All Dark Places: out now

All Dark Places is out today! This horror anthology, published by Dragon Soul Press, features a short story I wrote entitled Once in a Lifetime, and other scary tales from fellow authors Hui Lang, Anna Sinjin and AM Cummins.

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Once in a Lifetime is an existential dread short, inspired by an existential dread nightmare that troubled my sleep earlier this year. It involves a man who wakes up in a strange London flat in bed with a woman he doesn’t know, who insists he is someone else in an entirely different life. More disturbingly, memories of his former life – including his wife and children – start to fade from his mind.

For your copy or download of All Dark Places, click here.

All Dark Places: AM Cummins interview

Last but not least in my recent series of interviews with fellow All Dark Places authors, it is my pleasure to introduce you to the unfeasibly talented AM Cummins. As well as writing, she also hunts ghosts. No, really.

Give a short tease about what happens in your short story for All Dark Places.

My story in All Dark Places is titled The Harrison Farm. It’s about a young couple that moves into an old house and must learn a few old secrets before it’s too late.

What inspired your short story?

I love a good ghost story! So much so that my husband and I go ghost hunting when we find the time (mostly on vacations).

What do you find scary?

A dark backstory that doesn’t make sense until the big reveal at the end. I love to question and theorise why something spooky is happening throughout the story. I’ll admit also that I jump at loud noises or something unexpected, but in the end, I just don’t find that scary.

Have you experienced anything at all like a horror story in real life?

I have, actually! I even wrote a short story inspired by my experience: Adoption featured in an anthology e-book, Shadows of the Spectral. I, of course, changed a few things for entertainment value. But the story of the haunting is 100% true.

Why do you think some people are drawn to horror stories, and others are repelled by them?

A good horror story will stir up emotions. Sometimes those emotions can bring back haunting memories of personal experiences. I am a horror fan! When fear is in the air and the blood starts pumping, I know I’m alive.

To what extent are your characters based on you or people you know?

In this story, not at all unfortunately. I picked random pictures of people off the web and wrote my characters based on personality traits I thought they would have. The creation of characters is what drew me into writing.

Do you know your ending when you write, or do you start and see where the story or characters take you?

I know what direction my story is heading. I’ve tried to be a pantser, but then you spend too much time in the editing phase to my liking to fix all the holes. So I love to have a general (and negotiable) outline and let the story lead me to get there.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

I enjoy the creating part. Starting with nothing and making something. It can be a character, a story line, or world-building.

What is the worst thing about being a writer?

The second draft is the worst part for me. I have embraced the editing process completely. But once you take your baby, the manuscript you poured your heart and soul into, and give it a once over…Yikes! It can be soul crushing sometimes to realise it isn’t as perfect as you thought it was. The good news about that is you don’t have to face it alone. The writing community will give you just as much love as you show to it.

To what extent (if at all) do you agree with the statement “write what you know”?

Sure, writing what you know is easy. But nothing great came from easy. I’m a firm believer in pushing outside my comfort zone. My goal is to be the best writer I can be and you don’t do that by playing it safe. My passion is writing fantasy, but I’ve dabbled outside that genre. It was hard, but worth it.

Are you promiscuous or monogamous with your genre of choice?

I am all over the place in my writing. Of course, that doesn’t mean I publish everything I write. Currently I have been published fantasy and sci-fi stories, and now horror. I’m tackling romance next.

Which writers inspire you?

All of them, even you Simon! Writing is not easy. It can be frustrating and stressful sometimes. With deadlines, writers block, and marketing being an author is a lot of work. I applaud anyone who works hard to tell a story.

What are your future writing plans?

I am currently writing my first series to submit to a publisher. I devour series as a reader but always felt intimidated of them as an author. Challenge accepted!

What advice would you give someone who tells you they want to be a writer?

Write something. The internet is full of rules and advice about writing. It can become overwhelming. To find out if you honestly enjoy the process, go through it. Put your pen to paper. Rinse and repeat!

For more about AM Cummins and her writing, check out her pages on Amazon and Goodreads here and here respectively.

All Dark Places is released on the 30th of October and can be pre-ordered here.

