New Short Story: Red Butterfly

Photo by author

I’ve recently released a new short story. Red Butterfly concerns a man grappling with repressed memories of abuse in a cult his parents were part of when he was a child. It’s
a companion piece of sorts to an earlier short story, Aftermath, about a young woman returning to her estranged mother after leaving a cult. This brace of stories about coming to terms with leaving cults are quite personal to me, as they are in part informed by personal experience. But to be clear: both are fiction.

You can read both parts of Red Butterfly on Medium (here) or on Substack (here), depending on whether you have a Medium account, or if you subscribe to me on Substack (a mere $5 a month for unlimited access to short stories, classic film analysis, top tens, and my full film review archive). There’s a link to the second part at the end of the first.

New Short Story: Crockern’s Curse

Image by Rizal Deathrasher from Pixabay

In October, I published a new short story. Crockern’s Curse concerns a young couple investigating a childhood mystery on Dartmoor are menaced by supernatural forces linked to local folklore. A spine-freezing tale of supernatural horror, this proved very popular with readers of the Fictions publication on Medium (where it was published). It’s in five parts, but there are links to every subsequent part at the end of each instalment.

Check out the first part on Medium here. Alternatively, if you are a subscriber to Dillon Empire on Substack, check out all five parts there, starting with part one here (again, there are links at the end of each segment to the next part). I’ll explain more about what I’m up to on Substack soon, but the short verison is you can get all my film reviews there for free (they disappear behind a paywall after four weeks), or else take up the paid option of $5 per month and in addition to unlimited access to the film review archive, enjoy all my other articles syndicated from Medium, including top tens, classic film analysis, and of course, short stories.

Enjoy!

Sweet Dreams: All Parts Out Now

Credit: Pixabay

Medium publication Fictions have recently serialised my new short story Sweet Dreams. A science fiction thriller set in the near future, it concerns a journalist investigating a tech company that manufactures nightmare suppressing nanotech for children. “Sweet Dreams” refers to the technology involved, which Ali, the journalist, comes to believe may be linked to an increase in suicidal tendencies among young people. Her investigations uncover conspiracies, cover-ups, and eventually murder.

Themes of playing God and the dangers of mollycoddling are inherent in the subject matter, but quite honestly it isn’t meant to be terribly deep. My main motivation in writing was to create a gripping tech-murder mystery. I’ve had lots of great feedback on Medium so far, and I hope you enjoy it. All five parts are now available for your reading pleasure.

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

Part Five

New Short Story: In-Between

Photo by Jonny Gios on Unsplash

The Fictions publication on Medium published my short story In-Between. Originally conceived as a supernatural satire, this evolved into something far more personal. It concerns a recently deceased man whose attempts to haunt his family are constantly interrupted by ghost politicians attempting to secure his vote in an afterlife by-election. Check it out in full here. I hope you enjoy it.

Infestation Unpacked: Once in a Lifetime

My newly released book Infestation: A Horror Anthology features my Infestation novella – a six-chapter sci-fi horror tale – along with five other short stories. As I stated in my article last week, I’m going to expound a little on each story in the weeks to come, continuing in this article with Once in a Lifetime.

After inexplicably awakening inside a different home with a different wife, Hayden Jones experiences an existential crisis, as memories of a new life, that of another man named John Hunter, gradually replace those of his old life.

In desperation, he tries to write down all that happened in his old life – his wife, his children, friends, and acquaintances – when he finds in his new life, he is unable to contact them. He also finds he has awoken in London, miles from his country home near Dartmoor.

Previously published by Dragon Soul Press, as part of their All Dark Places horror anthology, Once in a Lifetime is based on a surprisingly well-plotted nightmare I had some years ago. Continuing with the recurrent theme of guilt contained within this volume, the story also touches on issues such as childhood bullying, abuse, and denial. Like several of my horror stories, it is designed with deliberate ambiguity, leaving room for the reader to separate reality from fantasy; a process they undertake based on their own personal baggage.

Photo by samer daboul from Pexels

On a lighter note, I’ve had it suggested to me that the story is an endorsement of living in the country versus living in the city. That isn’t consciously the case, although I do confess that I wouldn’t want to live in London instead of southwest England. London wouldn’t suit me at all (except for the many cinemas, and arts scene in general).

