Saturday, November 26, 2011

Author Interview: Benjamin Kane Ethridge

American author Benjamin Kane Ethridge has taken the horror world by storm with his first novel Black & Orange tieing the win for Superior Achievement in a First Novel at last year's Bram Stoker Awards. Ben is holding an online tour for his novel in December and I recently interviewed him about the book and his passion for the horror genre:



Let’s start with the most important question first – what are you working on now? Any new books in the works?

Oh boy. I actually have a few books I’m priming in some form. There’s DUNGEON BRAIN, which is in submissions with a couple major publishers. There’s THE ENDING STREET, which is eagerly awaiting my editor’s pen. And then there’s the sequel to my first novel BLACK & ORANGE entitled NOMADS, which is getting a once over before I send it to my Alpha-Dog, Michael Louis Calvillo.

Why horror?

It’s so honest. What could be truer than our blood, our guts, our disgustingness from within our bodies and minds? Most other genres can only flirt with such topics that tap pure humanness. Horror reminds us of the worst possible outcomes for existence: we can live badly or die badly, and for some poor souls, both. That distinction is fascinating to me and it goes beyond entertainment’s normal effect. For instance, do you lose sleep over a nice romantic comedy or action picture? No, you consume the product, perhaps enjoy the experience, and leave it somewhere back in time. Horror you take forward. It goes with you a while. So there’s no debating the genre is some powerful, long-lasting stuff.

Your novel Black & Orange tied the win for Best First Novel at last year’s Bram Stoker Awards. Saying you must have been beside yourself would have to be an understatement? The achievement must have opened many doors for you?

Yes, without doubt. I think the striking difference would be I’ve been asked to contribute to certain publications, rather than going through the normal submission process. It’s wonderful to have my work really considered with eyes wide open, because, as we all know, it can be quite difficult to rise to the top of the slushies.


How did the concept for Black & Orange come about – and why a Halloween novel?

I wanted to approach Halloween from a Dark Fantasy angle, but I also wanted to write a book for adults to enjoy. The holiday has been harvested endlessly in name of Horror, and it can always provide that spookiness that’s near and dear to our hearts, but what of this other world, this spirit world, that opens up that night? Exploring that was my primary goal.

What does Halloween mean to you?

It’s evolved of course. First, it was about the spookiness that blew its cold breath down my neck. Second, trick or treating. Third, getting the perfect costume to wear to school. Fourth, tying one on at as many great parties as I could stagger into on a given October. And now… well, months after the holiday I have a little girl who can’t stop obsessing about pumpkins and scary witches, so my reason has reverted back to the spookiness, which is a nice place to return to.

Have you been published before and if so where?

Before my novel I had a string of short stories appear in various magazines, e-zines, and other publications of that sort. My latest was in an anthology called Ante Mortem. The story is called “From the Bowels.” And never fear, the story’s just as repugnant as the title would suggest. I was in a strange, Freudian mood when I wrote that one.

You’ve published collaborative works with Michael Louis Calvillo – how do you actually go about creating a work with another author when each author’s voice is so different?

Michael and I work extremely well together. Our goals with language and creativity meet at a golden center. It’s been a while since we’ve written anything jointly, but I surely miss it because doing so reminds me where my thoughts go when pushed in another direction. I lay down a rhythm and he plays a lead over it. Sometimes we harmonize, and sometimes we hit a dissonance, but it always turns out to be a fulfilling process in the end. Our urban fantasy ORDER OF DEATH was an amazing journey. We haven’t found a publisher for it yet, but in time we will, and I do hope we can return to that world soon.

What’s your day job? On your site it says you monitor California’s waterways? Have you ever considered using your job as a reference in your writing?

Definitely. The most horrific places I encounter in water compliance takes me to wastewater treatment plants and other sewer related monsters. There is plenty of fodder for the icky and terrifying in those locales!

Bad Moon Books is well regarded in the small horror press. How was it working with them? What is it about Bad Moon that makes them so good to work with?

Bad Moon wants everybody to be completely happy with the finished product. That’s something you don’t often get from some larger presses because they’re concerned with putting out the most saleable product at all costs to creativity and vision. The hard working staff at Bad Moon Books become your friends in an instant, which I value greatly above all else.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

If you’re on the correct path, every marker on the writer’s journey is a place of varying discontent. An absolutely content writer is the truest fiction I can conceive of. Delusions work wonders for island-bound souls, so choose your mindset wisely, and do remember that being a tad miserable about your situation means the wheels are moving and you’re still looking in the rearview mirrors thinking “Where the hell am I? Where am I going next?” That’s the driver’s seat all writers should sit in.


