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Member Spotlight: Mary E. Lowd
Though long-overdue, we had a chance recently to speak with member Mary E. Lowd about her writing, editing, and publishing ventures!
Tell us about your most recent project (written or published). What inspired it?
Fate has conspired such that I actually finished three books in approximately one week, so it’s hard to exactly measure what counts as my most recent project when it comes to writing. Those three books are all spin-offs of my Otters In Space trilogy in one way or another, and they’re all slated to come out from FurPlanet this year.
One of them, Tri-Galactic Trek (to be released at MFF in December), is a collection of short stories, including five that have already been published and five new ones, that are technically a television show that appears briefly in Otters In Space 3: Octopus Ascending. With my Tri-Galactic Trek stories, I’ve tried to capture the heart of what I loved about watching Star Trek: The Next Generation as a kid, except with cats, dogs, a bear, and a photosynthetic green otter.
The second, Nexus Nine (to be released at AC in July), is a novel that takes place after the events in Tri-Galactic Trek, sharing some characters, but focusing specifically on a calico cat with an ancient computer chip in her head that contains lifetimes’ worth of memories. Clearly, I was drawing inspiration from the character of Jadzia Dax in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. However, I always felt like there was so much more to do with Dax, and so I invented my own character in order to explore the rich concept of a character who’s struggling to balance her current self with the overpowering weight of all of those extra memories inside of her.
The third book, Jove Deadly’s Lunar Detective Agency (tentatively to be released at TFF in March) is actually set in the Otters In Space main universe, except focused on a bloodhound detective on the moon. A friend of mine, Garrett Marco, and I brainstormed the idea for an interconnected pair of novellas about this character years ago — he would write a story about Jove Deadly and his brother; and then I would write a story about Jove and his sister; and both stories would involve the same mysterious, stolen computer chip. So, the final book is a co-written novel in two halves, and I’m very excited about it. Reading someone else’s words purposely designed to mirror your own writing style is a wonderful and surprising joy. Garrett managed to write the exact same kind of dumb jokes that I love best about my own writing, and so I got to experience them without having come up with them myself — truly delightful; one of the best gifts I’ve ever been given.
As you can see, I’ve been really busy. However, there is one more project I need to mention: at the end of last year, I founded a new furry e-zine called Zooscape. The first issue came out in December, and there will be a new issue out on March 1st. For years, there’s been talk in the furry writing community about how we need a high paying, consistently released, free-to-read online magazine in order to raise the profile of furry fiction. So, when my younger child started kindergarten last fall, I started one. If you ever need to explain what furry fiction is to someone, just send them there: https://zooscape-zine.com/
What’s your writing process like? Are you a “pantser,” an outliner, or something in between? How do you find that this helps and/or hurts your writing style?
Outlining does not come naturally to me. I’ve struggled with it ever since I was introduced to the concept in sixth grade when we were required to turn in outlines for our big research papers before the paper itself was due. My mom walked me through writing an outline, but it made no sense to me. At some level, I don’t really get how it’s possible to outline a work before actually creating the work, because until I’ve written it, how can I really know what I’m capable of pulling off?
For instance, I wrote a short story this week about a cat communicating telepathically with an electric eel. At a high level, I knew the entire structure for the story, but when it came to actually writing it, I found myself faced with trying to communicate the idea of death through memory images shared between these two creatures. And suddenly, I found myself writing about my own experience from 2016 of spending the night by my grandmother’s side as she died. Because that’s the most powerful, real image of death that I’ve experienced. And yet, how could I have ever predicted that a space opera story about a telepathic eel would involve describing how it felt to stay up all night by my grandmother’s deathbed? I could never have seen that coming.
All of that said, I know that having an outline — if I can figure one out — can really help me to work through a novel length project without getting stuck or somehow writing myself into a corner. So, I’ve been working on developing outlining skills, and since traditional outlines don’t seem to work for me, I’ve had to come up with some of my own strategies. In some cases, I use Tarot cards with evocative images on them to stand in for characters or places in a story, and then I can arrange them in a way that helps give me signposts as I travel through the work. I’ve also found it can be very helpful to pick a story structure that I’m already very familiar with from a book or movie and use it as a sort of road map. For instance, my novel The Snake’s Song follows the general shape of The Hobbit, and the longest novel I’ve written, a still-unpublished piece of space opera, was specifically designed to follow the general shape of The Lord of the Rings — assemble the team, and then the team voyages to the one place where the dangerous object can be destroyed.
What’s your favorite kind of story to write?
This is a really tough question, because stories vary so much… and I like different things about different ones. But I think, if I have to pick, my favorite kind of story to write is either the kind where I can toss off lightweight jokes that amuse myself or the kind where I pour my feelings into the keyboard because they’ve become too big and overwhelming to keep inside myself anymore, and the story provides a safe box to put them in. So, those are two totally opposite kinds of stories, and I seem to have failed to pick between them.
