#AnneRiceReveal what’s the book about? (Poll)

•March 3, 2014 • 1 Comment

Like many fans, I am eagerly awaiting the March 9th announcement on Anne Rice’s next book. So far, the project has been kept tightly under wraps, but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating as to what it might be. Some people think that she might have been inspired to add to the Sleeping Beauty Trilogy, many others are hopefully and anxiously holding out the possibility that it will be a return to the Vampire Chronicles or the Mayfair Witches. Of course I will be happy if it’s another in the Wolf Gift series (I am loving the Forest Gentry) but with the current mystery surrounding the release, it’s anybody’s guess.

Here is a video I put together in honor of the March 9th announcement on the Dinner Party Show:

What do you think the new book will be about? Take the poll! Leave your comments below.

Two ways to win: 60 Black Women in Horror [paperback]

•March 3, 2014 • 1 Comment

60 Black Women in Horror is available as a free eBook via Smashwords and over the next two months, will roll out to other distributors including Barnes & Noble and Amazon. It will soon be available for free on Goodreads. The eBook contains bonus materials consisting of an essay and four short stories that are not in the print edition. The print edition is currently available for $5.50 on Createspace.  It will be rolling out to other distribution points over the next several weeks.

Giveaway on Goodreads

Win a free, signed copy of the paperback edition of 60 Black Women in Horror on Goodreads! You will need a Goodreads account to enter. You don’t have to “like” my author page there, but as long as you’re there of course I would appreciate it if you did.

Click here to enter to win: https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/84071-60-black-women-in-horror-fiction

60 Black Women in HorrorIncludes:

60 Black Women in Horror (the list)
Interview with Linda Addison
Interview with Darlene Black
Interview with Valjeanne Jeffers
Interview with Jemiah Jefferson
Interview with Briana Lawrence
Interview with Nnedi Okorafor
Interview with A.L. Peck
Interview with Eden Royce
Interview with Sumiko Saulson

Giveaway on Facebook

You can also enter to win the signed paperback in a separate contest on my Author Facebook Page.  Just go to the link below, and click on the green “Giveaway” button to enter. In order to verify that you’re a human being, you will have to answer the question “Who is your favorite horror writer?” Don’t worry… it doesn’t have to be me or anything. I would really appreciate it if you would “like” my Author Facebook Page while you are there, but I don’t believe that is required to enter the giveaway. Just click here:

https://www.facebook.com/authorsumikosaulson

Then click on the green Giveaway button near the top of the page, under the big photo banner at the top.

You do need to have a Facebook account to enter.

60 Black Women in Horror now available in print

•March 2, 2014 • 1 Comment

Image

So.. this is done, I’ve got the print version of the publication on Createspace. It will roll out to Amazon and other distributors over the next 6 to 8 weeks, so for the moment it is only available here. $5.50 was the cheapest I could make it with expanded distribution. It has expanded distribution, which means it will be made available to bookstores and libraries. The reason I had to set the price this way is because it is based on the lowest profit margin distribution point: in this case, bookstores and libraries, where the profit I make is less than a dollar. It’s about a dollar on Amazon. I get more if you buy it direct from CreateSpace.

The paperback version contains the list and interviews. It doesn’t include the short stories or David Watson’s essay, which are available in the free online edition. This is because I wanted to keep the print cost down. The link is below.

https://www.createspace.com/4695298

Interview with Annie J. Penn, author of “Voodoo Knights”

•March 2, 2014 • Leave a Comment

Annie J. Penn Biography

Penn Annie JPhyllis Khan wrote the horror fantasy “Voodoo Knights” under the pen name Annie J. Penn.  The story deals with black magic, monsters and aliens and features characters such as Moh Moh Oh, a manwhoring alien hybrid who is the father of all monsters, and Miss Conceptiona, a shape-shifting transgender swamp monster. She also writes short stories. Annie Penn is a nomad who lived in more than nineteen towns and cities across two continents. She is currently writing her third novel somewhere in a remote place that both man and time have forgotten. Her other must read title is No Saints also written in English. Annie Penn is bilingual and hopes to write her fourth book in her native language. When asked where home was, Annie Penn would answer, The World. She is passionate about the safety of the elderly and would like to see the citizens of the world take better care of them.