To learn more about Ben's writing visit his website : http://www.bkethridge.com/ or his blog http://benjikane.livejournal.com/



Sunday, November 20, 2011

Invocation - A Prelude to The Noctuary

As part of my promotion of my new horror novella The Noctuary, I've released the short story "Invocation - A Prelude to The Noctuary" through Smashwords.

The short story introduces Meknok, the leader of the Dark Muses of Hell, the key antagonists in The Noctuary novella.



The short story is FREE for a limited time.

To download the story follow this LINK

For more information on The Noctuary you can visit the website or the publisher's page at Damnation Books.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Author Interview: Rocky Wood (part 2)

In part 2 of my interview with Rocky, he talks about how he became involved with the Horror Writers Association, his struggle with Motor Neurone Disease and his forthcoming authorial works.


How did you get involved in the Horror Writers Association?

When I realized my foreseeable writing future was going to be tied to the horror genre I decided to join the premier writers’ association for that genre, which is of course the HWA. I was welcomed whole-heartedly and immediately.
Quite soon thereafter I got a Bram Stoker Award nomination for ‘Stephen King: Uncollected, Unpublished’ and so I decided to travel to Toronto and attend the Awards. Again, a whole-hearted welcome and I made friends that weekend who are still my good friends in the community today.
I am not one to join and watch other people do work. Over the years I have had leadership positions in political parties, environmental groups, sporting clubs, and organisations like the Australian American Association, mostly when I get involved its ‘boots and all’. So, when I decided to help HWA it was going to be all or nothing.
The first time I ran for Trustee I failed to get elected (yikes!) but I didn’t give up and was elected the following year. Two years later I was tapped for President, presumably on the basis of my efforts.
What many people don’t realize is that today’s HWA is delivered to our members by about 100 (yes, one hundred) volunteers, all working away quietly in the background. They range from the Board to the Web team, through the Juries and on to areas like the Membership Committee and the Bram Stoker Awards Committee.
I credit any success the HWA has had in recent years to its leaders (such as Deb LeBlanc, Vince Liaguno, Marge Simon and Lisa Morton) and to all these volunteers who believe in our mission enough to give up their spare time (and writing time at that!) to help strengthen the Association and deliver our daily needs. And that’s lots more in the planning tray by the way.

Horror has been a massive part of your life...does it still have the same meaning today? It’s changed so much with the evolution of the e-book. Where do you see its future?

That’s the $64,000 question, isn’t it?
Horror is the original genre, probably the original form of oral story-telling around the cave-people’s fire. It’s not going away, ever.
The e-book (and I believe that is only in its infancy) won’t change the basis of the genre – which is story. It just changes the delivery mode, making it even more accessible. It has its dangers – there’s some real crud being self-published, but that will self correct and there’s plenty of really good material coming to light in ebooks that wouldn’t have got published in print.
The ebook has so far to go – the inclusion of hyperlinks, research material, still graphics and live video, all of which will enhance the reader’s experience.
And I am one who believes the printed book will never leave us (maybe I’m an optimist) – even if it means people will use Print on Demand to buy a book they treasure and want to display in their home or office, after they read it electronically. All change brings both opportunity and challenge, and the same applies to the horror genre.
We must try to stay with the curve without over-reacting or missing our chances. We can experiment and fail, that’s okay. To me there are more than enough horror writers and small press publishers to try out all the new opportunities as they come along. Some will lead, some will follow, some will wither away. That’s life.

Last year Horrors: Great Tales of Fear and their Creators graphic novel was published by McFarland, with Glenn Chadbourne as artist. How did the idea come about – and why a graphic novel?


The publisher approached me to write a ‘graphic novel’. Apart from one short story I had never published any fiction, and I had barely attempted to write any. And I told them so, but they were very insistent and asked me to pitch any idea.
This one came out of nowhere – the idea that the great horror tale may not be as unplanned as we might think. I delighted in being able to go back to Mary Shelley’s, Poe’s and Stoker’s original material (among other authors) and present them again, much as they were written (our ‘memory’ of ‘Frankenstein’ or ‘Dracula’ is infected by the various pop culture adaptations) and to weave in the true lives of their creators. Most of these people lived lives full of tragedy (as did most people all around the world before say the end of the Second World War). To bring that to the reader’s attention and weave it into a storyline was a lot of fun.