You’ve published a lot of short stories. Since the beginning of 2018, what are your favorites? Why those?
I had twenty-five stories come out in 2018, but the two that really stand out for me are “Not All Dogs” and “Wing Day,” possibly because they were two of the hardest to write. For “Not All Dogs,” I had to tap into the unconscious racism that comes from being raised with systemic white privilege and not having realized it yet… So, I had to look back at the ways I used to be a worse person, and it’s really hard to do that without flinching. However, I’m really proud of how the story finally turned out.
“Wing Day” was difficult to write differently. I had a really complex idea about three generations of a family — a human woman, her adopted butterfly-alien daughter, and the cloned butterfly-alien granddaughter — and in order to convey their story coherently and concisely, I ended up just writing down all of these disconnected sentences about them in a totally random order. Rearranging and shuffling those sentences — and sentence fragments — until they came together into an actual story felt a little like watching a bunch of bright colors tumble around inside a kaleidoscope until they suddenly came into focus as a coherent picture. It was kind of magical, and the story turned out so much better than I had dared to hope it would, like a carefully cut gemstone. It’s still hard to believe all those disconnected fragments actually came together like that.
What has most influenced your work? Is an author, a title, or something else?
I don’t think that I can escape that the answer to this question is Star Trek. Quite obviously, my Tri-Galactic Trek stories are heavily influenced by Star Trek. However, I can see traces of Star Trek in almost everything I’ve ever written, even stories where it wouldn’t be obvious to anyone else who read them.
Star Trek: The Next Generation was like a second family to me when I was a child, and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is still, on some levels, my favorite work of art ever created. My entire world view and approach to life was heavily shaped by both of those shows.
What’s the last book you read that you really loved?
I joined a book group last year that’s had me reading a lot of good books lately — N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth trilogy, Seanan McGuire’s Every Heart a Doorway, Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch and Binti, and Jo Walton’s Tooth and Claw. I highly recommend all of those books, but my favorite of the books we’ve read is The Power by Naomi Alderman. The Power is a thought experiment in gender-flipping the power structures of the entire world; women develop electric-eel like powers, making them the stronger sex, on average, and everything changes. It’s a book that manages to be both horrifying and also, strangely, an experience in wish-fulfilment, at least, for me. I think it’s a really, really important book, and I think that a lot of people need to read it.
Besides writing, how do you like to spend your free time?
I have dogs, and I spend time with them. Really, though, I spend most of my time writing, reading, or watching videos — which is not as different from reading as people like to believe. Basically, I immerse myself in story as much as possible, and then I try to deconstruct and understand that story. But I do also spend time with my dogs and go on walks sometimes.
Advice for other writers?
Find ways to enjoy the process of writing whenever you can, because the rewards for finished works are few and far between. Getting published is a long, slow process, full of rejection and heavily dependent on luck. And even when you’re fairly successful, published stories can still feel like they fall into a deep, dark void, never to be heard from again. So in the long run, the best way to survive is to find joy in the process of writing itself.
You will always be your own first reader, so write what you must deeply desire to read. At least then, you’ll get to read a good story while you’re writing, no matter what happens next.
Where can readers find your work?
Most of my books are published by FurPlanet, but my most recent novel, The Snake’s Song: A Labyrinth of Souls Novel, is through ShadowSpinners Press. They’re all available on Amazon. Also, I keep links for where to find my books on my personal webpage: http://marylowd.com/
My short stories get published all over the place, but I tend to reprint them on my own archive site, Deep Sky Anchor. So, you can find a lot of free short stories there: http://deepskyanchor.com/
What’s your favorite thing about the furry fandom? Why write furry?
When I discovered the furry fandom, I no longer had to stumble over the question, “Why otters?” when I told people about my books. Suddenly, the answer was simple: “It’s furry fiction.”
But my favorite thing about the furry fandom is that it’s given a label to my favorite kind of fiction, and it’s so much easier to find something when it has a label. For almost two decades, I struggled to find the stray piece of science-fiction with animal-like aliens or fantasy about animals, mixed-in with all the other science-fiction and fantasy. As soon as I had a word for what I was looking for — furry fiction — I didn’t have to struggle anymore. I could just read.
Lucas The Spider: I’m Starving
Apes of War
Evidently this has been a thing for a while, but somehow we missed it. Now, thanks to Oni Press, it’s all together in one place. “Brahm Revel’s critically-acclaimed series is collected for the first time in one volume in the Guerillas: Omnibus Edition! Private John Francis Clayton is on his first tour of duty in Vietnam, facing death at every turn in the middle of a war he doesn’t understand. Clayton is just trying to stay alive when he encounters an elite platoon of…. simian soldiers?!? This squad of chain-smoking chimps is the most dangerous fighting force in the jungle… but whose side are they on?” Find out when this hits the shelves in late March.

