Horror/Scary: May 29, 2013 Issue [#5697] |
Horror/Scary
This week: Kidnapped! Michael Thomas-Knight Speaks Edited by: Tornado Dodger More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
Welcome to the Horror Newsletter. It is our goal that Writing.com members of all ages can find useful information and entertaining articles within. If you have specific questions, try visiting "Writing.Com 101" or emailing the editor.
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“A word can change a mind, a sentence can change a life and a book can change the world.” -- Tom Kane, The Writing on the Wall
As a new F/T Horror Newsletter editor, I wanted to develop a series of editorials that would be interesting as well as engaging. I've decided that each month, I will kidnap an author who has chosen to write in the Horror/Scary genre. In order to be released, he or she will have to answer a handful of questions for you, the voracious readers of their fine fiction. The questions will be chosen randomly from a database of questions I've developed that hopefully you will find interesting and thought-provoking. - Tornado Dodger
Kidnapped! Michael Thomas-Knight Speaks 05.24.13
This month, my victim is Michael Thomas-Knight who is a wonderfully talented author. I encourage you all to check out his port and all the items we've featured below. I hope you enjoy getting to know him as much as I did.
How long have you been writing?
When I was a kid, I used to make my own little horror comic books with hand drawings and simple stories. My first 'published' horror stories were in the early 1990's. I had stories published in Wycked Mystic, Reaper's Harvest, Mausoleum and other pulp publications at the time. It was difficult to submit back then, manuscript formatting, printing out the stories (or before that - typing the whole story on a typewriter, ugh), mailing, waiting forever with no contact from the editor - only to find out the publication was no longer active. I had a story adapted into a short film and along with two other shorts - it was released on VHS under the title 'Evil Streets' in 1996. It was low-budget stuff, shot on video. Then, I stopped for a while and pursued a music career with moderate success. I didn't start writing fiction again until 2007.
Do you ever research real events, legends, or myths to get ideas?
Oh yeah, constantly. Many of my stories are influenced by everyday news. I keep a log of strange news items and some of them eventually become stories. 'The Suitcase,' which was published in From Beyond The Grave anthology (Grinning Skull Press), was inspired by a news story. I have a morbid fascination and I retain weird facts that a normal person probably wouldn't remember. If I'm writing a longer story, I'll set up a file folder with pictures, facts sheets and ideas for inspiration. I often read mythological stories and legends and watch all the crazy TV shows about legends and sightings of them.
What is your writing technique? Do you create an outline, or do you just come up with an idea, start writing, and see where it takes you?
That depends on the story. I'll start with one idea, maybe something I had seen on the news. I'll ask myself why that happened; what is the story surrounding that situation? I'll keep an idea in my head for a few months, in its own little thought bubble and just add things onto that idea bubble over time. I call this the incubation period. Then when I have enough to write most of the story, I'll begin to write it. Most of the time I'll write the main scenes first, the driving forces for telling the story and the most important plot point or action sequence. I rarely ever write a story in sequence unless it is really short flash. I'll write scenes then connect them together to finish the story. I always have 5 or 6 stories swimming though my head, incubating. I have never written a full-length novel so I don't usually outline. I love short stories. I love to read them and write them, for now that's my medium.
Tell us about your publication experience in general and especially with Imajin Books and what advice do you have for others seeking publication?
I submitted my story 'PIG' to The Horror 'Zine and editor, Jeani Rector asked me to make some changes. She wanted more action, I had originally written it with more subtle atmosphere and mood. So, I made changes and sent it back. I asked when it would be published on the website and she said, "No, I want this for my anthology, Shadow Masters." Then I found out other writers that are in the anthology, Bentley Little, Yvonne Navarro, Earl Hamner, Melanie Tem, Ronald Malfi and more, mostly known writers in the horror field. Imajin Books picked it up to publish it. Its official title is; Shadow Masters: An Anthology From The Horror 'Zine. The release date is May 27th, 2013. By the time you read this it should be on Amazon.com, Kindle and Trade Paperback editions.
Advice for other horror writer's? Start out small, send your shortest stories to web-sites and web-zines that publish horror fiction. Build a name, take advice from editors. If you send your first couple of stories to Cemetery Dance, Asimov's Science-Fiction, and all the high end publications, you are going to be disappointed. You may even quit writing. You can't start at the top. You can't release your own trilogy of novels and expect to be successful. Maybe one in a million writers makes it that way. Every writer seems to be in a rush to write that novel. Take small steps, there's no rush. Enjoy the journey and you will learn a lot along the way.