All Dark Places: Anna Sinjin interview

Herewith the second interview from my series featuring fellow authors contributing to the All Dark Places anthology. Welcome to the wonderful world of Anna Sinjin. She may look harmless, but her mind is responsible for some seriously twisted terrors. You have been warned…

Anna Sinjin

Give a short tease about what happens in your short story for All Dark Places.

One day, a man finds a mirror at a garage sale and brings it home to his wife as a surprise. Unfortunately, there’s more to the mirror than a simple reflection and, soon enough, they’re seeing things in the mirror that shouldn’t be there.

What inspired your short story?

We recently bought our first house and have had quite a time furnishing it without spending a fortune. We’re not as creative as the couple in the story, but my husband and I did watch DIY videos for flooring/bathrooms/etc in preparation in case we bought a fixer-upper. Thankfully, those skills went untested. I also thought, what an awesome idea if we went to a garage sale and found something wonderful that turned out to be cursed? Well, obviously, it wouldn’t be awesome for us, but it certainly had potential as a story.

What do you find scary?

To be honest, I’m afraid of the dark sometimes. It’s probably because I have all these thoughts about monsters and demonic entities living in my head. I mean, the clown from It could be hiding under my bed, ready to grab my ankles. Or maybe I might see the red eyes of a critter from Critters shining at me from down the hall. Or, if you’d rather a more realistic fear, I walk barefoot in the middle of the night when it’s literally pitch black. What if I step on a furry spider? These are thoughts that will more regularly stop me in my tracks when I’m coming back from the bathroom. What if that next step makes spider contact?

Have you experienced anything at all like a horror story in real life?

Yes, I have. There are times I’ll hear noises that no one else will hear. It doesn’t happen as often now as it used to. Once I woke up in the middle of the night and saw a shadowy figure standing next to my bed. It felt bad. Very Bad. I woke my husband up, but when I looked back, it was gone. Other times, I’ll catch things out of the corner of my eyes or feel things that I can’t see like someone hugging me. All of these things are explainable, so I’m not sure what I think about them. Call me crazy if you like. I do all the time.

Why do you think some people are drawn to horror stories, and others are repelled by them?

Horror is my True Love, but my husband avoids it like the plague. I love the thrill I get when I read/listen/watch a good horror story. It’s like being on a roller coaster! Your adrenaline is pumping, and you’re desperate to know what happens next, what’s causing everything, and how it will all end. My husband, however, says it’s too close to real life. There’s enough in life to scare the poop out of people, so why would they deliberately scare themselves with horror stories? All those stories do is remind people of the bad in the world.

To what extent are your characters based on you or people you know?

Except for one unpublished book and one published flash fiction, none of my characters resemble me or anyone I know. In the currently unpublished book, the characters are all based off of people I was around at one point in my life, including myself. None of them remained true to life, however, and quickly made a beeline to fiction when the horror began.

Do you know your ending when you write, or do you start and see where the story or characters take you?

A bit of both. Usually, I’ll play with an idea in my head for a bit until I’ve got enough that I can write notes for. Those notes can get pretty vague. As I write my notes, the story unfolds. Sometimes, I’ll start writing before I’ve reached the end of the notes and sometimes, I’ll wait. That’s the fastest process for me. Other times, I don’t wait for notes and just hit the keyboard, letting the story pour from my fingertips. This is only typical with short stories. More and more often now, I’ll do at least a portion of the notes first before I start writing. It saves time and makes each writing session more productive.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

Diving into my own personal worlds and watching them come to life. I love it when this idea in my head comes alive on paper. Suddenly, it’s no longer just an insubstantial idea. Suddenly, it has life… like Frankenstein’s monster. Except, unlike Frankenstein, I don’t abandon my creations. I show them love and, hopefully, introduce them to the world.

What is the worst thing about being a writer?

Not being able to talk to anyone about my writing. I’m supposed to be able to talk to other writers, but I find I can’t. The problem is that I feel supremely stupid talking about my writing. I’ve tried. I open my mouth to talk about it, but end up floundering without really having said much. Pitching ideas is a nightmare for me.

To what extent (if at all) do you agree with the statement “write what you know”?