image c. 2019 Oni Press
In Search Of … (2/25/1978)

Almost 41 years ago this episode on DNA research aired on the ZBC (Zootopia Broadcast Company) while most of the subjects of this show were very batshit insane (As a cub they totally got me to believe in an under water civilization of Atlantis) and the ghost episodes scared the crap out of me. The episode about the Crystal Skull always disturbed me a bit too. Still, the theme was so iconic to me I just had to post this when I found this tape. I really wish I got episodes of Police Woman, Seriously a female bunny cop in the 70s? They were really ahead of their time despite all the misogyny in that show. Hell, I think they even called her cute. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ok, for the young: Yes, this reference is one of those things that only people close to 50 would get but I just had to do this for the joy of it. The original show only holds up these days as just an example of really quaint over the top supernatural bullshit. They did the whole "We are just presenting facts and let you decide" and then proceed to talk to the most outlandish people telling you how divining rods totally work. The music is a vaporwave goldmine of just amazing late 70s TV cheesy synth that I just love to death. Discovery channel showed this in the 2000's but replaced the amazing opening which I think is a crime I'm just that kind of a pedantic nerd. Here is the episode I drew from that was a bit less batshit crazy than most episodes if you care to indulge in the source materal: https://youtu.be/CGiDniPE0mE
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Trailer: Wolfgang Doe

From the creators of Mascot Fur Life we bring you the fursuit cop series "Wolfgang Doe" It's like Zootopia except German and has some humans in it too. "Here you have the first official trailer for our production "Wolfgang Doe". The pilot episode was filmed in November of 2018. We are so looking forward to give you this project and to see your reactions. But for now enjoy this little sneak peek of the first episode. The whole thing was done in German, but for all the native English speakers, we added some subtitles! :3"
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TigerTails Radio Season 11 Episode 41
Nocturne (Nachtstück)

Yeah, I try to avoid gambling with my essence. Still, I have so many questions. There is a lot of Brothers Quay [1] influence here. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_Quay
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Rise of the Patcheé, by Eben Prentzler

Signal, by Renee Carter Hall

The Nuts Are Back
More from Animation World Network: “Feature animation studio ToonBox Entertainment and Canadian production company Pipeline Studios have announced the creation of a new joint venture. Their first project is Nut Jobs, a 2D-animated series for kids ages 6-11 based on The Nut Job, the hit animated feature film franchise that took in $120 million at the international box office. The production companies have been working in development on the series and have tapped Emmy Award-winning industry veteran and Grant Moran to spearhead these efforts. Moran, who will serve as the showrunner for the TV series, previously served as Executive Director in Charge of Production at Nickelodeon.” No word yet on any release date, but stay tooned.

