur Sucker Editor Extraordinaire. i will fight for you until the end.
There is, after I consider it, an adendum to this that I must, in good conscience, make you aware of. You will have to follow my blog’s my stuff and buy my stuff. Peace I am Your