Influences for this include David Lynch films such as Lost Highway, Mulholland Drive, and Twin Peaks, which also deal in existential themes of people being subsumed into different lives/universes. Once in a Lifetime was also slightly informed by lyrics in the classic song of the same name by the seminal band Talking Heads. (“You may find yourself in a beautiful house, with a beautiful wife… You may ask yourself: How did I get here?”) Most of all though, I wanted to tell a story about the unconscious, sometimes self-destructive impulses of middle age, where it is common for people to wonder about paths not taken.

Unlike the physical, external, creature-based horrors of Infestation, Once in a Lifetime is a much more psychological piece, though emphatically still designed to rattle and disturb, especially in the shocking finale.

Infestation: A Horror Anthology is available on Kindle and paperback from Amazon here (in the UK) and here (in the US). It can also be ordered via Smashwords here.

First Love: Papercut continues to get rave reviews

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Last February, I had a short story published as part of Dragon Soul Press’s First Love romantic fantasy anthology. This was my second published short story, as I usually stick to novels. What’s more I don’t usually write romance (here’s a rare exception).

My contribution, Papercut, is a poignant, heartfelt love story about a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. In his dreams, he is visited by a mysterious girl made entirely of paper, leading to a fantastical journey which I won’t spoil.

There have been several rave reviews for this story (and for the collection in general). Papercut also ended up in a top-three short story poll conducted by Dragon Soul Press. Here is the most recent of the unanimous five star reviews on Amazon:

“There are so many fantastic stories in this anthology, all with their own take on the theme of ‘first loves’, that it’s hard to decide on a favourite! I certainly think every story earned its place here, but I was intrigued by, and thoroughly enjoyed Simon Dillon’s Papercut. The gritty, perspective on everyday life in a strict religious household was interesting, and provided a stark juxtaposition to the strange magic that brings the Paper Girl into Gabriel’s lonely life. I’d absolutely encourage anyone looking for a nice mix of genres, and voices, to give this anthology a chance!”

First Love also features stories by AM Cummins, Kathryn St John, AR Johnson, DS Durden, Sofi Laporte, Meg Boepple, Melinda Kucsera, Edeline Wrigh, AD Carter, Zoey Xolton, and Galina Trefil. Pick up your copy here.

Title Announcement for my next novel (and other news)

As well as promoting new releases Spectre of Springwell Forest and my short story Papercut (part of the First Love romantic fantasy anthology), I’ve made good use of the grim winter months writing another spooky mystery novel entitled (drumroll…) Phantom Audition.

St Johns Museum, Warwick

I struggled more than usual to find a title for this particular novel, even resorting to testing a few suggested titles on social media. But in the end, my closest friend suggested this title to me, and it stuck.

Phantom Audition revolves around Mia Yardley, a recently widowed bit-part actress grieving for her much more successful actor husband in his ancestral family mansion (like the one pictured above). Cryptic runes, a strange diary, a mysterious medium, and ghostly visions gradually lead to the unravelling of a sinister mystery. Is Mia being given a message from beyond the grave?

This novel sits more at the supernatural/psychological thriller end of my gothic thriller/horror spectrum, though there are still plenty of suspenseful, skin-crawling moments. I intend to beta test it very soon, and once that’s happened (and it’s been through various publisher hurdles), it should be available this October.

Before then I have another scary novel to unleash, called The Irresistible Summons. This is a haunted house story of a very different kind about which I will say no more at present, other than you can expect to have it in your hands in July.

In between those two releases, I might just release another short story. It all depends whether my somewhat offbeat submission to my publisher’s upcoming Coffins and Dragons anthology is accepted. Watch this space.

First Love: A Dragon Soul Press interview with yours truly

Recently I was interviewed by my publisher, Dragon Soul Press, in conjunction with the release of their new romantic fantasy anthology First Love, for which I have contributed a short story entitled Papercut.

 

Papercut concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his overbearing Jehovah’s Witness mother, who has his world turned upside down when a mysterious girl made entirely of paper keeps appearing in his dreams.

Bits of this interview may crop up elsewhere, but here it is in full.

Did any of your books get rejected by publishers?