I semi-agree. Bram Stoker never traveled overseas, and yet he did so much research that the reader believes he went to the Carpathians. Do I need to have been in a haunted house to know how to write about one? No. I know fear, I have an imagination, and I have access to information. That’s all I really need. You should always know about what you write even if it’s only book knowledge. Make sure to double check anything you get through Google though, because it might not be true.

Are you promiscuous or monogamous with your genre of choice?

I’m flagrantly promiscuous. Currently, I write horror under this name and fantasy under another. Hopefully, I’ll be able to add cozy mysteries under a third name.

Which writers inspire you?

I don’t think any writer actually “inspires” me, but there are those I’ve looked to for guidance so to speak. Stephen King’s “On Writing” hit a good cord with me.

What are your future writing plans?

Haunted houses! However, my fantasy side is attempting to steal the spotlight. My genres don’t share me very well, so they’re currently fighting to be the next project.

What advice would you give someone who tells you they want to be a writer?

Be prepared to work work work without much return. Your significant other may or may not support you in your endeavour. This is normal, so try not to hold it against them. And remember to write for yourself and enjoy what you write. In the end, you’re the only one who matters.

Check out Anna Sinjin on Amazon here.

Check back tomorrow for the final interview with my fellow authors in the All Dark Places anthology, featuring AM Cummins.

All Dark Places is released on the 30th of October and can be pre-ordered here.

All Dark Places: Hui Lang interview

Hui Lang is a dangerous, disturbed and bloody good writer. He also prefers to only be seen when manifested as a wolf (hence the picture below). Our short stories rub shoulders in the upcoming horror anthology All Dark Places and I was brave enough to interview him for this blog. Or should that be foolhardy? You decide.

Give a short tease about what happens in your short story for All Dark Places.

The Mark of the Spider is a pulp noir horror fiction set in San Francisco 1925. It’s a story about private eye Marlo Price who is drawn into a high-profile murder. It’s a race against time when the Stars of Carnage and Madness align.

Dark Secrets and Hidden Pasts is about a lantern bearer, Samdel Thatch, who is searching for an artifact that will secure the release of his elven wife, Lyra. However, when him and his sister-in-law are trapped in a dimensional snare called the Half Rift, they’ve warranted the attention of Samdel’s former goddess at an abandoned inn.

What inspired your short story?

For Mark, it was Call of Cthulhu (both the table-top RPG and stories) along with fast-action paced serials from the 1920s and 1930s. For Dark Secrets, the nature of just how insidious evil can be and who it affects formed the basis of that story.

What do you find scary?

I won’t say what personally scares me, because there will be shitload of assholes who will flood my FB page with pics of it, then I’ll need therapy for months. However, I know common things like pitch darkness, closed-in spaces, something crawling on your skin that you have no idea what it is, that’s pretty scary stuff.

Have you experienced anything at all like a horror story in real life?

Encountering people who suffer from mental illness and where they go completely batshit crazy in a public setting is about as scary as things I’ve witnessed in real life. I have walked in a pitch dark woods on a lonely night before. That certainly gave me a sense of heightened awareness.

When I was a kid, my dad took us fishing to some lake in the middle of a swamp when we lived in Florida. We saw the police boats out on the lake looking around with their lights. We were on the boat pier when we heard branches snapping. Whoever the cops were looking for were with us and not very far.

Why do you think some people are drawn to horror stories, and others are repelled by them?

Fear is a great emotion to experience because it does many things to your body. It’s a safer way than experiencing pain which tells you your body is working. With fear, your memories are more real, your experience is more real, and you go through a bit of a rush. You remember your nightmares with vivid clarity more than your most orgasmic dreams.

For others, fear is a trigger. They’ve had trauma and they need a dose of fear like an accidental pregnancy. We live in a society where there is already a lot of fear, some people would rather just come home, open a book and read something happy. I certainly don’t blame them when they desire to have as little to do with horror as possible.

To what extent are your characters based on you or people you know?

None on real life. But I do know Samdel Thatch quite well as he’s the main character in Book 3 of my Rise of Evil Series called the Lantern Bearer’s Quest.

Do you know your ending when you write, or do you start and see where the story or characters take you?