The Book: Voodoo Knights

MohMoh Oh is the spirit monster creator of the Voodooverse. Hard to believe he was once human. in his swamp lives the three headed, five legged, very moody, sometimes blood thirsty angry, but always bejewelled, bi-sexual monstrocity, the fabulous Miss Conceptiona. Very much in awe of his talents are the fierce opposition, the day time hours hospital director who becomes something totally different when day turns to night. Lets not forget the real Voodoo master, the never have been and never would be human, spirit from Planet Katanga, father the most honorable. In opposition to them all is the fast talking genius girl, Hetti O!

Annie J. Penn Interview

Q. “Voodoo Knights” combines elements of horror fiction with science-fiction genre elements such as aliens. How do you think these two genres came together in your story?

A. Voodoo Knights was my introduction to the readers. I thought if I lost them as a horror writer I could interest them with science fiction for now. I guess this has to do with my concern about being accepted as a female in horror. So, yes, merging the two genres was deliberate.

Q.  What can you tell us about the sequel you are working on, about alien hybrid Moh Moh Oh, the father of all monsters?

A. I am currently multi tasking which means that Moh Moh Oh is coming along a lot slower than what I originally thought. Because he was a character in the horror-sci-fi Voodoo Knights the book continues in that vein. I am having a lot of fun with Moh Moh and would sometimes, whilst in the middle of doing something else, seek him out (stop and write about him instead).

Q. You have said regarding “Voodoo Knights,” “I now feel that I held back on the horror bits because I was unsure how the readers would take to me, a female writing horror.” Do you think that knowing that there are other women out there writing horror makes you feel more at ease about writing in the genre?

A. When I first started writing Voodoo Knights I told no one. I was worried people would find it, sorry ladies, un-ladylike. Also, I had no idea so many ladies were indeed interested in writing horror. Gee, if only I had done my research. There is no telling what Moh Moh might have been then. He might just have a surprise up his sleeve about some transformations for himself. He is after all, Moh Moh Oh the father of monster creations. Damn, I love the guy. I could talk about him all night!

Q. As I was adding you to the list of black women writing horror fiction, I realized that you are the first and so far only Australian on that list. How do you feel about representing Australia? Are you originally from there? Do you think that being Australian affects your writing or story backgrounds at all?

A. NO! I am not Australian. I come from the beautiful South Africa. I fled the Apartheid regime in 1983 and have been over here in Australia ever since. Australians are not interested in Voodoo and told me so when they rejected my manuscripts dozens of times. It is extremely difficult to write anything that is not mainstream and expect Australians to show an interest. That is me, the writer speaking. I love living in Australia.

Q.  Besides “Voodoo Knights,” you write short stories. You wrote one, “The Funeral,” for the eBook edition of “60 Black Women in Horror Writing.” Is there anywhere else our readers can look for your short stories?

A. My short stories are somewhere here on my computer. I will probably publish them one day. I recently came up with the brilliant idea to publish them as a free e-book to expose myself a bit more. Gee, wonder where I got that idea from. Some of these short stories were written in Afrikaans which is the language my people speak in the Cape Province of South Africa.

Q. Is there anything else you would like the readers to know that we haven’t covered yet?

A. A couple of things about me that are not already known to my writer and reader friends: I speak English as a second language. As a matter of fact, I was about eight or nine when I was first introduced to the language in an educational facility.  I am able to read and understand a third language but am unable to keep a conversation. Crazy, but true. Horror is my favourite genre, but I also write erotica and crime.  I am a qualified Registered nurse but retired early due to medical reasons. I love holidaying in the United States, so much, I have been to 29 states.

