Biography:
"I know I probably shouldn't be bragging about this, " Christian says with a sheepish look. "But my resume is twelve pages long."
Not unusual for a guy who can only keep still while working on his numerous novels, or a short story, or planning something that requires his
full attention. And what requires all that attention?
"There are so many stories in my head clamoring to get out that at times I feel as if I need more than one of me to keep up. There's a reason I
have the largest head in the world, I think. Besides that, boredom is anathema to me. There's nothing worse than to not have anything to do.
I never understood people who claim, 'I'm bored!' Really? I want to yell at them. Then get off your ass and DO something!"
Thank goodness Christian drives only himself that hard and doesn't expect those around him to try and maintain his breakneck pace. Well,
most times. He does have a tendency to get frustrated if people can't keep up with his lightning-quick though process.
"My sister said to me the other day, 'You're the smartest person I know.' I disagree with her. I'm more clever than book smart, and make
connections between things that others don't seem to see. That doesn't make me smart, just, um, weird."
Is it any wonder he identifies most with cartoon characters?
He laughs at that. "Yeah, it's funny. I used to have the biggest crush on Kimba the White Lion (for those of you who remember that show), and
then when Jonny Quest came along, I thought I was related to him. This fantasy lasted for a long time...at least until Jessica Rabbit was
created, then it was a full-fledged obsession. Now I most identify with Calvin from Calvin and Hobbes...even as an adult. Freakazoid is
another favorite of mine, as are Pinky and the Brain, and the Animaniacs."
So, does he write comedy?
"Nope. Not at all. In fact, my friends who are subjected to reading my stuff are amazed at how completely and utterly DARK my writing is. It's
not that I see the worst in human nature, but have experienced a lot of what people do to each other, purposely or not. A few of the more
squeamish members of my critique group have actually said that I scare them because of how edgy and intense my work is. I don't blame
them. Isn't that the idea behind the idea Tears of a Clown? My sense of humor in life masks a well of darkness that comes out when I sit
down to write."
Christian's early life was not optimal. Coming from a broken home, that factor, more than anything else in his life, shaped his outlook on the
world.
"I ran away from home many times before the age of fourteen. The early attempts were practice runs for the actual event that took place in
late May of my fourteenth year. I had no real idea how to survive in the world, nor any plans on where I was headed. I just knew that I
couldn't stay with my family any longer if I wanted to survive. So I fled."
Even then, he barely made it. A killer tornado in Grand Island, Nebraska, which took the lives of 150 people, spared him. Hitching rides
cross-country is dangerous for an innocent, gullible kid like he was.
"There were some people who tried to get away with stuff with me. I learned quickly."
He landed in Boulder, Colorado, on the eve of his fifteenth birthday, tired, exhausted, and homeless. Though he had an aunt who lived
there, he chose not to stay with her, feeling that he'd be caught or arrested for being a runaway. So he lived on the streets for the first few
years, learning survival skills that have carried him into adulthood.
"Though much of the stuff I learned living on the streets is no longer usable by me now, it was an eye-opening period of my life that really
shaped who I am. I found out that I could rely on my own intellect and cunning to get by. It has taken a lot of work to rid myself of those
unnecessary ways of living, and I work at it every day. But isn't that the joy of becoming an adult?"
Currently at work on a couple novels and screenplays, he considers himself lucky.
"To have the ability and skill to give voice to my stories has been a saving grace. Without that outlet, my head would explode."
We hope that doesn't happen. Really.
Publishing
The Bark Magazine--Essays
"Paranoia"--Joseph Finder (Review)
New Yorker Magazine-- "Crazy" Poem
"Pull The Trigger"--Essay Anthology
Highlights For Children/magazine--Children's Fiction
On The Edge/Magazine--Articles/Essays
Babel Magazine--Essays
"Time And Tide"--Poetry chapbook
Boulder Weekly Magazine--articles
Boulder Daily Camera--Articles
Amazon.com--Reviews
Barnes and Noble.com--Reviews
Grants/Fellowships/Awards
2004--1st Place/Creative Non-Fiction
Pikes Peak Writers for
Digging Holes In A Lake--A Sort-of Memoir"
2004--Grant/Boulder Arts Commission
"Digging Holes In A Lake--A Sort-of Memoir"
2003--Nominated for "Ploughshares: Emerging Writers" issue by
author Catherine Ryan Hyde ("Pay It Forward", "Electric God", "Walter's
Purple Heart") for short story, "Cold"
2003--Arts In Education Grant from Boulder Arts Commission for The
Writers' Salon
2003--Finalist Colorado Gold Conference/General Fiction: "Canary
In A Coalmine"
2002--Awarded the Cami Butler Memorial Scholarship for Writing
Screenplays
The Locksmith--Original Screenplay
(collaboration with award-winning screenwriter Karen Albright Lin)
Red Ball--Screenplay
Contributing Writer
The Twitch of an Eye--Original Screenplay/Romantic Comedy
(collaboration with award-winning screenwriter Karen Albright Lin)
The Space Between Breaths--Original Screenplay/Supernatural
Thriller (collaboration with award-winning screenwriter
Karen Albright Lin)
The Universe At Night--Original Screenplay/Sci-fi Thriller
Novel-Length Fiction/Non-Fiction
Perpendicular--Fiction/Novel
Canary In A Coalmine--Fiction/Novel
Listen For The Color Of The Sky--Historical Fiction/Novel
Someday Never Comes--Fiction/Novel
Digging Holes In A Lake: A Sort-Of Memoir--Novel/Non-Fiction
Eternity, Tennessee (Book One)--Fiction/Novel Series
Stumbling Toward Eternity (Book Two)--Fiction/Novel Series
Throwing Rocks At God (Book Three)--Fiction/Novel Series
Dream of Eternity (Book Four)--Fiction/Novel Series
Forever and Ever, Amen (Book Five)--Fiction/Novel Series
Short Fiction/Novellas
The Present--Short Fiction
Concrete Broke Your Fall--Short Fiction
Vengeance--Short Fiction
Heaven For Sale--Novella
Mailbox Assassin--Short Fiction
Cold--Short Fiction
Symmetry--Short Fiction
The Memory of Inanimate Objects--Novella
Let's Start With The Dog--Short Fiction
Blame It On The World, Or What's Left Of It--Short Fiction
The Price of a Memory--Short Fiction
Educational
The Writers' Salon--1998-2004 -
Founder/Facilitator
"Writing Fabulous Fiction!"--2004 -
Facilitator
Pikes Peak Writer's Conference 2004 -
Moderator
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