Yes, I always know the ending when I write. I am a plotter. I have will plot out my story anywhere between four to six times before I actually sit down to write a story. However, I have frequently deviated from it often or end up cutting significant parts of it. The Mark of the Spider lost half its original plot due to word limitations and I could only use a third of Dark Secrets and Hidden Pasts.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

Reading reviews. Knowing I made someone cry after they finished my story. Being forgiven after someone reads my story also is a great experience too. Reading a dedication to you after you’ve helped someone significantly with their work.

What is the worst thing about being a writer?

I won’t be making any money at this.

To what extent (if at all) do you agree with the statement “write what you know”?

Ever read a story that had dragons in it? I read stories that had dragons in it. Lots of dragons. We can add elves, magic, gnomes, and undead in those stories too. Now, I don’t know about you, but I don’t think dragons exist in real life, but still… Someone stopped and wrote about them and here we are. If people wrote what they know, then there is a lot of fraud out there regarding dragons.

Are you promiscuous or monogamous with your genre of choice?

I am a motorcycle clubhouse whore when it comes to genres. I prefer fantasy, but I will write and read anything. I want to be the writer who can write in any genre at any rating. 2019 will have several new genres from me.

Which writers inspire you?

Frank Herbert, Robert Jordan, Tracy Hickman, Margaret Weis, and Glenn Cook.

What are your future writing plans?

2019 is shaping up to be a busy year for me. I will be participating in five out of the six planned anthologies from Dragon Soul Press. I hope to revise and release Fallen From the Stars, and the first three books from The Rise of Evil series while working and finishing Crown of Dragons (Book 4). I also plan on writing a trilogy. Lastly, I have about a half-dozen flash fiction pieces I plan on releasing on my FB page.

What advice would you give someone who tells you they want to be a writer?

  1. Set realistic goals if you’ve never really written before. If you feel like you have a story in you, take a writing class. Learn. Practice. Write short stories so you can build endurance to write longer ones. Writing is an endurance sport.
  2. Get. Feedback. On. Your. Work. There is an expression that your first one million words will be crap. True, but don’t make the first word after your million crap too if you’ve never gotten feedback. When you get it, don’t get defensive, don’t argue, and don’t be asking for criticism just to be validated.
  3. Read your favorite successful authors and emulate their writing style and patterns. Over time, you will develop your own and become an author in your own right but you need to learn from a master before you become one yourself.
  4. Get yourself a muse. Someone you can talk to about your work when you feel like you can. I have several authors whom I frequently collaborate on ideas with.
  5. Leave your ego at the door. Some people are going to read your work and mouth off your work sucks. You can’t please everyone, but if they tell you why your work sucks, stop, and pay attention. I’d rather have my colleagues tell me something is bothering them about my story than to just ignore their feedback and read the 1-star review that echoes the same sentiment.

For more about Hui Lang and his writing, check out his writing on Amazon and Goodreads here and here respectively.

Over the next couple of days, check back here for interviews with my other fellow authors in the All Dark Places anthology, Anna Sinjin and A M Cummins.

All Dark Places is released on the 30th of October and can be pre-ordered here.

All Dark Places: The countdown begins

On the 30th of October, All Dark Places will be released by Dragon Soul Press. This horror anthology features a short story I wrote entitled Once in a Lifetime, as well as other spine-freezing gems from Hui Lang, Anna Sinjin, and AM Cummins.

Once in a Lifetime, is an existential dread short, inspired by an existential dread nightmare that troubled my sleep earlier this year. It involves a man who wakes up in a strange London flat in bed with a woman he doesn’t know, who insists he is someone else in an entirely different life. More disturbingly, memories of his former life – including his wife and children – start to fade from his mind.

Over the next few days, I’ll be interviewing my fellow contributors, so keep checking back every day to hear entertaining insights from these terribly talented wordsmiths.

All Dark Places is released on the 30th of October and can be pre-ordered here.

White Rabbits and Snicker-Snack: Marcus Bines Interview

Marcus Bines is a fellow author who contributes to the Dragon Soul Press anthologies. His excellent short story Blessed be the Brine has been published as part of the Shadows of the Sea anthology. He has now contributed a second story, Snicker-Snack, to the Chasing White Rabbits anthology, based around characters from Lewis Carroll’s classic Alice in Wonderland. Let’s begin this interview by diving down the rabbit hole…

51yovvFWbQLWhat is the enduring appeal of the Alice in Wonderland characters?