Where to Find Annie Online:

http://www.amazon.com/Voodoo-Knights-Annie-Penn/dp/1470123312

Prayers and Thoughts for Greg Wilkey&His Family: RIP Alicyn

•March 1, 2014 • Leave a Comment

I am also very saddened by the loss of Alicyn Wilkey, a kind person, a thoughtful friend, and the wife of a good friend of mine. Eloquence escapes me at this point so I’m happier to reblog. Grief is such a personal thing. This happened very suddenly, and she was very young – she was only 42. This is a terrible tragedy. They were a very, very close couple and had been high school sweethearts before they married, they were married over twenty years.

fantastyfreak's avatarA Bibliophile's Reverie

I’m going to keep this short. But, I wanted to relay this message to all my dear readers of this book blog. I am in so much shock, as is everyone the knew Greg Wilkey, through Anne Rice’s fantastic, loving Facebook page.  Having reviewed his Mortimer Drake series here on my blog, interviewed him about his books, and talked with him at great length through Facebook, I feel that it is only appropriate to share this very, very tragic news about his wife’s passing. He is a very, very talented author, an adept wordsmith, and his wife certainly shared that same creative talent in the area of culinary arts.

Please keep Greg Wilkey and his family in your prayers, thoughts! Now, I am sharing this beautiful reading of John Donne’s “Death, Be Thou Not Proud, from the film Wit,with the poetic grace of the talented British actress: Emma Thompson. As…

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Interview with Briana Lawrence, author of “Treat Me Kindly”

•February 28, 2014 • Leave a Comment

This should have been in the book 60 Black Women in Horror Fiction. In fact, it will be… so we are officially up to 62. But no, not changing the title. 🙂

Sumiko Saulson's avatarSumiko Saulson

The Author

ImageAt the age of nine, like most kids, Briana Lawrence had a dream. She wanted to be the best “WRITTER” in the whole wide world. Her fourth grade class laughed and wondered how one hoped to become a “writer” if they couldn’t even spell the word. Back then her stories were created with crayons and construction paper. As she grew older they progressed into notebooks and colored ink pens of pink, blue, and purple. When she lost her older brother, Glenn Berry, in a car accident, she stopped writing.
 
Dreams, however, have a funny way of coming back.
 
Before she realized it she was grabbing her notebook and pens again. She would write stories that ranged from high school romance to her imagination running wild with the likes of Goku, Vegeta, and the other characters of Dragonball Z. This continued throughout college where she would always end up…

View original post 3,445 more words

Anne Rice on her upcoming book reveal and women in horror

•February 27, 2014 • 2 Comments
Anne Rice

Anne Rice

As Women in Horror Month draws to a close, I am very pleased to have the opportunity to ask one of the most successful and prolific women in the genre about her upcoming book reveal, which will be taking place live on The Dinner Party Show on Sunday, March 9 at 5pm PST/8pm EST, in addition to getting her perspective on Women in Horror Month.

As Ms. Rice astutely notes, women have been a force to be reckoned with in horror from the very start.

“ I’m glad to see women honored for horror writing,” says Anne Rice. “We have always excelled in this genre. You could say the genre was created by a woman, Mary Shelley, with her stunning novel, “Frankenstein.” Not enough people have actually read the novel, in which the monster speaks for himself for pages and pages… It’s a stunner. And of course the great gothic novelists, Emily and Charlotte Bronte, have also shaped horror writing with their classics. Shirley Jackson’s horrifying story, “The Lottery” was in mid-twentieth century textbooks when I was in college. I’m glad to see women saluted for their involvement with the genre.”

