The Writing of Jack Remick

Man Alone: The Dark Book

Man Alone is set in and around a complex Seattle where Rat City meets the Billionaires’ Club. Zene, a man alone, lives in a chaotic, sexually disruptive and violence-wrecked world. His life ruined after a chain of disappointments and falls-the fruits of his violent nature, Zene runs into Karizma, a love-creature from his past, and he’s smitten again, knowing all the while that for him, there’s no future in love. Not your basic romance, for sure.

No Century for Apologies

Pieces

The creative impulse comes. How do you know that it has to be a poem? What if it’s a piece of sculpture? or a novel? You are the instrument of the language. How do you know that the meaning of the impulse can’t be accomplished by going in and doing the dishes?

PIECES is not a collection of poems, not a collection of stories, but PIECES of the craft in fiction, poetry, essay, and workshop.

What Do I Know

The essays in this book center around the questions of love, wisdom, and knowledge through time. What is love in the twenty-first century? Is there a wisdom to marriage? Are our bodies “naturally wise?” What is the nature of orgasm? The meaning of sex? The author uses examples from ancient authors such as Pascal, Marcus Aurelius, and Descartes to clarify the issue of the decay of wisdom and the relation of nature to science, while at the same time drawing on present-time social and cultural mores to ask the enigmatic question-Is there such a thing as “stupid wisdom?” This is not a how-to book on becoming wise, but an interrogation of human wisdom in the Anthropocene. Will the “speaking word-ape” destroy itself as well as the environment it lives in?

Maxine

Maxine and Berle are on the run with Charlie’s half a million dollars and a shrunken head in a wooden box. Charlie wants Maxine back, he wants his money back, and he wants Berle dead.

Gabriela and the Widow

The Widow (La Viuda) is ninety-two years old. She lives in a house filled with photos and coins, jewels and a sable coat. Aware that her memory is failing but burning with desire to record the story of her life on paper, she hires Gabriela, a ninteen-year-old Mixteca from Mexico. Gabriela is one of the few survivors of a massacre and treacherous journey to El Norte. Gabriela and the Widow is a story of chaos, revenge, and change: death and love, love and sex, and sex and death. Gabriela seeks revenge for the destruction of her village. The Widow craves balance for the betrayals in her life. In the end, the Widow gives Gabriela the secret of immortality.

Valley Boy

Ricky Edwards lives, works, and plays in Centerville, a small California town in the middle of the Valley. Ricky has a gift for music but he’d rather fight, drink beer, chase girls, and debeak turkeys. He debeaks turkeys because he wants a Lifters Car Club jacket with red lettering on the back. He fights because his long-time pal, Linard Polk, teaches him about violence, fast cars, and guns – which drives Teresa, Ricky’s hyper-religious mother, nuts. She wants Ricky to escape the legacy of his daddy, an Okie skirt chaser who abandoned the family for a honky-tonk preacher’s daughter gone bad. If Ricky can just get out of Centerville, maybe he can make his mark.

Valley Boy is Book Two of Remick’s California Quartet Series.

Blood

Ex-mercenary Hank Mitchell is doing five years hard time for stealing a tubful of women’s underwear. In prison, Mitch falls like a bear for his young cellmate. In the prison library Mitch discovers the novels of Genet and the Marquis de Sade and is inspired to write his own story – a saga of family deception, sexual obsession, and contract killing – to atone for all the blood he’s spilled. But now his family wants him out and back in the killing game, a game where the rules are about to change.

Satori

Jack Remick is a writer and teacher. As a young man, he worked as a tunnel rat, a bus driver, a house painter, a social worker, a retail clerk, and waited tables at the UC Berkeley Men’s Faculty Club where he rubbed shoulders with Nobel Laureates, scoundrels of all stripes, and international students from a dozen countries who taught him about cultural relativism. Remick learned to write poetry from J.S. Moodey in Centerville, California, and from Thom Gunn at UC Berkeley. When he was young and idealistic, he dropped out of Cal-Berkeley and spent time chasing rainbows in South America. When that didn’t work out, he repatriated, got degrees from Berkeley, San Francisco State University and UC Davis where he specialized in romance linguistics and French literature. At Davis, while studying with Jarvis Bastian, a psychologist, Remick discovered Claude Lévi-Strauss, psycholinguistics, and C.S. Peirce—discoveries that changed his life, his writing, and his mind. Remick reads and writes French and Spanish. For a short time, he was the only Spanish speaking social worker in Fresno County. Now that he is older and wiser, he has given up travel in favor of the sedentary life of a writing guru to hordes of writers in Seattle. He enjoys that very much and is very proud of the writers who practice the discipline. Remick taught fiction and screenwriting in University of Washington Certificate programs. He served for several years on the editorial board of Pig Iron magazine as fantasy editor, contributing editor and assistant editor.

Jack Remick

As a writer approaches the visionary techniques of Late Style, art changes from exercises in the craft of massaging the Ego to the transformative language of the unconscious, the archetypes, the structural reality of myth.

Art is salvation ever more so in the Late Style which is that time when the artist, in silence, frees the mind from oppressive and expected cultural-historical restraints of form and content to unleash a newness that both confounds and instructs. Without art, we are members of a tribe of efficient killers. I am not a member of that tribe.

Free Master Class with Jack Remick

Do you have a passion for writing, but find yourself struggling to begin, persist, or complete your creative works? If you’re nodding your head, then you’re in for a treat! Unleash your inner writer and join us for an extraordinary journey into the world of storytelling! Acclaimed author Jack Remick invites you to a FREE Master Class, hosted every Tuesday from 1-3 PM Pacific Time via Zoom.

In this exclusive Master Class, Jack Remick will share his wealth of knowledge and experience, taking you on a deep dive into the art of writing. Here’s what you can expect:

 

Introduction to the Craft: Jack will kick things off with valuable insights on how to start writing, ignite your creative spark, and overcome the infamous writer’s block.

Keeping the Momentum: Learn the secrets of keeping your writing momentum going, ensuring you stay inspired and motivated to craft your best work.

Finishing What You Start: Jack will unveil his strategies for completing a body of work – the ultimate goal of any writer. Discover the techniques that will help you bring your creative projects to a satisfying conclusion.

Live Workshop Session: What makes this Master Class truly unique is the opportunity for you to have your work personally reviewed and workshopped by Jack Remick. Submit a piece of your writing ahead of time, and during each session, he will select one piece for live discussion and improvement. It’s like having a bestselling author as your mentor!

Don’t miss out on this chance to receive personalized guidance from a seasoned writer. This Master Class promises to be an invaluable experience that will help you unlock your writing potential.

Date: Every Tuesday, Starting January 2, 2024

Time: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM (Pacific Time)

Location: Zoom (Details will be provided upon registration)

Ready to embark on this incredible writing journey? Sign up now and be part of the Master Class that could change your writing life forever!

The Latest from Jack Remick

No Century for Apologies, Praise and Award Cover

No Century for Apologies Set in Ayahuantu, second poorest country in the mid-continent, No Century for Apologies finds Castle trapped in a battle between corporations for possession of the country's lone valuable natural resource. Now on the shortlist for the Hoffer...

PIECES

The creative impulse comes. How do you know that it has to be a poem? What if it's a piece of sculpture? or a novel? You are the instrument of the language. How do you know that the meaning of the impulse can't be accomplished by going in and doing the dishes? PIECES...

Review of What Do I Know?

What Do I Know? Reviewed by Jack Smith Jack Remick, novelist, poet, and nonfiction writer, arranges his current book according to calendar dates, beginning with January 5 and ending on June 16—or, beginning in the winter and ending in the spring.  What we have...

Book Launch–Media Event

September 19th Author Event by Lisa | Sep 19, 2021 | Book Promotion | 0 comments Jack Remick: What Do I Know? Virtual Event The essays in What Do I Know? ask questions about love, wisdom and knowledge. What is Love in the twenty-first century? Is...

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