I think it must be something to do with their unpredictability – and how similar that is to how many of us experience life. All we know as we read the books and travel through Wonderland is that Alice will be curious, and everything around her will be insane and nonsensical; she has to navigate the insanity, aiming for a point where things make sense – if they ever do. That desire to wrestle the chaotic world into one of order is a very strong one for many of us I think! Wow, that was a bit deep for question 1.

Tell us a little about your short story for Chasing White Rabbits.

In my story Snicker-Snack, Alyssia is a young Londoner with a dull call-centre job and irritating colleagues who is sent a mysterious and ultra-sharp knife in the post. She quickly discovers how handy it is for defending herself against the capital’s ne’er-do-wells, but also that using it comes with some unusual side effects. The inspiration for the story was the Jabberwocky, Lewis Carroll’s amazing nonsense poem (included in Through the Looking-Glass) that makes perfect sense once you ease yourself into the language.

Besides Alice in Wonderland, are there any other existing fictional worlds you would like to write a story about?

Well, as you can see from that synopsis, I haven’t exactly written about Wonderland itself, or even included any specific characters from Carroll’s novels – although if you look closely in Snicker-Snack you will find certain characters either hinted at or explicitly referenced. I’ve never really thought of writing in other fictional worlds, and if I did I think I’d like to do something fairly tangential, or inspired by another medium – like imagining the homeworld of Ziggy Stardust, David Bowie’s sci-fi alter ego from the 1970s.

To what extent are your characters based on you or people you know?

Not much – at least not deliberately! Having said that, my current WIP novel series and my first published short story, Blessed Be The Brine (to be found in this anthology) both contain teenage characters. As a secondary school teacher, I’m sure there are shades of pupils I’ve taught in those characters. In fact, when my 15-year-old son read my short story, he complimented me on getting the teenage kids just right in the way they speak and act. So that was a relief!

Do you know your ending when you write, or do you start and see where the story or characters take you?

I’m not ultra-rigid in my planning, but I do think it’s kind of foolish to start a story without knowing where it’s going. Some of the most satisfying stories have a circularity in the character arcs that make them very pleasurable, and knowing the ending means you can get the beginning right I think. But I love it when characters and events pop up on the way in the writing process, ones you didn’t plan and that either throw you for a loop or fire your creative juices. I often find it’s the latter, thankfully.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

For me, it’s tapping into the creativity that I see as a beautifully human and inherently spiritual element of life. I spent years thinking I wasn’t creative because I couldn’t do it the way others did (e.g. making music, painting, drawing), but the chance to create a whole world that exists in my mind and the mind of the reader is a joyful, inexplicable and mysterious thing. What’s really weird is that the worlds I create as a writer almost certainly look different in the imagination of the reader – I find it hard to even get my head around that!

What is the worst thing about being a writer?

The fact that I have to juggle writing with other responsibilities – you know, ones that actually earn me money and mean my family can live in a house and eat food. I’m blessed to be a teacher, as I get whole weeks off work at a time, but it means that when I’m teaching, my writing progress is painfully slow. As teachers we basically cram 12 months of work into 10 months, so everything else that is non-essential tends to get squeezed. That’s where my writing goes at the moment, unless I can find the energy to get up at 5am. It happens, but not enough!

To what extent (if at all) do you agree with the statement “write what you know”?

I don’t think I do really – unless it means “write what you know when you’ve researched some stuff”! I tend to prefer writing female characters to male, and have never been female. My preferred writing genre is fantasy at the moment, which automatically moves my writing away from what I know in terms of daily life. But do I know the mundanity of a tedious job, as Alyssia does in Snicker-Snack? Sure. Do I know what it feels like to have to lead other people without the first clue how to do it (a challenge my main character Autumn faces in my first novel, Gods Of Clay)? Absolutely. So I think I’d prefer “write what you want and include what you know.”

Are you promiscuous or monogamous with your genre of choice?