Let's try something serious. If you could change one thing in history, what would it be?
Probably, Nazi Germany. It's such a blemish on the soul of mankind. If ever extraterrestrials come to earth, how do you explain that to them? And then try and convince them, we're friendly
I read in your bio on your website that from 1996 – 2002, you owned, managed, edited and was one of 14 writers for your own print music publication called, Guitar-2001 Magazine. That sounds like quite the endeavor. Tell us the most rewarding part of that experience and the most exasperating.
I liked finding and spreading the word about new bands and musicians. I'm a great advocate for talent - I've even suggested for some WDC members to send stories to specific magazines to get published, that is just the way I am I guess. But, back to the question, we did an interview with guitarist, 'Buckethead'. At the end of the interview he told us he had just signed a contract to join Guns & Roses (one of Axle's later incarnations of it). It took me 6 months to release the issue. In that time - right as I released the issue - G'n'R performed on the MTV Music Awards, the first live appearance in 10 years. Everyone wanted to know who the crazy guitarist with the mask and bucket on his head was? They couldn't find anything about him in the mainstream press - we had the scoop! Havoc ensued, the issue sold out in days!
The hardest thing was getting issues out on any regular schedule. I had to sell add space, get all the stories and reviews set up, arrange schedules with the printer, do the layout, sometimes I would be working all night, many nights in a row, to get the issue to the printer on the morning of a certain date. Sometimes grammar and spelling suffered. It would kill me to see something simple misspelled when the issue came out.
List 3 books you just recently read and would recommend? List 3 of your favorite movies?
Recent Books:
Deadfall Hotel, by Steven Rasnic Tem.
Songs of a Dead Dreamer - Thomas Ligotti, his first collection of short stories.
In The Tall Grass - by Stephen King and Joe Hill
Some fave movies:
Bram Stoker's Dracula - 1992, Francis Ford Coppala
Psycho - 1961, Alfred Hitchcock
Dagon - 2001, Stuart Gordon, based on HP Lovecraft tales 'Dagon' and 'Shadow Over Innsmouth.'
What do you think the publishing world will look like in 5 years?
I don't know but the market is getting oversaturated with self published books that have not been vetted properly and are not great quality reading. I think many readers are going to be reluctant to try new authors.
Where can your readers stalk you?
I hope you enjoyed this look into the mind of a fellow author. I encourage you to read the entire interview here : "Invalid Entry" .
If you would like to share your thoughts, please send me a note using the box at the bottom of this newsletter.
Write and Review on! ~ Brooke
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"Invalid Item" [] by A Guest Visitor
A contest with one prompt and two genres. Write either horror or romance/erotica!
"I'll Give You a Sentence Contest" [ASR] by Nikola~Thankful Library Lady
I'll give you a starter sentence, you give me a story!
"Invalid Item" [] by A Guest Visitor
A contest where the winner wins an upgraded membership.
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~ ~ Kidnapped Author's Freedom Five ~ ~
All my kidnapped authors must choose five horror stories to be released.
Excerpt:
He lights the last of five candles, black candles that trace the points of a star within a circle. The circle is a white powder substance carefully laid upon a black cloth, atop a makeshift altar of some kind. Before the man, center of the circle, a bronze bowl sits with several seemingly random items within it; a few strands of hair, a feather earring, a gold ankle bracelet, and a napkin with lip stick smudges soiling its white surface. The man pushes his long hair away from his face and tucks it behind his ears. He briefly pulls on his goatee, his dark brown eyes taking a mental inventory of the items before him. Nimble fingers pull the hood of the black cloak up over his head, shadowing those dark eyes. The same nimble fingers reach out beyond the makeshift altar towards a boom-box/cassette player resting on a nearby shelf. He presses play and a Latin chant fills the room with sound.
~ ~
Excerpt:
From inside her crib my daughter stares at me with a grim face, reaching with long skinny arms. I have no idea what she wants, just like in April when she tried to kill me.
Death would have been a sweet deliverance after thirteen hours of hard labor, but suddenly she came. A five pound female with eyes like those of a snake and lips the shade of a grape. The recompense for all the sin I'd done was stretching in my arms. I could sense the darkness she possessed and it wrapped itself around me like smoke. I sobbed in disbelief.