WiHM2014Mary Shelley is widely credited with starting the science-fiction genre and was probably the first to cross over from traditional and gothic horror into the modern horror literary genre. Released in 1818“Frankenstein” predated the works of her contemporary Edgar Allen Poe by close to a decade. Other writers who would follow in her footsteps over the next seventy years, including Bram Stoker, Oscar Wilde, and Robert Louis Stephenson. Many of the early writers of modern horror were women, as Anne points out above. Emily Bronte’s “Wuthering Heights” was a poignantly moving ghost story as well as a tale of love gone horribly awry.

These women went on to influence other women, and so we have writers like Anne Rice, whose “Interview with a Vampire,” “Witching Hour,” and “Wolf Gift,” among others, carry on in the gothic horror tradition, regaling the reader with tales of supernatural and frequently deadly creatures. Like Shelley, Rice often tells the tale through the eyes of her monsters. Fans were exhilarated by her 2012 return to the genre with “The Wolf Gift,” and will be excited to know that she has a new novel in the works, currently under wraps.

Fans on her Facebook page (which has close to 1 million followers) are anxiously awaiting the announcement regarding what exactly the new book will be about. Many are wondering if we can hope to be revisited by any old friends from her literary past in the new story, and are titillated by the mystery. All will be revealed Sunday, March 9 on The Dinner Party Show, an internet radio show hosted by her son Christopher Rice and his friend, another bestselling author, Eric Shaw Quinn.

“I think the Dinner Party Show is providing me with a terrific opportunity to really talk about my new book as I reveal it,” said Rice. “I’ll be there live in the studio. I’ll be able to take questions posted on FB during the broadcast. I’ll be able to get into the whole thing. This is far better than a print announcement for me. And of course I love the show’s format, the easy exchange with Christopher and Eric, etc. So that’s why I’m very excited about revealing on the show. Since the show will air live at 5 p.m. California time, lots of people can tune in at the same time. This is infinitely more fun say than releasing a Youtube film. It’s kind of the best of the new world of technology and the old world of radio and in the flesh press conferences. “

How to Join The Online Reveal at The Dinner Party Show

The Dinner Party Show

The Dinner Party Show

If you would like to be a part of the big reveal on March 9, tune in to The Dinner Party Show. You can ask Anne questions on their Facebook Page or on Twitter @DinnerPartyShow. Make sure to submit your questions on Facebook and Twitter along with the hashtag #AnneRiceReveal

Interview with Valjeanne Jeffers, Author of Immortal IV: Collision of Worlds

•February 27, 2014 • 8 Comments

BWIHWiHMonth 2014This is a part of our Black Women in Horror Interview Series.  February is African American History Month here in the United States. It is also Women in Horror Month (WiHM).  The Black Women in Horror interview series celebrates the place where the two intersect.  These interviews are included as a part of the free eBook “60 Black Women in Horror Fiction.” The Black Women in Horror Interview Series is designed to raise the profile of and bring attention to the more than 60 black women who write horror and related genres of speculative fiction.

Valjeanne Jeffers Bio:

Valjeanne Jeffers

Valjeanne Jeffers

Valjeanne is the author of the SF/fantasy novels: Immortal, Immortal II: The Time of Legend, Immortal III: Stealer of Souls, and the steampunk novels: Immortal IV: Collision of Worlds and The Switch II: Clockwork (includes books 1 and 2). She is a graduate of Spelman College, NCCU and a member of the Carolina African American Writers’ Collective. She has been published under both Valjeanne Jeffers and Valjeanne Jeffers-Thompson. Her writing has appeared in: The Obamas: Portrait of America’s New First Family, from the Editors of Essence, The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South, Pembroke Magazine, Revelry, Drumvoices Revue 20th Anniversary, and Liberated Muse: How I Freed My Soul Vol. I. She was also semi-finalist for the 2007 Rita Dove Poetry Award. Valjeanne’s fiction has appeared in Steamfunk!, Genesis: An Anthology of Black Science Fiction, Griots: A Sword and Soul Anthology, LuneWing, PurpleMag, Genesis Science Fiction Magazine, Pembroke Magazine, Possibilities, 31 Days of Steamy Mocha, and Griots II: Sisters of the Spear (in press). She works as an editor for Mocha Memoirs Press and is also co-owner of Q & V Affordable editing. Her two latest novels: Mona Livelong: Paranormal Detective and Colony: Ascension will be released later this year.