image c. 2019 Toonbox Entertainment
[Live] Top Deer

If you’re a top deer, you’re a bottom.
Link Roundup:- New unicode animal emoji approved
- Furry Network tweets about updates
- Margaret Cho barks about furries, pride, and costuming on The Masked Singer
- Superbowl Commercial Uses ASMR
- PlaugeofGripes (Not a Furry) Choose Your Starter
- Minnesota Man Keeps Freezing His Pants Off, Thanks To The Polar Vortex
- Florida Girl Stole Papa John’s Delivery Car To Visit Boyfriend: Police
- Man Breaks Lingerie Store Window To Attack Barack Obama Mannequin
- Name a Cochroach After Your Ex and Watch it get fed to a Meerkat
- The “Zombie Deer Virus” Has Hit 24 US States
The World in Black and White?
A very… unusual anime feature is heading to our shores this spring. “Los Angeles-based Eleven Arts Anime Studio has set April 12 as the theatrical release date for the sci-fi coming-of-age animated feature, Penguin Highway, which it will be distributing in the U.S. and Canada. Directed by Hiroyasu Ishida, the film won the Axis: The Satoshi Kon Award for Excellence in Animation award at the Fantasia International Film Festival for best animated feature and has also been nominated for the Japan Academy Prize for Animation of the Year. The film will screen with the original Japanese dialogue with subtitles as well as the English dub. In the film, budding genius Aoyama is only in the 4th grade, but already lives his life like a scientist. When penguins start appearing in his sleepy suburb hundreds of miles from the sea, Aoyama vows to solve the mystery. When he finds the source of the penguins is a woman from his dentist’s office, they team up for an unforgettable summer adventure!” Got that? Read the article at Animation World Network for more, including the trailer.

image c. 2019 Eleven Arts
Meet Meat

For this Friday I give you an older Gobelins short. "A mchiavellian whaler is emarked on a chase. Between life and death, the hunter is about to be hunt."
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212 - Retirement Home Alone - Patreon: www.patreon.com/thedraggetshow YouTube:…

Patreon: www.patreon.com/thedraggetshow YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/DraggetShow www.draggetshow.com Be sure to check our website for all Things Dragget Show! Podcasts, videos, merch and more! 212 - Retirement Home Alone - Patreon: www.patreon.com/thedraggetshow YouTube:…
Commercial: A Perfect Gift

This commercial is very cute and I expect the kitty and lion adopted the bunny. (I still have so many questions) ""A Perfect Gift" is a commissioned short film we made last year for the Chinese company Pans Jewelry. The story behind this video is very special because it was part of a multi-media art exhibit held by Pans in Shangai, in which they asked kids to draw their imaginary friends, and featured their drawings along with jewelry pieces and plushies based on them. The exhibition also featured this short film, in which we were asked to create a story featuring the characters created by the kids. It was challenging to bring all these characters together, but we did it by being inspired by the themes of family and legacy that Pans Jewelry conveys with its brand. You can see photos of the exhibit here [1]!" [1] https://www.facebook.com/panspuan/photos/pcb.1124813704337683/1124813547671032/?type=3&theater
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S8 Episode 8 – Gratitude 2019 - This episode Roo and Tugs are together in the Salt Lake City studio with our guest Oaken and read your emails on what you're grateful for and what they hope for in 2019. NOW LISTEN! - Show Notes Special Thanks Oaken, our g
NOW LISTEN!
Show Notes
Special Thanks
Oaken, our guest.
Everyone who wrote in!
Music
Opening Theme: RetroSpecter – Cloud Fields (RetroSpecter Mix). USA: Unpublished, 2018. ©2011-2018 Fur What It’s Worth. Based on Fredrik Miller – Cloud Fields (Century Mix). USA: Bandcamp, 2011. ©2011 Fur What It’s Worth. (Buy a copy here – support your fellow furs!)
Space News Music: Fredrik Miller – Orbit. USA: Bandcamp, 2013. Used with permission. (Buy a copy here – support your fellow furs!)
Fifty Sheds of Grey: Kevin MacLeod – Spy Glass. Licensed under Creative Commons: by Attribution 3.0. Visit Incompetech for more.
Patreon: The Tudor Concert - Inflammatus. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0.
Closing Theme: RetroSpecter – Cloud Fields (RetroSpecter Chill Mix). USA: Unpublished, 2018. ©2011-2018 Fur What It’s Worth. Based on Fredrik Miller – Cloud Fields (Chill Out Mix). USA: Bandcamp, 2011. ©2011 Fur What It’s Worth. (Buy a copy here – support your fellow furs!)
Patreon Love
The following people have decided this month’s Fur What It’s Worth is worth actual cash! THANK YOU!
Artorias Ichisake and Kit and Cody
Rifka, the San Francisco Treat and Baldrik
Lokimutt and Guardian Lion and Dusky and Katchshi
Plus Tier Supporters
Skylos
Snares
Simone Parker
McRib Tier Supporters
Hachi Shibaru
Lygris S8 Episode 8 – Gratitude 2019 - This episode Roo and Tugs are together in the Salt Lake City studio with our guest Oaken and read your emails on what you're grateful for and what they hope for in 2019. NOW LISTEN! - Show Notes Special Thanks Oaken, our g
Beyond the Mask Teaser

