Showing posts with label Trent Zelazny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trent Zelazny. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

EVIL JESTER DIGEST VOL. 2: Behind the Stories, with Trent Zelazny, Gene O'Neill, Holly Newstein, Simon McCaffery, Mark Allan Gunnells, John Michael Kelley, Eric J. Guignard, and John Palisano

I still can't get over what an amazing year 2012 has been for me. I'm extremely grateful to everyone who has purchased my work, and for all the kind words and encouragement I've received along the way. 2012 saw the publication of two of my novels, two novellas, and two anthologies I edited. I made 2 professional fiction sales and had the honor of working as the editor of three remarkable novels: Inheritance by Joe McKinney, Seraphim by Jon Michael Kelley, and The Quarry by Mark Allan Gunnells. I also oversaw the production of more than a dozen fine books from Evil Jester Press, with a range of duties, including graphic design, formatting, proof-reading, contract negotiations, slush pile warrior, etc. What a year! I don't know if I can match that pace in 2013, or even if I should try, but I do know I'm in a far better place than I was in 2011, and I'm grateful to so many people.

I can think of no more fitting way to express that gratitude than to turn my blog over to 8 talented writers, all of whom have stories in Evil Jester Digest, Vol. 2, one of the projects I alluded to above. Working with these folks, and so many others, has been a special gift. So it is only fitting that I give a gift (courtesy of Evil Jester Press) to those of you reading my blog. Here it is...

 
The Amazon link to download Evil Jester Digest, Vol. 2 is here.
 
Included are 12 dark tales from masters and rising stars of genre fiction. It is our hope that you enjoy the book. Of course, Amazon and Goodreads reviews are appreciated, as well as good old-fashioned word of mouth. But the most important thing is that you know how much we appreciate your consideration.

Without further ado, I would now like to turn the stage over to eight of the anthology's esteemed contributors. They have a few words to share about their stories.

 

Eric J. Guignard…

I try to write non-familiar monster trope pieces, but occasionally I like to slip back into the warm comfort of my favorite traditional horror genre: Zombies. The writing industry is glutted with zombie fiction, and I didn’t want to put out another gore-filled undead slasher. I wrote my story, “A Curse and a Kiss” with zombies taking more of an incidental or background role. The story itself is a variation of the fairytale “Beauty and the Beast,” told through the eyes of a servant. I have always been a lifelong fan of Grimms' Fairy Tales and Aesop's Fables. The original telling of “Beauty and the Beast” is much darker than the “Disney-fied” version, and I wanted to bring the story back to its original tone and message, though I changed the curse placed on the Prince to becoming transformed into the “Living Dead” rather than an animalistic beast.
(above) Eric J. Guignard and Gene O'Neill at KillerCon 2012
 

Gene O’Neill…

"Coyote Gambit" is the earliest of the Cal Wild stories. The series actually begins rolling with the introduction of the character, Karch, who is nicknamed the Armless Conductor. But this part of the series is actually quite along in time after The Collapse. So a novel down the road, The Confessions of St. Zach, will begin right after The Collapse and develop the early part of the series. But "Coyote Gambit" is the only immediate short story. The series really took form after I decided that we needed a modern argument of the philosophy underlying McCarthy's fine novel The Road. I like the book but don't agree with the writer's view of human nature in crisis. Cal Wild books and stories support my view of human nature. But "Coyote Gambit," especially the gruesome implication of the ending, is closer the harder edged view of The Road than my more humanistic beliefs. It's not a story for the faint hearted. 

 

Mark Allan Gunnells...

 

Let's face it, we're all addicted to technology. I certainly am. However, I also grew up in a time when no one had cell phones, there was no texting, no Facebook, no Instant Messaging. Therefore, as much as I love technology, I also feel I could live without it if I had to. However, when I look at young people today, kids that were born "plugged in" as it were, I wonder...could they survive if their technology was taken away? I decided I wanted to explore this in a story, and satire seemed the best way to go. Taking the idea and stretching it to an extreme and absurd to get my point across. I was happy with the result, hopefully readers will like it as well. 

(above) Mark Allan Gunnells, indulging his sweet tooth at any cost
 

Trent Zelazny…

Trent has two terrific stories in Evil Jester Digest, Vol. 2...
 
 Slink: Though in a contemporary setting, this was an attempt to write a story that might have hopefully been accepted and published by Black Mask, maybe in the forties, at some point before its decline and eventual demise.
Windows in the Wreckage: The story came to me after having a dream about being stranded in the woods. As I’m not a big camper or hiker these days, I asked myself, “How in the world would I get stranded in the woods? What would take me there, and what, in my own reality, would be something horrible I'd be terrified I might have to face?”
(left)The great Trent Zelazny ensconced in kitties!
 