The Book: Immortal IV, Collision of Worlds

ImmortalIVRules were broken. Now the price must be paid.

“The New World awoke to a roaring wind, light blazed from the mirror swallowing the planet…”

The Guardians broke the rules. As punishment, Karla and Joseph are transported to a steam powered realm. Tehotep is now ruler of the empire. Karla is his concubine. Vampires roam the streets. Androids enforce a demon’s will.

And there is no way out. Except death…

Valjeanne Jeffers Interview

Q. You write paranormal erotica, fantasy, sci-fi and steamfunk. Can you tell our readers about the steamfunk genre?

A. Steampunk first emerged as an alternate reality genre in which everything was powered by steam (and gas). For example, the 1960s Wild Wild West series (which I loved as a kid) was a steampunk TV show; although I don’t think the term had been coined yet. Wild Wild West the movie, starring Will Smith, was based upon this series.

Steampunk has given us wildly imaginative costumes, gadgets and worlds, often set in an alternate Victorian England or Western America.

But in the beginning the biggest problems with steampunk, as noticed by readers and authors, was the absence of color. Peoples of color were excluded as main characters, as were their worlds, and their challenges. So, writers and artists created steamfunk: steampunk from a Native American, Black, Latina, Asian . . . worldview; with our own heroes and heroines, in worlds we created, and taking on causes that mattered to us within an artistic space—such as oppression, equal rights, and neo-slavery— or we’re just simply telling groovy tales that came out of the Black and Brown experience. In steamfunk, folks like George Washington Carver, Harriet Tubman, and my own Simone2, become characters that tell our stories.

Authors Milton Davis and Balogun Ojetade deserve an honorable mention because they released the first steamfunk anthology, entitled simply: Steamfunk! I’m very honored to have my story, The Switch (Book I of The Switch II: Clockwork) published in this groundbreaking anthology.

Q.  What do you think it is about vampires that people find so sexy?

A. Vampires are sexy, aren’t they? I think folks find them so, because they were first created as creatures who unleashed their victims’ sexuality and inhibitions. Take Bram Stoker’s character “Lucy,” for example, and Dracula’s transforming her into a vampire—which was very sexualized in Francis Ford Coppola’s remake of this classic. Of course Lucy, as all traditional victims of vampires, paid for her sexual awakening with her immortal soul.

I’m a long-time fan of vampires and, even as child, I thought they got a raw deal. Classically, every single vampire movie ended with a stake to the heart of the Nosferatu. And if you read between the proverbial lines, you see that the vampires’ greatest sin was their sexual liberation. But what’s wrong with being sexual? It’s something which should be celebrated not punished.

Others allures of the traditional vampire are that: not only do you get to live out your fantasies, the “curse” comes with meta-human speed, strength, and immortality— as well as (usually) wealth. So, the original vampires had preternatural speed, strength, and were rich. Their lives, undead though they might be, were one long, sensuous blood-drinking party. That’s the original vampire template.

Now, of course, vampires come in a myriad of varieties. Take the main character of my novel, Immortal III: Stealer of Souls, “Annabelle.” Annabelle doesn’t drink blood, she drinks time: killing her victims slowly over a period of years. Yet in keeping with the original vampire archetype, she is very sexual and an opportunist—always looking out for herself. But beneath Annabelle’s shallow, self-serving persona is a tragic history and a core of steel.

Q. More and more writers, especially women, are publishing under the speculative fiction genre category rather than the specific category of horror. Do you think that horror is a maligned genre? Do you think that people feel horror is “unladylike?”

