At the Zombiefest convention last month, the good folks at FearZone.com took me to a quiet corner of the mall, held a camera to my head and demanded an exclusive reading of some short shorts. They’re posting the film on their site tomorrow to slather your Thanksgiving holiday in horror gravy. Here’s an advanced screening.
Happy Turkey Choppin’, boys and girls! Don’t forget your MyBlade.
For my masochistic writer friends doing the NaNoWriMo: Dr. Wicked has posted WRITE OR DIE — an online tool that will annoy you or eat your text if you start slacking!
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The anthology, Horror Library Vol. III, is now available from Cutting Block Press. Featuring stories by Bentley Little, Gary Braunbeck, Matt Warner, Cullen Bunn, Jeff Strand, and many many more, this is a book of stories that you won’t want to miss. If you don’t believe me, visit the publisher, who offers a generous sampling of the first two pages of every story online for free. Even an advanced peek at my story, “Guarded” is available!
Speaking of “Guarded,” I read that story at an author’s event at Zombiefest 2008 this past Halloween, and an audio recording may soon be podcast at the Library of the Living Dead. Keep your ear canals open for it in the weeks ahead.
Lorne Dixon has put together an awesome 30 year anniversary tribute to Stephen King’s masterpiece of dark fantasy, The Stand — called “What a Long, Strange Captain Trips: The Stand Turns Thirty” — which you should go read over at the new November issue of the online magazine, Nossa Morte. There’s some great reflections and anecdotes about the book from a bevvy of writers: find out about Kathe Koja’s early fan letter to King, Jeff Strand’s relationship to long-long stories, and Rick Hautala’s theft (and subsequent return) of the original manuscript…on ugly orange paper!
Here’s part of what I had to say in my own tribute to King:
You know what I like about The Stand? The brilliant way King shows the contagion spreading right from the beginning. Right away, he taps into the fear of our fellow man, the reality that we are really a threat to each other, the way we are powerless over some things … and yet at the same time he concentrates on character, on that very same “fellow man” that we fear, as if the only consolation against each other is … each other. The stand is a case study in character, and the book taught me a lot about writing….

1) I own a German paperback edition of The Stand! I always thought that if I could challenge myself to read the entire thing, using the original of King’s book as a helping hand, that I’d master the German language. Right. It’s a bazillion pages long. Maybe I should stick to Max & Moritz.
2) In my “Horror & Suspense Writing” class last year, I asked students to bring to class a picture that to them embodied their worst nightmare. One of the students brought the cover image (above) from The Stand. I challenged them on this: “Is that really YOUR nightmare, or is it one given to you by Stephen King?” His answer? “Both.”
3) I remember thinking back “in the day” that King’s re-release of an unexpurgated edition of this epic novel, “Complete & Uncut,” was a silly marketing gimmick — and a sign of the lack of editorial control over his work as a ‘brand name’. Now I realize that it is a sign of King’s resistance to censorship, authorial vision, and his sense of literary (not commercial) value. The re-release of this novel in unexpurgated form also is probably the most populist work of literary “restoration” ever, and “stands” as a testament to the level of literary achievement possible in the realm of popular fiction.
4) I was bored by the TV mini-series. Still am.