 

Holly Newstein…


"Kristall Tag" had its genesis in what I learned about the fall of Berlin and the invading Russian Army. 

Berlin, when the Russians took it, was a city of women and children. The Russian soldiers were capable of great kindness—and terrible savagery. All Germans were tainted with Hitler's evil, even those who had no choice in the matter. The Russians wanted revenge for what the Nazi Army did to their countrymen. I wanted to explore the journey of one innocent in this maelstrom of death and brutality, and how her actions reverberated across the rest of her life. And because I am a horror writer as well as a history geek, there had to be a touch of the supernatural involved...
 

(above) Holly Newstein Hautala, Rick Hautala, and Peter Giglio
at World Horror 2012
 

 

Jon Michael Kelley…

 


“The Tardy Hand of Miss Tangerine” was inspired by a tattoo proclaiming an apocalyptic date that has, coincidentally enough, just passed. A few years ago, I’d been dragged to my first metaphysical fair, and it was there that I was introduced to the wearer of that prescient ink. She was a young woman, strikingly plain, who looked more like Beatrix Potter  than she did Helena Blavatsky. That was, until I saw that final Mayan calendar date running along the length of her lower right arm. At first glance, I’d initially thought it was a Bible verse. Silly me. You see, she was giving a rather expensive reading to my companion, so I had the opportunity to look again—and I then realized what that proverb was actually proclaiming. I passed on the Tarots, having by then decided that my money might be best spent buying freeze dried food, bottled water, and the blueprints to a bomb shelter made for two. Then a story started forming…
(above) Jon Michael Kelley at AnthoCon 2012

 

John Palisano…


What if there were a major outbreak happening in our sister country Mexico? How would we guard our borders? With what? Would we help, or just protect our own interests?
 
And if said outbreak had fangs, then what?
 
One young man discovers the illegal alien task force he's joined is just a cover, and that the border fence being constructed is crucial rather than just misguided patriotism.
 
With "VAMPIRO," playing with themes of xenophobia and self-loathing seemed interesting. Some have indicted the story as a simple comment that illegals are vampires. Take a bigger bite. There's more under the thin, translucent skin.
 
(above) John Palisano, Brad C. Hodson, Peter Giglio, and Eric Shapiro
at Dark Delicacies in Burbank, California. Should we start a band?
 

Simon McCaffery…


The genesis of "Vanishing Act" was an article I read in the mid-1990s about poor deluded Sarah Winchester and her bizarre Mystery House. Writers are almost always voracious readers, and there's an unconscious filter that is always sifting through everything for the kernel of a new tale, like a whale sucking in thousands of gallons of seawater for specks of zooplankton. (below) Simon McCaffery, working on his tan.

I was fascinated by the true story of an educated, wealthy, devout young woman whose mind is stripped and driven to such extremes by grief and a fear of the afterlife. I knew I wanted to weave it into a story, and I made a couple of poor attempts, but eventually set it aside. The vivid story of Sarah and her mad, marvelous house of many doors remained in my imagination. I also had toyed with a potential novella or novel about a desperate father searching for a vanished son, and the idea of certain very rare individuals capable of conjuring unseen doorways between worlds, driven by an intense desire to escape from unhappy lives or relentless will to be reunited with the lost. And these ideas finally collided, with the resulting story.

I'm thrilled that it worked for Peter and the Evil Jester Press crew, and proud to appear among so many talented writers I admire. The human heart is a funny thing, and fear and obsession can lodge there and grow like dark cancers. And how many doors do we open and pass through in a lifetime, without a second thought? 
 




 
 

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

THE NEXT BIG THING: STEALING NIGHT

Last week, Simon McCaffery tagged me in The Next Big Thing. He was tagged by Weston Ochse. This is a daisy-chain series of blog posts in which authors answer questions about their upcoming or latest works. 

Check out past posts from Simon McCaffery, John Skipp, and Weston Ochse. And check out next week's posts from those who accepted my invitation to participate: Trent Zelazny, Kate Jonez, James Grady, and Gwen Perkins.
 
 
 
What is the working title of your next book?

Stealing Night

Where did the idea come from for the book?

One: I had a number of disquieting dreams following a bad car accident. They all involved oncoming headlights. Two: Having recently created the fictional town of Sunfall, Nebraska in my novella Sunfall Manor, I was dying to know more about the town and its people. Strangely, the book that came out of this marriage isn't a traditional horror tale. It's a thriller, and a damn good one, I think.

What genre does your book fall under?