A. I think authors are choosing to publish under the speculative fiction moniker because genres and sub-genres are tending more and more to bleed together (forgive the pun) and can’t be categorized under a single genre. For example, Charles Saunders, the creator of Sword and Soul, and a writer I greatly admire, has described my Immortal series as a world in which “science and sorcery co-exist.” Derrick Ferguson, another writer whose work I love, describes Immortal as “imaginatively experimental.” Anyone who’s read my books will tell you that they easily fit into several genres or sub-genres such as horror, science fiction, erotic and/or fantasy. I’m sure that’s true of a lot of today’s writers.

I certainly don’t feel that horror is a maligned genre, nor do I think it’s unladylike. In contrast, I think women, with each passing decade, are beginning to break out of the myths and stereotypes which have oppressed us for so long. Look at the criticism that Zora Neale Hurston endured during the Harlem Renaissance, just because she refuse to stick to the script that male writers laid out for her.

I feel that eventually terms such as “unladylike” will become a thing of the past. Female authors are constantly redefining themselves ―flexing their literary muscles if you will. So, today you’re just as likely to encounter a ghost, ghoul, bloody fight scene or sociopath in a woman’s novel as in a man’s.

Q.  As you have mentioned in other interviews, science-fiction is a very white male dominated genre, and the same certainly can be said of horror―a casual search of top 10 and top 100 lists of horror writers reveals virtually no writers of color and very, very few women of any color. Do you think it is because women of color don’t write in the genre, or do you think it is due to the barriers we face when we do write?

A. Without a doubt, it’s because of the challenges we face in becoming published, whether we chose the traditional or Indie route, and then in getting exposure for our work. We face hardships as female writers. If you’re a woman of color, writing SF or horror, it’s that much harder. Oftentimes publishing houses won’t even talk to you (this was my experience) if you are a writer of color whose chooses to create characters that look, and act, like you. They don’t understand yet, that readers of all colors are looking for multicultural novels. After all, we live in multicultural world and art imitates life.

But we are here. We write. We create. We get our novels out there and our readers find us. Because they’ve been looking for us.

Q. Do you think the independent and small publishing revolution is helping to increase diversity in horror and related genres?

A. Self publishing has helped tremendously, as has the social media revolution. Both are helping writers of color get around barriers and walls that, oftentimes, were built to keep us out.

Q. One of your fans recommended you for the Black Women in Horror Writing list specifically because of your Immortal series. What can you tell our readers about the books?

A. Readers enter Immortal during the year 3075, on the planet Tundra, a utopian world that has been without racism, poverty or war for 400 years. I begin with the story with “Karla,” a young Indigo (Black) woman who works as a “healer “(drug counselor). Karla is a recovering drug addict who has gotten her life together, and used her journey to heal other addicts. But she is having disturbing dreams―some erotic; some terrifying. Two men emerge from these dreams. One of them, Joseph a Copper (Native American) man, will help unlock the mystery of her nightmares. . .and her werewolf nature.

The series continues through three more volumes: Immortal II: The Time of Legend, Immortal III: Stealer of Souls, and the concluding volume (or so I thought when I first wrote it) Immortal IV: Collision of Worlds. With each book, new characters emerge each with their own preternatural abilities. In writing the series, I drew heavily from my memories of the 1960s, one of the most beautiful and turbulent eras. And my readers tell me they get a strong “make love not war” vibe from my books.

Q. Is there an Immortal V in the works?

A. Yes, there is definitely an Immortal V in the works! Immortal IV: Collision of Worlds is actually a steamfunk novel, and one which overlaps with The Switch II: Clockwork. Both both have open-ended conclusions. Which is a hint that I’m not through with either series yet. My readers won’t stand for it, and neither will my characters.