~ ~
Excerpt:
The only thing in life my father had ever concerned himself with was money. He listened to the stock market reports and read the money columns in the Wall Street Journal, spoke of profit margins and percentages, but alas, he was not a rich man; he was just plain-old-cheap. He was frugal to a malignant fault.
My older brother and I would see him twice a year, when he would pick us up from where we lived with my mom. He would bring us on one of his special outings, usually to a fair or a stock-car race, for which he would make us aware of every dollar he spent for the day. He would calculate how many miles to drive to the Danbury Fair, what mileage he was getting on his Pontiac Bonneville, and calculate the total cost of gas consumption for the day. Then, he would tally the cost of meals for my brother and me, admission to the fair, cost of the rides, and add-in how much he would have made if he had worked for the day, and not taken us out. He kept a running total for the trip.
~ ~
Excerpt:
Jack lifted his dirty shirt tail and wiped a circle of dust from the shop’s cottage window pane. He cupped his hand over his eyes and peered in but it was too dark to see much. He strained his eyes and saw a glint of silver sparkling on a silver teapot as an old lead glass lamp shone upon it. As his eyes adjusted, he could see it was one of those antique shops - where people took their old stuff, he thought. He wiped his nose on his sleeve, and then wiped the sleeve on his pants. As he moved away from the window, he could see his reflection, his hat pulled low over pale blue eyes, a down-turned, mouth, his hair coarse and long, falling into the collar of his too-big shirt. Others said his mouth was mean, his eyes too close together. A sign of dishonesty, they said.
~ ~
Excerpt:
I live alone in a big old house, an old man with nothing more to add to the world, or to my life. I sit in my easy chair, gazing at the picture of my wife on the mantle, taken on the last birthday she was alive. She entered the hospital days later, never to return home. I never even knew she was so sick. I realize now, she had put on an act for my benefit, feigning health and happiness so I would not worry about her. I had every expectation that she would come home from the hospital. I still wait, hoping for a chance to say goodbye. I blot my teary eyes with a tissue and go to bed early.
For a third time in as many days, I am awakened in the deep, dark hours of the night, by wailing and groaning. Having enough of this tomfoolery, I head down the stairs in my nightclothes to investigate the commotion.
~ ~
~ ~ Editor's Choice - The Trio of Terror ~ ~
~ Classic Chiller ~
Excerpt:
In the dead of the night, two young boys peered out of a window across the street, a pair of binoculars shared between them. His left eye squeezed tightly shut, Jake peered over at the old, decrepit house. It was completely dark.
"You think he's still up?" Jake whispered.
"Sure, he doesn't sleep." Nick nodded, shaking the spy glass between them.
"Quit it!" Jake hissed.
"Sorry... Look! There's a light."
Fight forgotten, both boys peered intently through the lens at the yellow glow blazing in the small basement window.
"What do you think he's doing?" Nick asked, clutching the window sill tightly.
~ Modern Macabre ~
Excerpt:
As she fiddled with the lamps, her hands shaking, she tried to point the light at the darkened areas in the room with little success. Her breaths became sharp and shallow, her forehead beginning to grow damp with panic. Cold spiders trailed paths on her back as she flitted around turning on all the lights, pushing furniture out into the hall and snapping the door shut. Still, dark patches remained, and with a terrified cry she collapsed in the middle of the room, nails digging into her arms as she convulsed into a fetal position on the soft white carpet. Her eyes were brown and bloodshot, scouring every corner of the room for something unknown; her black hair, split out behind her, had become messy and tangled, contrasting with the ashen color of her skin. When her convulsions died down into shivers, she pulled a little red notebook out from the pocket of her grey sweater. She sat up, opened it, and drew out a pencil. It took her a few tries to steady her hand.
~ The Future of Fright ~
Excerpt:
The patient strains against the padded cuffs, cords standing out on his wrists and neck. The large men in white pay him no mind, but continue their conversation.
Why can’t they understand? It’s inside me! I have to get it out!
The patient’s wide quivering eyes keep straying to his torso, looking for it. Trying to see it. He cannot, yet he knows it is inside. Moving about, squirming, grinding its teeth. He screams.
The men in white turn at looked at him, exasperation in their eyes. They grasp the gurney and begin pushing him out of the examination room.
No! Nooooo! Where are you taking me? Take me to surgery! Get it out!
~ ~
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