Well, I’m still new to this really, having been writing for about three years, so I’ve stuck with one genre for now – namely fantasy. I find I can let my imagination loose that way, and I really enjoy it. But my novel series is a mythic fantasy which is fairly epic, Blessed Be The Brine was definitely tinged with horror and Snicker-Snack is an urban fantasy.

Which writers inspire you?

Oh man, so many. I’m currently reading a Stephen King novel for the first time in a few years, and am so impressed by the detail in his research and world-building – but it never bogs the story down. I’d forgotten how enjoyable his books are. As a fantasy writer (and a linguist in my history), obviously there’s Tolkien, whose worlds are ridiculously detailed, to the point where some modern readers struggle to engage. Personally, I wish I could re-read The Lord of the Rings every year, but I’d never have time! The movies will have to suffice. Michael Grant’s Gone series is a great example of YA-fantasy-horror, and when a novel’s opening line involves a teacher disappearing into thin air in front of the class, that’s a great hook! I don’t tend to read EVERYTHING a writer has produced, but recently I’ve loved Room by Emma Donoghue (I know, not all that recent!), The Wake by Paul Kingsnorth (an amazing novel, written in a proto-Anglo-Saxon dialect, about the aftermath of 1066) and Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi.

In addition to the short stories, I understand you are presently writing a vast fantasy epic. Please tell us a little more about that project.

As already mentioned, Gods of Clay is the (current!) title of Book 1 of the series, which is going under the collective name Legends of Vanartha at the moment. The first book is mostly about Autumn, a 14-year-old peasant girl who suddenly receives a supernatural power – seeing visions of the future – and has to find out why by leaving home and family to go on a dangerous journey across her world. Simultaneously, several other characters from different walks of life (a princess, a fisherman, a diplomat and two ageing lovers) find they also have unusual powers at their disposal and have to choose what they will do about them. I’m currently about halfway through book 2 and exploring a range of avenues in terms of publication for book 1.

What advice would you give someone who tells you they want to be a writer?

Go for it – and have realistic expectations! If you have access to a pen and paper, or a keyboard and electricity, there’s nothing stopping you putting words on paper and creating something amazing – a world, an emotion, a reaction, a character – out of literally a blank space. And that, as far as I’m concerned, is always worth doing. Accessing that creative spark that makes us who we are is, I believe, a privilege of being human. But that’s no guarantee anyone else will love or even like what you create – and if getting other people to read it is your goal, there’s hard work involved, and learning the craft of writing (both on the technical spelling-punctuation-grammar-sentence level and how to make a story work), and persistence, and resilience, and a willingness to listen to and act on criticism. Among many other great qualities!

Check out Marcus Bines on Facebook here, on Twitter here, and on his blog here.

Chasing White Rabbits is out now and can be purchased here.

All Dark Places – Now available for pre-order

All Dark Places, the horror anthology containing my short story Once in a Lifetime, is now available for pre-order from Amazon Kindle. Just click the link below.

NOTE: Dead tree (ie print copies) will be available for pre-order soon.

All Dark Places is published by Dragon Soul Press and released on the 30th of October.

BIG NEWS: The Spectre of Springwell Forest to be published by Dragon Soul Press

I am very pleased to announce my next novel, The Spectre of Springwell Forest, is to be published by Dragon Soul Press this December.

Spectre of Springwell Forest sinister wood - for blog headerNeedless to say, I am utterly thrilled at this news. Having a traditional publisher has been a wonderful, eye-opening experience, and I am very excited to see where things go from here. My previous novels have all been self-published with varying degrees of success, but it is wonderful to now have talented publishing professionals working alongside me.

The Spectre of Springwell Forest is a mysterious, ghostly, gothic nail-biter. The story involves a young mother who is strangely drawn to a sinister painting of an abandoned railway tunnel. If you enjoyed my previous novels The Birds Began to Sing or The Thistlewood Curse, you’ll definitely enjoy this one too.

In the meantime, don’t forget I also have my short story Once in a Lifetime coming soon, as part of the All Dark Places horror anthology, also published by Dragon Soul Press.

All Dark Places is released on the 30th of October.

The Spectre of Springwell Forest is released on the 20th of December.