But it will be probably one to two years before I release Immortal V. In the meantime, I’d like to invite my readers and fans to check out Mona Livelong: Paranormal Detective, a steamfunk horror novel that I’m going to release within the next few months; and Colony: Ascension An Erotic Space Opera, which will also hit the shelves later this year. There is already free ebook preview of Colony available at amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Colony-Space-Opera-Valjeanne-Jeffers-ebook/dp/B005ZWQ66K/

Q.  Is there anything you would like our readers to know that we haven’t already covered?

A. I’d like to thank writer extraordinaire, Sumiko Saulson, for interviewing me and my readers and fans for their support! I’d also like to give a shout-out to my fantastic cover artist, poet Quinton Veal. Folks can preview or purchase our books at: www.vjeffersandqveal.com

Where to Find Valjeanne Online:

 

Interview with Eden Royce, author of Containment

•February 27, 2014 • 4 Comments

WiHMonth 2014BWIHThis is a part of our Black Women in Horror Interview Series.  February is African American History Month here in the United States. It is also Women in Horror Month (WiHM).  The Black Women in Horror interview series celebrates the place where the two intersect.  These interviews are included as a part of the free eBook “60 Black Women in Horror Fiction.” The Black Women in Horror Interview Series is designed to raise the profile of and bring attention to the more than 60 black women who write horror and related genres of speculative fiction.

Eden Royce Biography

Eden Royce

Eden Royce

Eden Royce is a native of Charleston, South Carolina whose great-aunt practiced root, a type of conjure magic. She now wishes she’d listened more closely. Her stories have been published with several presses, including Kerlak/Dark Oak Press, Sirens Call Publications, and Blood Bound Books.

She also reviews books for Hellnotes, a website dedicated to horror in fiction, art and movies and is a contributor to Graveyard Shift Sisters, a blog dedicated to purging the black female horror fan from the margins. She is also the horror submissions editor for Mocha Memoirs Press. Besides writing, she enjoys roller-skating, listening to thunderstorms, and excellent sushi.

She lurks around edenroyce.com and blogs at darkgeisha.wordpress.com

The Book: Containment

The dead are kept in chambers, their energy used to feed the City’s voracious appetite for power. This grisly fuel is watched over by Feast, a devil-human hybrid whose run-ins with the City may make him the next power source.

Eden Royce Interview

Q.  You are a writer of dark fantasy and paranormal fiction. What do you consider the relationship between these genres is to horror, if any? Are they sub-genres, or simply other genres in the speculative fiction wheelhouse?

A. I believe dark fantasy goes hand-in-hand with horror. Horror is written to frighten and dark fantasy is written to fascinate and disturb. And the two overlap beautifully. I’ve written what I consider to be dark fantasy and readers have told me how creepy and scary the tale is. When creating paranormal creatures, you have to give them motivations and reasoning that is oh-so-slightly different from humans, but similar enough that we will recognize their behavior in ourselves. And that in itself is scary.

Q. Do you think women in general, and black women specifically, face in entering horror and related genres? Do you think we are still underrepresented?

A. Women that write horror are small in number compared to their male counterparts. I edited a horror and dark fantasy anthology titled “In the Bloodstream” and the majority of submissions I received were from men.

As women, we face difficulty because of perceptions: the idea that it is impossible to be a female if you write horror; that there must be something wrong with you if your mind tends toward the dark. So sometimes, we hold ourselves back on the page. Thankfully, the numbers of female horror readers are growing. Much of what appeals to women in life is safety and security: for ourselves, for children. Horror pulls against giving the reader that safety.

Black women struggle as much or more because a large portion of the Black community doesn’t read—or admit to reading—dark fiction.  Society sees us as only able to write from our experience, which by the perception of many is not crafting chilling horror. There is also the religious component in many of our circles that may be disturbed at our interest in reading or writing about evil. Those concerned should strive to separate the writer from the work.  Most writers of dark fiction that I’ve met are wonderful, sweet people.  They just enjoy creating worlds in which the bad guy flourishes, at least for a while.