I knew Glenn Chadbourne through the King community (he has illustrated King on a number of occasions, most spectacularly with Cemetery Dance’s, ‘The Secretary of Dreams’ series). Strangely, Glenn and I were born on the same day in the same year, he in Maine and I in New Zealand. And I was lucky enough to visit him in Maine, stay with him, and enjoy a wonderful lobster dinner while we were working on the book. He is possibly the most brilliant horror illustrator working today and it was a great honor to have him illustrate my prose. And he’s just a wonderful man to boot!

Do you have “another” favourite author?

Tricky question that. I read widely in areas outside horror – particularly biography and history. I have a few historians I read every time their work is published (eg, Martin Gilbert) and I still love to read my old fiction favorites like John Irving (who gets better by the book). I particularly enjoy Simon Winchester’s books, which are a mix of geography, geology and history and full of obscure and interesting facts.

Late last year you were diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease, which degrades the muscles and is invariably fatal, yet amazingly it hasn’t affected your passion as an author and HWA ambassador. How do you manage it?

Yes, I was. When you are told you have a fatal illness and there is no hope of recovery or survival you face that moment of truth. You can curl up in a ball, you can limit your horizons to your family and friends (a very valid choice), or you can continue living life just as before. That last was my choice.
I have always lived life ‘big’. I’ve had a great life – lots of travel all over the world, great friends and wonderful family, and many ‘communities’ in which I have participated (politics, sport and horror among them).
 I had been fortunate enough to see my favorite sporting teams play in great stadiums – the New Zealand All Blacks at home or at Cardiff, Manchester United at Old Trafford, the Boston Red Sox at Fenway. I’d made friends at conventions all over the world – including in the old Yugoslavia. I’d traipsed archaeological sites in the jungles of Mexico with my friend, Erich von Daniken (author of ‘Chariots of the Gods?’). I’d met political, sporting and artistic leaders and worked for the causes I believed in, such as the Australian-American alliance.
And now I was being told that within 2-5 years I would be dead, and that my body would slowly give out in a manner that meant I would lose my ability to speak, walk, type and finally move at all. So I made that choice I mentioned and I also chose not to be defined by the disease. I would define IT – for me at least.
In the time I had left I would continue as much as my normal life as I could and I would actually fit in many of the remaining things some people would call a bucket list (I hate the term).  So I travelled to Egypt and Lahaina (Hawaii), I worked on a couple of books, I tried to spend even more time with family and friends, I went to see Manchester United play in a European final at Wembley, visited Auschwitz and the D-Day/Normandy battlefields, and saw my beloved All Blacks once again crown champions of the World (and in our homeland at that) and so on.
And I am throwing my last best efforts into helping the HWA be a better and more sustainable organisation for my Presidency. I had been elected only months before I was diagnosed and took up the role only eleven days after I received the news. Hopefully, by the time I stand down, we will have grown our membership even more (we are already up from 400 odd to over 650 in a year); we will have bedded down the Jury process for the Bram Stoker Awards; we will have set manuals and processes in place for our major operating areas like the Web Team, the Stokers and the Board; we will have relaunched our Chapters; we will have a whole new website; and we will have delivered on a number of events like the Bram Stoker Awards Weekend last June on Long Island that received high praise from the horror community. We will have an HWA that continues to be grow and be successful long after I am gone.
As to writing, I had a couple more books in me that just had to be delivered. You know how it is – you don’t really have a choice! To answer your question, I guess I have always lived life with passion and I don’t intend that to change just because my body is failing me.
You’ve had a few of your works on King republished as e-books...any new books – King or otherwise - on the horizon?

