Showing posts with label Historical Lovecraft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Historical Lovecraft. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Historical Lovecraft Reviewed

Historical Lovecraft has been reviewed again, both on Amazon and a few times on Goodreads. The Amazon review, written by Tristan J. Tarwater, mentions my story by name. To quote: My personal faves were 'Black Hill,' an interesting take on an oil operation, 'Deus Ex Machina,' especially as an ex theatre geek, 'Shadows of the Deepest Jade,'...honestly, there wasn't a story that I didn't enjoy, though there were ones I definitely preferred over others. (Emphasis mine) Click through to read the rest. Certainly a bit of a morale booster.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Historical Lovecraft Reviewed

It seems that the first review of Historical Lovecraft has come in here. The twist? It's in Italian. Thanks to google translate, however, I can pretend to know what's going on. What's even cooler than the idea of a book I'm in getting a review is if it's a good review - and this one is. David says:

The entire selection is a seriously good average - and is basically on what you assess the anthologies: the number of stories above the average level.

(The oddities in grammar are, obviously, the result of the translation, not David's prose.)

No stories besides William Meikle's get an individual shout out, but I can live with that because Meikle's tale was, indeed, fantastic, and because - without any contradictory evidence - I'll just go and assume that my story was in the group "above the average level." 'Cause why not, eh?

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Bibliography

SHORT FICTION

Beyond the Shrinking, published in Beneath Ceaseless Skies
Read

Deus Ex Machina, published in Historical Lovecraft.

The Dream Journal of a Would-Be Insomniac, published in Horror D'oeuvres
Electronic

The Dummy,published in the January 2012 issue of Bards and Sages Quarterly
Print/Electronic

A Game of Distance, published in Plasma Frequency Magazine's third issue
Print/Electronic

Hope Immortal, published in Dark Stars: The Year's Best Science Fiction Short Stories
Electronic

Legwork, published in the first issue of Fantastic Frontiers Magazine
Electronic

The Metamorphosis of Jane Doe, originally published by Linger Fiction (now, alas defunct). Reposted on the Rack as a sample.
Read

Painting Nothing, in The Gloaming
Read

Solo, published by Interstellar Fiction
Read

Strings, published by Eschatology Journal
Read

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Me, Reynolds, and an Interview

I've been interviewed over at Joshua Reynolds's blog, Hunting Monsters. Like his interview with me yesterday, it's a totally serious affair with absolutely no wise cracks or levity. We talk about my writing process, Historical Lovecraft, baboons, and necromancers. Check it out.

 (This week's review – delayed by the sheer snaziness of the Katz/Reynolds interview bonanza – will be up on Friday)

Monday, May 2, 2011

Interview: Joshua Reynolds

The Facebook face of Joshua Reynolds...
is he man or beast?
Joshua Reynolds is the author of The Far Deep from Historical Lovecraft. His story can best be summed up as a mixture of John of Austria dancing, a knight and his man-at-arms fighting Turks and undersea monstrosities, and witty dialogue. If your first thought upon reading that was that you should go read the story, you'd be correct. If your second thought was that Joshua Reynolds would give a completely dry and serious interview, you would, alas, be wrong.

1. What should readers think when they hear Joshua Reynolds? Why should they sprint to the nearest bookstore/online bookseller/ezine and read everything you've written?

Ideally they should think ‘Hey, I ought to buy that!’, but since that’s not likely I’ll simply say that I write stories about steampunk cyborgs fighting werewolves on the moon in between blatant Lovecraft pastiches and the occasional heartwarming story about Aztec detectives and Italian spies fighting midget assassins dressed as chimney sweeps.  If any of that sounds good, you’ll enjoy my stuff.  If not, well…buy it anyway.

2. What about Historical Lovecraft intrigued you?

Well, the title for starters…it’s got two words I love to hear attached to anthologies-‘Historical’ and ‘Lovecraft’. And it’s a good fit…Lovecraft was all about the weight of history and ancient evils and centuries old secrets.

Also, people with additional melanin content in their epidermal composition being on his lawn and/or looking at him funny. But let’s just concentrate on the former, shall we?

3.  What's your favorite story in the collection (that is not, to avoid awe inspiring amounts of narcissism and/or nepotism, written by someone in this email conversation)?

It's a toss-up between Nelly Geraldine Garcia-Rosas' "Ahuizotl" and Aaron Polson's "Ngiri's Catch". 

4.. How did you choose the Battle of Lepanto? Is it something you've always known about, or did you research it for the story?

Both, actually! I’m a sucker for history, especially as it relates to the Mediterranean, and Lepanto was a focal point of several books I was reading at the time. It was one of the largest naval battles in history with a cast of characters that would make Joe Abercrombie and George R. R. Martin weep with envy. It had pirates, zealots, knights, pirates, cannons, pirates and pirates. 

Did I mention the pirates?

5. How important was historical accuracy to you when writing?

It ranges from ‘Very’ to ‘Historical what now?’ depending on the story. Honestly, I’ve come to believe that the concept of historical accuracy is, at best, wishful thinking. Every time we learn something new about the past, it changes what is considered ‘accurate’. Basically, as long as you’ve got the big generalities right, there’s little reason to sweat the small stuff.

6. What're your general writing process?

First, I turn on the computer. Then I stare at it blankly for ten minutes or so. Then I start writing. That’s it really…it’d be nice to have a process, but really, I just write until the story is finished. Then I move on to the next story.

7. Do you have anything coming up to keep an eye out for?

Well, if you really want to know…besides a number of short stories appearing in various anthologies and magazines, I’ve got two books coming out later this year. The first, from Airship 27/Cornerstone Books is called THE MARK OF TERROR and features Jim Anthony, Super-Detective, an old public domain pulp character, going up against a cult of killers who worship the ancient Greek god of terror. The second, from Pulpwork Press, is called DRACULA UNBOUND!-it’s a sequel to my novel DRACULA LIVES!, released in October of last year.

Oh, and in 2012, the Black Library will release KNIGHTS OF THE BLAZING SUN, my first (and hopefully not the last) tie-in novel for that company. 

8. What's your dream publication?

My dreams are crass, mercenary things so I’m going to say one that pays me more money than is entirely ethical in today’s economy.

Seriously, I want to roll naked in a pile of cash. Any publisher that can make that happen is the corporate entity of my small, sad dreams.

9. What's your advice to someone trying to publish short stories?

Ha! First, find someone both smarter and more successful to ask that question of. Second, it’s dead easy to get published…just write and submit. Repeat ad infinitum, ad nauseum. Third, when an editor asks for changes, don’t argue, especially if there’s a paycheck in it.

Really, just write. And write. And write. Keep writing until you sell something, and then write some more. Write what you want to read, and what you hate to read and what editors ask for and what seems to be the current ‘thing’. It all works, as long as you write and submit.

10. Favorite Lovecraft tales?

“Pickman’s Model” is the big one. I also like “The Dunwich Horror” and “At the Mountains of Madness”. Oh, and “The Hound”. Flying bat-dog-zombie-sorcerers are awesome!

11. Let’s say you meet someone who’s never read horror, but is curious about the genre. If you had three books to try and convert them, what would you give them?

Ooh, tough one. Lessee…THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, by Shirley Jackson. THE GRIN OF THE DARK, by Ramsey Campbell.  Aaaaand THE RED TREE, by Caitlin Kiernan. If I had four I’d toss in something by Guy N. Smith just for contrast.

12. Any final words?

I was once bitten by a camel. It’s an experience that still haunts me to this day. 

Friday, April 1, 2011

Historical Lovecraft Preorders

Are you interested in a book of Lovecraft-inspired horror stories stretching back throughout history? A book that happens to contain stories by E. Catherine Tobler, Josh Reynolds, William Meikle, Jesse Bullington, and quite a few more fantastic authors, all gathered to present you excellent tales of supernatural misfortune, disaster, and woe? A list of authors that would not, of course, be complete without good ol' me? 

Of course you're interested. The question we face today is not do you want to read some great fiction? because that's obvious (you do, in case you're wondering). The question we must face is: do you want to read great fiction while shaving twenty percent off the cover price? If you answered yes, you'll be glad to know that Historical Lovecraft is now available for preorders. Buy as many as you want. I promise I won't get mad if you get a copy for everyone you know.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Historical Lovecraft: Table of Contents

The table of contents for the upcoming Historical Lovecraft anthology, which I just happen to be in, has now been released. The contributors are as follows:

ANCIENT HISTORY
The God Lurking in Stone, Andrew G. Dombalagian
The Seeder from the Stars, Julio Toro San Martin
If Only to Taste Her Again, E. Catherine Tobler
Deus ex Machina, Nathaniel Katz
Shadows of the Darkest Jade, Sarah Hans
The Chronicle of Aliyat son of Aliyat, Alter S. Reiss

MIDDLE AGES
Silently, Without Cease, Daniel Mills
The Good Bishop Pays the Price, Martha Hubbard
An Interrupted Sacrifice, Mae Empson
Pralaya: The Disaster, Y Wahyu Purnomosidhi
The Saga of Hilde Ansgardottir, Jesse Bullington
The City of Ropes, Albert Tucher

MODERN ERA
Inquisitor, William Meikle
The Far Deep, Josh Reynolds
City of Witches, Regina Allen
Ahuizotl (TRANSLATED), Nelly Geraldine GarcĂ­a-Rosas
The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins, Molly Tanzer
The Second Theft of Alhazrad's Manuscript, Bradley H. Sinor
A Meeting On The Trail To Hot Iron, Joe Pulver
Black Leaves, Mason Ian Bundschuh
What Hides and What Returns, Bryan Thao Worra
Ngiri's Catch, Aaron Polson
An Idol for Emiko, Travis Heermann
Black Hill, Orrin Grey
Red Star, Yellow Sign, Leigh Kimmel
Manuscript Found in a Trunk (REPRINT, TRANSLATED), Meddy Ligner

An interesting list. Especially that Katz guy. Totally awesome guy, him/me. The book's coming out at the end of April. It will be fourteen dollars for a print copy, or five for an e-copy, with a 20% discount for the first two weeks. You know you want a copy.

It would probably be a shade off to review an anthology I'm in, but I will talk about it again in the future. I'll mention when it comes out and perhaps talk a bit about my favorite (non me-written) stories.