Q.  In your latest novel, “Containment,” the dead are used as an energy source. There are many kinds of dead… the living dead, the Undead, spirits of the dead and corpses of the dead. What are the dead like in your story? Do they feel?

A. In “Containment”, there aren’t any zombies or vampires.  (At least not at this point in the series.) So much of The City’s natural resources are gone, they have turned to spectral energy as power, similar to what supposedly creates poltergeists. There are Containment agents that stand at the bedside of the soon-to-die to capture their spirits as their physical bodies perish. There’s also a crack team of workers that track down rouge spirits that attempt escape. It’s the energy that is preserved and captured and in “Containment”, the more violent the death, the stronger the energy.

Q. Why do you think that underlying issues of mortality and life beyond the mortal realm appear so frequently in horror and dark fantasy? Do you think the genres connect with our primal fears, or need to understand these things?

A. The fear of the unknown is one of our strongest. We have solved so many mysteries in the world, but what actually happens after death always eludes us.  I think it’s normal to surmise what may happen to us at the end, especially since it’s something that each one of us will have to face at some point.  To me, it’s the need to influence what we have no control over. And we can do that through writing and filmmaking.

Q.  Your power plant of the dead is overseen by a devil-human hybrid named “Feast.” Does his name have any special significance?

A. In the “Containment” world, all devils have one-word names, usually a verb or some sort that gives an idea of each creature’s individual power. Feast knows little about his devil side and is fascinated and a little frightened of it. I chose Feast as a name because unlike a lot of the other devil names that will be seen in Book Three, the word “Feast” has positive and negative connotations. I wanted to show through his name that there are more sides to his character than even he knows.

Q.  Feast seems to be getting into a lot of trouble with The City authorities. Has he always been such a rebel? Do you think his human half is to blame?

A. I actually blame his devil side more. :Laughs: Feast is a loner and it’s usually loners that have little to lose and are willing to push the envelope. Many of the humans in “Containment” are going along with the status quo that The City sets because they have families, reputations, and lives to protect.

Feast has always been on the City’s radar as a hybrid citizen, but things happen in the story that makes Feast question the legitimacy of some of the rules. He can’t be quiet and blend into the background, because he has never had the ability to do so.  (Some of his devil traits are visible.) So he does what he feels is right and that gets him in trouble.

Q.  What are you working on now?

A. So many projects!  I feel like I’m writing all the things. I’ve started Book Two of the Containment Series, and I’m working on my full-length novel. It’s what I call Southern Gothic horror: lots of dark places, family secrets, superstition and magic, all steeped in the culture of my hometown of Charleston, South Carolina. I got the idea from one of the stories my Grandmother told me; I hope I can do it justice.

I’ve also started the process of editing an anthology titled “Torched” for Nocturnal Press Publications. It’s my first project with and international publisher and I’m excited.

Q. Is there anything you would like our readers to know about that we haven’t already covered?

A. It is so important to support independent authors. Buy their books, or ask for them at your local bookstore or library. When you read something wonderful, leave a review or contact the author via social media. The author will appreciate your time in commenting on something that is a true part of them.

 Where to Find Eden Online:

www.edenroyce.com

Author Interview with Alex Laybourne

•February 27, 2014 • Leave a Comment

Alex Laybourne has something new out.. “Diaries of the Damned”

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I’m interviewing Alex Laybourne, author of zombie horror “Diaries of the Damned”. Welcome to my blog, Alex, and thanks for answering my questions.

Author Interview

1) What’s the hardest part of being an author?

For me, the hardest part about being an author is simply finding the time to sit down and write. I work a full time job which takes about 50-60 hours out of my week, not including the commute. I travel quite frequently for it also, which means 18 hour days. I have four young children, and also like to spend some time with my wife. Being a writer takes sacrifice, it means you stay in when others go out, you don’t sleep enough and are often a slave to the muse. When she wakes and tells you to write, there is very little you can do to convince her otherwise. We do it gladly, because we…

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