There’ll be at least two more books from me – another King thing I’m not ready to announce quite yet; and of course I’ve been writing a new graphic novel – ‘Witches!’  
This is a history of the witch persecution craze that infested the ‘Western world’ from about the 13th century into the 17th, before Reason prevailed.
It doesn’t seem to get much discussion in the popular literature world and we thought it was worth going back and trying to explain what happened and why.
‘We’ of course is myself and Lisa Morton (the Bram Stoker Award winning author), who just happens to be Vice President at the Horror Writers Association and nd it’s illustrated by a particularly talented Australian from Rockhampton, by the name of Greg Chapman. Perhaps you know of him?
I am immensely proud of what the three of us have delivered (yes, it’s all but finished) and look forward to seeing the printed work when McFarland publish it early next year.


Read part 1 of this interview HERE

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Author Interview: Rocky Wood (Part 1)

Rocky Wood is a legend in the horror fiction world. Horror Writers Association president, Stephen King expert, author, ambassador and all-round nice guy.

For the past eighteen months or so, I've been working with Rocky on the graphic novel Witches!, which he is co-writing with Bram Stoker Award winner Lisa Morton and I am illustrating. 

In part one of this two-part interview, Rocky talks to me about his passion for all things Stephen King.

Tell me about your first introduction to horror fiction

Unsurprisingly, this was at the hands of Stephen King. I really didn’t read horror in my youth – in fact I don’t believe I read even Poe until my twenties.
My taste up until then ran more to classic fiction like ‘War and Peace’, ‘Gone With the Wind’; historical fiction, including Michener and obscure but brilliant books like ‘Andersonville’ (McKinley Kantor) and ‘A Distant Trumpet’ (Paul Horgan); and political thrillers such as Allen Drury’s ‘Advise and Consent’ series (you’ll note a bias toward American fiction). My guilty pleasure was Robert Ludlum! And I read huge amounts of non-fiction – history and biography in particular. Then came the day I went to the movies to see the latest hit, ‘Carrie’.






When did your “healthy obsession” with Stephen King begin? What was the first book of King’s that you read and what was that moment you knew you would become a lifelong fan?

That night at the movies, of course! It was early in 1977 - the next day was a Saturday and in those days in New Zealand shops were only open until lunchtime. I headed to the three bookshops in downtown Wellington to buy ‘Carrie’ and none had it, so I walked off with ‘Salem’s Lot’. Within a day, Mr King had captured me for a lifetime!
I guess I didn’t know it then – it probably took a book or two more – ‘The Shining’, and then ‘The Stand’ before I knew I needed to read everything King had written and would ever write. As a university student I didn’t have a lot of spare cash, but I bought King, Michener and Ludlum in hardback, as they came out (Clancy supplanted Ludlum when the latter got rather repetitive), which was the indication I was hooked.
I know the big fellow doesn’t like being reminded ‘The Stand’ is a favourite of most fans, bemoaning that ‘Stand-fans’ wouldn’t care if he’d never written another word but that is really not true. ‘The Stand’ welded many of us on and we hung out, we still hang out, for every new book and short story.

What inspired you to want to collate everything King has ever written/created. How did you motivate yourself to even take on such a task?

Well, I’d been a freelance journalist through my university years and did quite well both in terms of getting published and in terms of earnings in those days. I pitched a few books (non-fiction) but didn’t get a bite. Then my corporate career took off and I began concentrating on that and left writing behind. I came back to it twenty years later, at the beginning of this century (wow, think about that, being far enough into a new century that we can talk that way) when I woke up one day and remembered how much I had enjoyed writing.
I am one of those people who can work a 10-12 hour workday and then write for a few hours, at the end of which I feel totally refreshed and relaxed. Writing is cathartic for me. So, when I decided to write again I retained my earlier view that if you write you should get paid for it (not for everyone I know, but as a freelancer you soon learn to focus on consistent, paying markets). I basically developed a business plan for myself that played on my perceived strengths – I knew I could get paid for non-fiction and I knew King’s work intimately; combined with what the market might want – if a book about King couldn’t sell, what would?

Then I made a big mistake (one that paid off). I formed a partnership with David Rawsthorne and Norma Blackburn to compile ‘The Complete Guide to the Works of Stephen King’ – this turned out to be over 6000 pages on compact disk – an ‘electronic book’ (which was unusual in 2003). The mistake was the word ‘Complete’ – I am a perfectionist and having decided to be ‘complete’ meant I would have to somehow access the really obscure King stuff, including his Papers at the University of Maine Fogler Library. And in those Papers are unpublished novels and so on that can only be read with King’s written permission. A daunting task indeed, especially as I live about as far away from Maine as you can get and I had no contact with King.
What to do? I wrote to his office saying I’d like to travel to Maine from Australia and I had allowed three weeks to sit in the Fogler reading the materials there for my project but that I needed SK’s written permission to read the ‘Restricted’ works. To my delight I got a very quick answer from Steve’s wonderful PA (who is now a good personal friend) saying something to the effect that Steve had said if I was silly enough to travel all the way from Australia and sit in a Library for three weeks I was welcome to read the Restricted materials!
The motivation really wasn’t too hard – when I set my mind to something it gets done. And after all I was setting myself a task of reading and summarizing everything written by my favorite author!


