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Authors of Monterey Shorts pictured above. Click on author's image
above to
read bio. |
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Byron Merritt
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Ken Jones
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is the founder of Fiction Writers of the Monterey Peninsula, which was established in January of 2000. He continues to raise teenage twins (a boy and a girl) while working full time as an emergency room nurse. Lately his writing life has consisted of writing shorts stories. But he’s interviewed famous authors, too, and has had some of these interviews published in countries as far away as Australia and the United Kingdom. His grandfather, the famous Dune author Frank Herbert, was an early inspiration in his writing career. Brian Herbert (Byron’s uncle) and Kevin J. Anderson—coauthors of the New York Times best-selling Dune prequels—remain an important influence in his writing life. Byron currently lives in Pacific Grove, California with his beautiful fiancé, Stasia, the polish princess. |
moved to the Monterey Peninsula after retiring from the Boeing Company in March of 2001. Southern Californian natives, he and his wife felt a growing attraction to the Central Coast that finally became too powerful to resist. Ken holds a Bachelors of Science in Personnel Management and Industrial Relations from Northern Arizona University and his working career involved technical and business writing. He began writing for pleasure in the mid 80's, focusing primarily on short story fiction. Ken's short-short stories have received Honorable Mention in the Coast Weekly's annual 101 Word Short Story Contests in 2001, 2002 and in 2003. In '03, in addition to one HM, his Holiday Dinners was awarded first prize. He is actively developing material for the second collection of 'Monterey Shorts' stories scheduled for publication near the end of 2004. He is also working on a novel length mystery that builds on the primary characters from his story Borscht in The Bay published in Monterey Shorts. Five of Ken's stories are contained in , a collection of short stories and poetry produced in November '03 by the Pebbles Writing Group of Carmel. Ken and his wife Anne have one daughter, Nora, and one grandson. Ken and Anne live in Pacific Grove with their deaf, one-eyed (or in the more sensitive words of her loving Veterinarian, 'sound challenged and monocular') cat Lucky.
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Linda
Price |
Walter E.Gourlay
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is a founding member of FWOMP.
She took a year off following the disappearance of her husband in March 2001
while he was boating on the Monterey Bay. |
, a native New Yorker, and a World War Two veteran, has had a varied career. At various times he’s been a labor union activist, a writer and copy editor of pulp fiction, house manager of a noted concert hall in Manhattan, and public relations director for an international firm. He earned a doctorate in Chinese history at Harvard and taught graduate and undergraduates at Michigan State University for twenty years before moving to California. His monograph, “The Chinese Communist Cadre” was published by MIT, and another of his papers “’Yellow’ Unionism in Shanghai”, was distributed by the Harvard Program in East Asian Studies. He’s a founding member of Fiction Writers of the Monterey Peninsula (FWOMP), a member of The Monterey Writers’ Workshop, is on the Steering Committee of the local chapter of the National Writers Union, and is Program Chairman of Central Coast Writers. He writes a monthly page for the Newsletter of the Carmel Residents’ Association. Two of his short stories--"Marriage Makes Strange Bedfellows" and "The Night We Killed Music"—were included in the anthology Pebbles, (Thunderbird Writers Group, 1999). Five of his stories, are in The Barmaid, the Bean Counter and the Bungee Jumper, (Pebbles Group, 2003). One of them, “Laundry” is excerpted from his wartime memoirs, a work in progress. His story, “Reunion” appears in Monterey Shorts, published in 2002. He is now researching a monograph on “Chiang Kai-shek and Mussolini”, and doing research for on an historical novel set in New York City, Java, and Japan during the Wars of the French Revolution and Napoleon, based on Dutch and Japanese sources and New York City archives. Walter lives in Carmel, California. |
Mark
C.Angel |
Shaheen
Schmidt
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Mark Angel was born and raised on the
Monterey Peninsula. He currently resides in Carmel Valley. He will
soon publish a science fiction novel entitled
Rexriders, about a
civilization that coexists with dinosaurs. He has a bachelor’s
degree in psychobiology with a minor in music from the University of
California at Santa Cruz, and an Associate of Science in fire
protection technology from Monterey Peninsula College. Mark is
currently employed as an Emergency Medical Technician with American
Medical Response, and he has been a volunteer with the American Red
Cross, Carmel Area Chapter for over 20 years. |
Shaheen Schmidt, a native of Iran, has lived in the United States since 1985, and currently resides in Carmel Valley. Although she works in Carmel as a hair designer, she has an insatiable curiosity and interest in visual arts, dance, music and writing and is one of the founding members of Fiction Writers of the Monterey Peninsula. Since childhood, she has kept a journal and special notebook to write her stories, fully illustrated in her own hand. Shaheen’s writing is often inspired by music she hears, or spending time in nature. |
Mike
Tyrrel |
Chris
Kemp |
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is
the grateful husband of a fine wife and the proud father of two daughters who
have turned their home into a resting place of homeless lizards, snakes, birds
and other creatures. Because the Tyrrel household doesn’t have a television,
Mike tells them adventure stories nightly, one of which is included in
Monterey Shorts. |
has no recollection of his past and is in no particular hurry to comprehend his future. For now he is content to dwell in his uncannily quiet, mist-shrouded apartment complex in Pacific Grove—of which he suspects he may be the only tenant—transcribing half-formed dreams and revealed fragments of someone’s life, perhaps his own.
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Frances J. Rossi
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Pat
Hanson |
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believes her insatiable need to write must stem from her 16th Century French
literary ancestor, Etienne Pasquier, known for his encyclopedic historical
work, Recherche de la France. In keeping with that tradition, she has written
several articles for publication on the history of the Church. "A Flash
of Red" was her first published fiction story.
She serves as web master for the FWOMP site, and works for SandCastles
Toys in the Barnyard on their website. |
has a doctorate in Community Health, a nine-page resume, is a veteran health
and sexuality educator, Chair of the Santa Cruz/Monterey Local 7 of the
National Writers' Union, and owns her own consulting business, Health Matters. |
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And not to be left out, our mascot, Shahdee, the watchful and ever listening, gentle pit bull. |
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