Yes. In some cases I came maddeningly close to mainstream publication. My most notable near misses were for Love vs Honour, a teenage romantic drama with a religious twist; and for Children of the Folded Valley, a dystopian memoir about a man looking back on his life growing up in the midst of a seemingly utopian cult. In the latter case, the publisher wanted me to rewrite the entire novel as a third person narrative, which was absurd. I felt thoroughly vindicated by the fact that when I self-published it, Children of the Folded Valley became my most successful novel to date by far. Everyone else I have spoken to says they can’t imagine it being a tenth as powerful as a third person narrative.

What inspires you to write?

The voices in my head. They won’t shut up.

What is your writing Kryptonite?

Social media (so distracting). Or exhaustion.

How hard was it to sit down and actually start writing something?

For First Love? Honestly not that hard. Although romance isn’t a genre I often tackle (despite the afore-mentioned novel Love vs Honour), romance with fantasy elements is a little different. I had the idea for my short story Paper Cut download into my mind almost straight away once I read the brief for the anthology.

What does literary success look like to you?

Someone making a film of your book. Even if the film ends up being terrible, it shows the book reached enough people that someone thought making the film was a good idea in the first place.

A more boring answer is making enough money on book sales so you can quit the day job. That’s a pipe dream for most writers though. Actually, a pipe dream is aspiring to be a plumber. Just as punching a clairvoyant who has won the lottery is striking a happy medium. Enough terrible jokes…

Do you read much and if so, who are your favourite authors?

Yes, I read constantly across many genres. I answered this question in fairly exhaustive fashion elsewhere on the Dragon Soul Press website, but this time I shall mostly restrict my answers to romantic fiction. I tend to prefer my romance doomed. Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte), The English Patient (Michael Odaatje), Anna Karenina (Leo Tolstoy), The Remains of the Day (Kazou Ishiguro) and One Day (David Nicholls) are all good examples. There are a few exceptions to this, such as Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, or Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd (which is sort-of happy at the end despite the melancholia and tragedy throughout). Many of my favourite novels that wouldn’t be classed as romance feature doomed romantic subplots. Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell for example, or Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks. Fantasy fiction also features a few great romantic tragedies, including one that to my mind rivals Romeo and Juliet, at the conclusion of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy.

As Sally Sparrow once observed in classic Doctor Who episode Blink, “Sad is happy for deep people”.

How many hours a day do you write?

I don’t really time myself, but I have a daily goal of writing 1,000 words per day on weekdays, and 2,000 words per day at weekends, whenever I take on a project (either a novel or a short story).

What is your motivation for writing more?

To silence the voices in my head.

When did it dawn upon you that you wanted to be a writer?

It evolved over a longer process that always involved writing to some degree. I’ve always written short stories, but my first ambition was to be a journalist. That evolved into wanting to be a film director, but then I realised I preferred writing screenplays to the production rigmarole. That then evolved into writing novels.

Are you satisfied with your success?

No. I’ve still got loads of things I want to share with the widest possible readership. I have a pathological urge to entertain, and I don’t think I’ll ever be cured of it. Nor do I want to be.

First Love also features stories from a bunch of other hugely talented authors. Whether you fancy reading about the romantic dreamscapes of the religiously oppressed, or love stories involving forest nymphs, mages, selkies, Native American mythology, or, as one of my fellow writers pitched her story to me, “Bridget Jones meets Morgana Le Fay”, this is a must for those who like their romance with a fantastical twist.

To pre-order in the UK click here.

To pre-order in the US click here.

Paperbacks of First Love will be available from the 28th of February.

First Love: Now Available For Pre-Order

You can now pre-order First Love on Amazon Kindle. I have contributed a short story entitled Papercut to this Dragon Soul Press romantic fantasy anthology, and even though I say so myself, it is really rather good.

Papercut concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, who takes him on a magical journey into… Well, you’ll have to read more to find out.

First Love is released on the 28th of February.

To pre-order click here (for the UK) and here (for the US).

First Love: Another short story coming soon

I have some more exciting news on the publishing front. Dragon Soul Press has selected my short story Papercut for inclusion in their upcoming romantic anthology, First Love.

The theme for this anthology is self-explanatory, but with elements of fantasy. My story, Papercut, concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, and… Well, you’ll have to read it to find out what happens.

First Love is released on the 28th of February. Watch this space for further updates.