Crime Drama. Thriller.

What actors would you chose to play the part of your characters in the movie rendition?

I'd like to see Jack played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. I'll catch some hell for this, but I think Bryce Dallas Howard would be perfect as Paige. I think William Petersen would make a terrific Chuck. In terms of Nora, I can't say; I'm not really up on child actors at the moment. I like Taylor Kitsch in the role of Lee. 

What is the one-sentence synopsis for your book?

While seeking enlightenment in hope of providing a better life for his niece, a man becomes an unwitting accomplice to a tragic crime.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

Stealing Night is under contract with Nightscape Press.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

6 weeks.

What other books would you compare this book to?

The Color of Light by William Goldman.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?

My need to make the nightmares go away, and my desire to learn more about Sunfall.

What else about this book might pique the reader's interest?

One doesn't have to read Sunfall Manor to understand Stealing Night. Wanted to get that out of the way. It's a transformative work, and probably my most sensitive. Like all my stuff, it is dark. It's also a short novel of about 180 pages, so it respects your time, but it packs a punch.

This is what Rena Mason, one of my first readers, had to say about it:

Stealing Night masterfully weaves themes of humanity and sacrifice into a story of love, life, and redemption. Peter Giglio’s compelling thriller will keep you captivated until the very end!”
Rena Mason, author of The Evolutionist


The novel will be released in eBook and print next April by Nightscape Press. Hope everyone checks it out.

Happy Holidays!

Peter Giglio







THE NEXT BIG THING: BRADLEY & GIGLIO'S THE DARK

Last week, Simon McCaffery tagged me and Scott Bradley in The Next Big Thing. He was tagged by Weston Ochse. This is a daisy-chain series of blog posts in which authors answer questions about their upcoming or latest works.

Check out past posts from Simon McCafferyJohn Skipp, and Weston Ochse. And check out next week's posts from those who accepted our invitations to participate: Trent ZelaznyKate Jonez, James Grady, and Gwen Perkins.  




What is the working title of your most recent book?

THE DARK

Where did the idea come from for the book?

It came from John Skipp. But there’s more to it than that. Scott and I actually wrote a pair of Afterwords on the subject, but neither of them made it into the book. Click here to read them.

What genre does your book fall under?

Horror. But Skipp once called it a “metaphysical thriller.” We like that. So can we say that? Yes, that’s the ticket. It’s a metaphysical thriller!

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

For the role of Ben we’d like to offer the part to John Cusack. If you’re reading this, Mr. Cusack, please call. And for the role of Claire, we’ll go with Anne Hathaway. Call us, Anne.   

What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

One night in L.A., the Dark becomes sentient.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

The book was published in October by Ravenous Shadows Press, under executive editor John Skipp.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

2 months.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

First Blood by David Morrell, in terms of the pacing and structure. The Light at the End by John Skipp and Craig Spector, in terms of tone.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?

A lot of that was answered in the pair of Afterwords we linked, buy we would like to talk a little about what influenced us to write it the way we did. Knowing that this novel would be heavy on action, we spent a couple weeks studying the works of David Morrell and John Farris, particularly the shorter novels like First Blood and The Axman Cometh. We also looked closely at films that moved the way we wanted The Dark to; most notably Steve DeJarnatt’s Miracle Mile. Our good friend Eric Shapiro’s brilliant novella It’s Only Temporary was also instructive, though the styles we employed are very different.

What else about the book might pique the reader's interest?

It’s packed with action and raw emotion. It’s a “one-night-only apocalypse of the soul,” according to John Skipp. Hell, we’d buy and read this book if we hadn’t written it. We hope you will, too.


Happy Holidays!

Scott & Peter

Saturday, July 14, 2012

INTERVIEW WITH TRENT ZELAZNY

What I love most about Trent Zelazny’s work is that it drips with honesty. He’s also a master craftsman who knows how to get under one’s skin and make them think. I’d call him the small press Poet Laureate if I wasn’t afraid that would minimize him in some way. So you can imagine how thrilled I am to welcome him as my guest today. His latest novella, BUTTERFLY POTION, has just been released in print and eBook by the fine folks at Nightscape Press. Everyone should snag a copy, but first…heeeeeere’s Trent!



I still can’t get FRACTAL DESPONDENCY out of my head, Trent. The week following my first reading of that novella, I kept imagining the story as a film shot in black and white and blue. I was actually scoring the thing in my mind, casting it, and, above all else, loving it. So I was shocked to hear that it isn’t even close to your favorite! What is your favorite of your stories? Why?

