Tony Nesca’s free-flow writing draws the reader into a tragi-comedy of epic proportions.
Calabritto
by Tony Nesca
Genre: Literary Fiction
Written in Tony Nesca’s classic free-flow, stream of consciousness, the prose itself mesmerizes and captivates, drawing the reader into a tragi-comedy that unfolds an intricate tapestry of human experience.
About a Girl
by Tony Nesca
Genre: Literary Fiction
About a girl is a short novel that begins with two strangers, a man and a woman, who meet at a bus-stop and go on an impromptu bar-crawl on a cool, winter day. Taking place in twelve hours it recounts the oddball, hardcore, characters they meet and their increasing emotional connection as they fall for each other almost immediately. Infused with sexual energy, pop-culture references, intellectual debate and literary allusions this is an unapologetic, uncensored look at our society through the eyes of the outsider.
It is written in a free-flow, spontaneous style with long unhindered sentences that enable the reader’s eye to glide down the page as the story flows and moves to an urban beat of strippers, punk rockers and nightlife happenings.
Tony Nesca was born in Torino, Italy in 1965 and moved to Canada at the age of three. He was raised in Winnipeg but relocated back to Italy several times until finally settling in Winnipeg in 1980. He taught himself how to play guitar and formed an original rock band playing the local bars for several years. At the age of twenty-seven he traded his guitar for a Commodore 64 and started writing seriously. He has published six chapbooks of stories and poems (which he used to sell straight out of his knapsack at local dives and bookstores), seven novels, six books of poetry and stories, a spoken word album, a graphic novel co-written with Nicole Nesca, and has been an active contributor to the underground lit scene for 28 years, being published in innumerable magazines both online and in print.
Tony Nesca and his wife Nicole I. Nesca have one question – where have all the fearless artists gone? Unable to find a mainstream publishing outfit that suited their taste for grittier writing, the Nescas formed their own – Screamin’ Skull Press where they have published 19 distinct works through their Indie Press, and their journey toward a more rebellious future for literature continues.
Screamin’ Skull Press exclusively publishes the worrk of the Nescas – raw, electric and with a free flowing mix of prose and poetry, their books are explorations of freedom, art, death, love, literary experimentation and living how one chooses.
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This is the Calabritto/About A Girl online book tour. In conjuction with this virtual trip I was asked to write a few insights into these 2 books, where they came from, style, ideas, why the hell I would write anything at all, and so on…
It is the 20th anniversary of About A Girl, so I’d like to say a few words on its origin.
It started as an exercise to fight a writing block, being stalled, for the 1st time, on my 2nd novel. I started thinking about this particular day at a bus stop in the neighborhood I grew up in and off it went. It was initially published as a short story in a couple of now defunct lit-mags, but a few weeks later, it grabbed me by the throat and burst out like an energy surge, and in 8 weeks, it was a novel. It is still my best seller, though that’s not saying much in the world of underground writing – it sold a bigger handful than the rest, is about all you can say.
Sometimes writing can be a chore, a real pain in the ass. This wasn’t one of them. It was a pure joy to write, coming out easy and fierce. I rewrote it only once, the hell with perfection, this was pure stream of consciousness, a garage band banging it out, any other rewrites, any other corrections, would have ruined the entire thing, the very spirit of the book. What a blast it was.
20 years ago, in an 18th floor apartment, in Winnipeg’s inner-city, hot summer nights, sirens running the streets lighting up the room
I like the blurb. Sounds really good.