Here is a teaser for the upcoming documentary by Tyler Purcell [1]! "This is the final teaser trailer for an all new feature-length movie entitled "Beyond the Mask" about artists within the furry fandom and their daily struggle to make ends meet. The story revolves around 6 individuals with different passions within the artistic community. This teaser is one of our stars Allison Weir from Portland Oregon. She struggles with several diseases, one of them makes it difficult for her to walk, yet she still stands up and even dances in costume as a way to keep her sanity." [1] http://www.beyondthemaskdoc.com/
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FWG Blog – February 2019
It’s February! This may be the shortest month of the year, but with the lack of a blog post last month, this certainly won’t be our shortest post of the year!
Guild Newsroom
We will be re-restarting out Member Spotlights starting on February 15th, where we will be featuring our own Mary E. Lowd! Look forward to that coming soon, as well as other spotlights coming at the end of February and middle of March.
Attention, all members on Twitter! When making posts about your writing, be sure to use the hashtag #furrywriting so that we can keep up with your work and share it with the world!
Member Highlights
Some highlights from last month, as featured from our FWG Member News section on the forums:
- Huskyteer and Kyell Gold co-authored a story called “Chasing Her Story” in the conbook for this past Midwest FurFest. If you have a copy, make sure you check it out!
- Madison Keller had a story featured in the recently-released “Slashers” anthology by Thurston Howl Publications. They also had a story accepted to “The Furry Cookbook” (also by THP), a rom-com called “Bucking the Trend”.
- Joel Kreissman had a story called “Ancient Infections” accepted into THP’s “Purrgatorio” anthology.
- JFR Coates‘s anthology “Furry Trash” was released from Rabbit Valley just in time for the close of 2018.
- S. Park released their first short erotica under pen name “A. Rhiannon”. You can find it on Amazon or Smashwords.
- Mary E. Lowd, along with being our next Member Spotlight, had a short story, “The Otter’s Mermaid”, come out in “Furry Trash”. She also had two short stories released in “Empyreome”, entitled “The Ugly Sapling” and “Katelynn and the Hummingbird“.
- Frances Pauli‘s newest “Hybrid Nation” short story has been released on Amazon. They also have a story entitled “Big Bird” in the recently-released “Jackal Who Came in From the Cold“.
- Alison Cybe has a handful of updates for us this month! They have a short story collection called “Sovereigns” that will be released later this year from Blue Rose (https://blueroserpg.com/). Their short story “The Greatest Steak” was accepted into THP’s “The Furry Cookbook”. They have completed the first draft of their cyberpunk series “Cybera – An Erotic Cyberpunk Thriller”, all the chapters of which are available on their FurAffinity page. They’ve begun to post their out-of-print stories to their website. The latest book of their “Tales of Monsterotica” series, called “The Drag Queen of the Opera“, has been released, while the first book of that series, “The Castle of Count Shagula”, is available in audiobook format.
Our usual reminder to all our member that have had something exciting happen in the past month not featured here: be sure to keep up with you Member News thread on the forums! Not only is this how we get our information, but these threads are able to be viewed by any person logged into the forums. Share your achievements with the rest of the writing community!
The Marketplace
For those of you looking to submit, keep an eye on the open markets on our website. For those of you who just forget, The Marketplace is your reminder for all things open for submissions!
Short Story Markets:
Publisher Title Theme Deadline Pay Zooscape Zooscape Zine General furry Fiction Ongoing $0.06/word (maximum $60) Thurston Howl Publications Even Furries Hate Nazis Furry stories against Nazism February 15th One copy of the anthology (non-paying) Thurston Howl Publications Movie Monsters Stories featuring monsters that have/could be in movies March 1st One copy of the anthology (non-paying) Armoured Fox Press Foxers or Fur-iefs?: The Furry Underwear Collection Furry erotica featuring underwear March 1st $0.0050/word plus one copy of the anthology Thurston Howl Publications Sensory De-tails Furry stories relating to strong animal senses April 1st One copy of the anthology (non-paying) Thurston Howl Publications Trick or Treat: A Furry BDSM Anthology Furry erotica featuring BDSM May 1st One copy of the anthology (non-paying) Thurston Howl Publications The Haunted Den: Furry Ghost Stories Furry ghost stories June 1st One copy of the anthology (non-paying) Thurston Howl Publications Give Yourself a Hand Furry erotica featuring masturbation June 15th $0.0050/word plus one copy of the anthology Thurston Howl Publications Pawradiso: The Ten Spheres of Furry Heaven furry stories based around the spheres of Heaven (in reference to Paradiso) July 15th One copy of the anthology (non-paying)
Novel Markets:
- Thurston Howl Publications is open to novel/novella submissions, with no planned date for submissions to close.
Special Events and Announcements
Jess E. Owen will be a Guest of Honor at the upcoming Texas Furry Fiesta! She’ll be signing books and participating in writing panels. She’s well-versed in the art of self-publishing, so this would be a great chance to learn!
It’s award nomination season! The Leo Awards just wrapped up nominations. You have until February 16th, 2019 to nominate for the Ursa Major Awards, and until March 15th, 2019 to nominate for the Coyotl Awards. If you’re eligible to nominate, go do so!
Wrap-up
Our forums are open to all writers, not just full members of the FWG. Check them out here and join in on the conversation. While you’re there, check out how to join our Slack and Telegram channels. Before joining any of these, though, we ask that you please read up on our Code of Conduct! With all the negative going around in the world these days, both furry and non-furry, we want to make sure the guild feels like a safe place to all its participants, free of threats and hate speech.
We have two weekly chats, called our Coffeehouse Chats! Our first one is Tuesday at 7:00pm EST in our Slack channel, and our other is Thursdays at Noon EST on our forums in the shoutbox on the main page. Both of these chats feature writers talking about writing, usually with a central topic. As with the above, these chats are open to both members and non-members, though you must be registered for the forums.
The World of the False Dawn
Also at Further Confusion we learned about Shard, a fantasy role-playing game with a considerably anthropomorphic bent. The creators, Shard Studios out of Austin, Texas, we running several games to introduce new players to the system. Here’s what they have to say on their home page for the game: “Shard Studios invites you to enter the fantastic world of Dardunah, the vast shard of a shattered realm, as presented in the colorful pages of the Shard RPG! Many years in the making, this system allows players to choose from a wide variety of animal people who are the main cast of the many adventures this otherworldly setting offers. Skyships glide through shimmering clouds past majestic crystal peaks. Giant insects prowl alien jungles or lurk in the sparkling emerald seas. Warriors with blades of diamond and amber duel across crimson sands. And mystics chant in shadowy chambers as their spirits wander abroad.” There are several books of game play and background available now.

image c. 2019 Shard Studios