It’s not that I dislike it.  It’s really the piece of writing that got me noticed.  But to me it’s more of an important piece in regards to my life.  Much of the story is autobiographical.  Not all, of course, but a lot of the things in Fractal Despondency really happened to me.  A small one, for example: waking up with my left ear filled with dried blood.  I still have a scar at my ear that will never go away.  So some moments are directly from my life, some are almost direct but shrouded in make believe, and, of course, some parts I just completely made up.  It’s special to me in that it was the first thing I wrote where I said, “Okay, enough bullshit.  Stop pulling punches.  Sit down and tell people the way you really see things.  The way you see them through your own uniquely prescribed lenses.”  I like it, but I think it could’ve been better.  Maybe I’m wrong.  It certainly could’ve been worse.  I could’ve been, and in all likelihood should’ve been dead, so anything I write now is special to me, because I’m still alive to do it.


As for a favorite, I’m a moody motherfucker.  Depends on the day, I guess.  I’m very pleased with how Butterfly Potion came out.  And Shadowboxer, in all honesty, I have a very soft spot for.  I started writing it literally the next day after finishing Fractal Despondency.  Maybe even the same day.  That poor character’s life is even worse, I think.  Maybe that’s why it doesn’t sell. J


You’ve mentioned that you’ve taken some criticism for how honest your work is. Share with us your views on honesty in prose. What have you gotten out of baring your soul on the page? 

I get lots of emails from people who say this thing or that was good, but it made them very uncomfortable.  I dated a girl briefly who broke it off after she read my stuff (it wasn’t working out anyway).  I think one of the drawbacks to the whole honesty thing in fiction is people tend to place themselves in the character, and when you’re being as honest as you can be, you’re likely gonna strike some sort of chord on some level, and some people take it personally.  I’m kind of talking out of my ass here, but now I’m not, though it’ll sound more like I am.

Our society has basically simplified literature by breaking it into two basic categories: “Escapism” and “Literary”, the former being exactly that, an escape, and the latter being, uh, well, “good”, which, I guess, to whomever broke down the complex versatility and millions of doorways that spans each and every type of fiction, means “important”, which is apparently measured by someone (we don’t know who) who has made it a cultural duty to find a way to still keep the classes separate.  In other words, there’s fiction for stupid folks and fiction for smart folks.  Few people judge a book by its content; they really do judge them by their covers, or by the name attached to them.  Someone once told me how much she hated Stephen King, then admitted to never reading him.  The whole thing is just lame.  My work is not escapism, though I wouldn’t call it important either.  I’m just saying the things I feel I’ve gotta say.  If life had showered me with rainbows and unicorns, I’d be writing about that, but it showered me with death and substance abuse, manipulation, suicide, and so I write about that.

For me, if I’m not telling the truth, truth the way I see it on a given day, then there’s no point.  Don’t get me wrong.  I read all kinds of things, and I’ve written things with the sole purpose of having a good time.  I’m not a super serious person.  I’ve got a big time goofy side, and I’m a total geek, in my own ways.  But I also have a lot of anger and regret and shame and guilt, and these are the things I usually put words to.  If I’m happy I strum the three chords I know on a guitar.  I have a human therapist, a great therapist, and then I have my keyboard therapist, or pen-and-paper therapist.  The writer in me is my other therapist.

Tell us about an author who you don’t think people read nearly enough. What’s their best work? Why should people start reading them right now?

People who know me, or who have followed me for a while, know that my favorite writer is David Goodis, pulp master of the 40s and 50s.  And Joe Lansdale, contemporary master.  I’ve gushed enough about both of them, so I’ll talk about somebody else for a change.  A somebody else named Roger Zelazny.  With only a couple of exceptions, I didn’t read his work while he was alive, and that saddens me because I can’t call him up and say, “Dude!  I mean, Dad!  I just read Creatures of Light and Darkness!  Holy shit, man!  You just rocked my face off!”  I don’t talk about my father a lot, and it’s nothing against him, which, I’m sure, wherever he is, he knows.  Even writing in different genres, it’s tough being a writer who is the son of a writer, not to mention being the son of a great, great writer, whose work was so damn poetic, so thought-provoking, and so damn entertaining.  His work was my first real experience with philosophy.  The first thing to really strike a chord inside me was “For a Breath I Tarry”.  A small and simple little scene, which, through the magic of cut and paste, I can recite verbatim.

    They came to rest in the place once known as California.  The time was near sunset.  In the distance, the surf struck steadily upon the rocky shoreline.  Frost released Mordel and considered his surroundings.
     "Those large plants...?"
     "Redwood trees."
     "And the green ones are...?"
     "Grass."
     "Yes, it is as I thought.  Why have we come here?"
     "Because it is a place which once delighted Man."
     "In what ways?"
     "It is scenic, beautiful..."
     "Oh."