How did it feel when you found those obscure pieces King wrote that were thought lost?


Well, it was I who found them, as I travelled to Maine in 2002 and then another five or so times since on my research. It felt fantastic – the whole process was like being an archaeologist – following a range of obscure clues and then determining where to look.
The first lot of a dozen or so stories I found were all in the Fogler – some were in the public boxes and to this day I remain surprised that other researchers hadn’t found them. Each time I found one my spirits lifted, as I had the joy of first reading the story and then revealing the fact that it even existed to the world of King fans.
There is an important point to make here – I believe King to be the equivalent of a Twain or a Dickens. So much of their work may have been lost for all we know and I am determined that should not be the case with King. Future generations of readers, critics and historians should know about as many of the things he’s written as possible, no matter how obscure. Many of them inform his development as a writer, and much of the earlier stuff reflects themes he would later develop in his well-known popular work.
Almost every historian bemoans lost material about their subject (say Lincoln) and I hope I am contributing by documenting works that would otherwise have been lost to the sands of time. I want to make a point here – in the end all this material is actually Stephen King’s – if he wants to bury something or destroy it that is entirely his right. But when he lets it out (say by putting it in his Papers), or when it was published but just ‘lost’ (‘The King Family and the Wicked Witch’ for instance) then I am pretty sure he thinks it fair game. One thing I know about Mr King is that he doesn’t believe in censorship and that would include his own materials gathered from the lost corners of America. 
Perhaps more interesting in terms of finding lost pieces was his non-fiction. Most people don’t know he has published over 800 pieces of non-fiction.

Justin Brooks and I decided to write a book, ‘Stephen King: The Non-Fiction’ that would cover every single piece. There I was again, setting myself a nearly impossible task. Back to Maine and visiting small town libraries, historical societies and so on – looking for material King may have written and published in his high school and university years. And there they were – forty odd new pieces, ranging from a defence of America’s role in Vietnam (!) through to pieces about basketball in his local newspaper.
Again, I am pleased to have found those and brought them to the attention of future researchers. Some of these works might have been lost forever if we hadn’t ‘dug them up’ and put arrangements in place for them to be preserved. Needless to say, I haven’t given up (neither has Justin) and we still regularly turn up ‘lost’ or unknown pieces (largely non-fiction).



Have you ever met Stephen?

I have never met Steve.
This may seem strange but remember I live over ten thousand miles away. During my trips to Maine he has been unavailable and I totally respect that – he recently said even those professionals closest to him often forget that writers need clear time in which to practice their craft. So, I have been very careful to respect his time and his privacy.
He and his office have been incredibly generous to me (in fact, King is incredibly generous full stop – both to the horror and writing communities, and to ‘community’ in general). One of the restricted unpublished novels I read was ‘Sword in the Darkness’ – not a great book, but buried in it was a lengthy chapter (a horror tale) that shone a light on the King that would burst into our lives just a few years after he wrote it. In terms of his development it is an important piece and one of the characters (Edie Rowsmith) deserved a life outside a cardboard box in the Library.
I asked if we could publish that chapter in my first printed book, ‘Stephen King: Uncollected, Unpublished’ and free Edie from her darkness, and King kindly agreed. He later agreed to allow a ‘lost’ poem, ‘Dino’ to be included in the same book. And he allowed me to republished an obscure piece of non-fiction, ‘My Little Serrated Security Blanket’ in ‘Stephen King: The Non-Fiction’. I send him every ‘lost’ piece I find, so that he has a copy.

In part 2 of the interview Rocky will reveal how he became involved with the Horror Writers Association, why he loves horror, his diagnosis of Motor Neurone Disease and what readers can expect from him in the near future.

For more information on Rocky's Stephen King visit his Amazon page