That’s the first bit I distinctly remember reading where my heart pounded in my chest and I fell in love with my father’s words.  Some personal favorites would be A Night in the Lonesome October, Lord of Light, My Name is Legion, Creatures of Light and Darkness, Damnation Alley, and of course the Amber Series.
                                            

BUTTERFLY POTION is a very strong story. How does it differ from your previous outings?

Thank you.  I’d put it in a similar vein as Fractal Despondency and Shadowboxer, but having worked through so much stuff since writing those two, both mentally and emotionally, I think it has a slightly clearer vision and, for want of a better way to put it, a more fatherly outlook, as though Fractal Despondency and Shadowboxer are hurt and crying children, and Butterfly Potion is telling them, “Yes, it hurts and I bet it hurts bad.  In fact I know it hurts bad.  Real fucking bad.  But look, you’ve survived it.  You’ve come out the other side.  Now let’s get a move on, let’s Keep on truckin’.” – I was born in the 70s, so I can say “Keep on truckin’.”

Nightscape Press, BUTTERFLY POTION’s publisher, looks to be doing some interesting things. How was the experience of working with them?

They’re great.  Really good folks who really care about what they’re doing.  As far as working with a publisher, my experience with Nightscape was the most fun and rewarding I’ve had.  Looks like they have a good lineup coming.  I’m pleased and proud to be in with such good company.

What lights you up?

Pretty girls, music, laughter.  A damn good movie or a damn good book or a damn good basketball game.  A philosophical discussion that doesn’t turn into a pointless argument.  Long walks on the beach… wait, forget that one, that’s for my personals ad.

What shuts you down?

Negative people.  I don’t mean people having a negative day.  We all have those.  I mean people who are just negative, day in and day out.  People who never have nothing nice to say.  People who are always right.  People who would rather say something shitty than say nothing at all.  I think the Earth will implode by the weight of hatred.  If you wanna be negative, to quote my father’s novella …And Call Me Conrad, “Love is a negative form of hatred,” so that might be a more positive way to still be negative.  Food poisoning can do it, too.

What can you tell us about your forthcoming anthology?

It’s called Mirages: Tales From Authors of the Macabre.  Something illusory, without substance or reality.  The sticky threads that communicate the meaningless in a thousand different ways.  I was thrilled to get such a stellar lineup of writers.  There’s a story in it called “Angela & the Angel”.  I think you’d really like that one.  It’s written by Scott Bradley and a guy you might know, Pete, goes by the name Peter Giglio.  I think it’s a great collection and I think folks will really like it a lot.  So many great authors, so many great stories.  Should be out in late August.


You’re a huge NBA fan. How far back does this passion go? What is it about basketball that captures your fascination?

As to not have much crossover with another interview I did, I’ll keep it brief.  I loved basketball as a kid.  When I was little my favorite player was my big brother, then Larry Bird.  In high school I set the interest aside so I could do the whole disassociated artist thing.  Then a few years ago it came back and saved my life.  I’ve been debating writing a non-fiction piece on exactly how it did that.

How did childhood shape your love of reading and writing?

We come back to the word “Escapism”, though not as defined when I used it before, I don’t think.  The escape part, yes.  Pretty much everyone will admit it now, so I’ll say it.  My family was fucked up.  Whatever, really, it happens.  Most families, in one way or another, are fucked up.  There were things in my childhood I hid from, some things I had to hide from.  Books and movies were the safe places for me.  I could escape the shit and the fear and live in another world for a while. Comedy/humor and horror were the big ones for me as a kid, both in books and movies.  And drama.  I liked stories that could make me cry.  Only in hindsight do I think that was because I needed to cry.

What else would you like people to know about you?

I love my friends.  I haven’t always been the best friend to some, but I would die for them, if I had to.  Friends, please don’t pull a Max von Sydow/Ming the Merciless thing on me for saying that.

Also, people often say I’m easy to read, and yet they’re constantly confused by me.  I could go off on a long tangent but won’t.

I’m also willing to admit that I still really love the band Jesus Jones.


Amazon.com links to buy BUTTERFLY POTION:

Paperback: http://www.amazon.com/Butterfly-Potion-Trent-Zelazny/dp/1938644018/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1342289186&sr=1-1&keywords=trent+zelazny+butterfly+potion

eBook: http://www.amazon.com/Butterfly-Potion-ebook/dp/B008GG1WU2/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&qid=1342289186&sr=1-1

And here's the BUTTERFLY POTION book trailer: