Author Interview with Rhys Hughes

If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?

I would choose a squonk. It’s a creature that is generally described as being small and roundish, indigenous to the hemlock forests of Pennsylvania, but I’m not even sure what a hemlock forest is, unless it just means it’s a forest where lots of hemlock grows. I imagined it as a forest where the hemlock plants are so tall they are like trees, but I guess that’s wrong. Squonks weep all the time. They are the saddest lifeforms in the world, and if you capture one in a sack it will dissolve completely into tears. But my wife loves animals of all kinds, and she is very sweet, so I reckon she would cheer it up. Maybe we would end up with the first jolly squonk in history, a squonk that likes to laugh. It’s a nice thought.

What type of music best describes your writing?

Jazz. Because the way I write often involves improvising between certain markers. I don’t plan stories carefully, but I know roughly the direction I want them to go, and there are certain points along the way I try to reach. Sometimes I don’t reach them but go around them, or even go off on tangents, but that doesn’t matter. My method is to attempt to link up all those points, but I am a pantser between those points. Absolutely like certain types of jazz. Not sure exactly what types. Could be trad, could be cool, bebop or fusion, maybe a mix of all the kinds. I played ragtime piano when I was younger and I began to get into looser forms too, but I was never an especially good musician. I do my jazz in my writing instead.

Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.

I don’t have any office space at the moment. I am sofa surfing. In fact, I am homeless, but if I say that it sounds more desperate than it is. We lived in a nice apartment in India, but my visa expired so I had to leave the country. The UK is absurdly expensive, and until I get a proper job, I can’t afford an apartment here, so no office space. I write wherever I can and whenever I can, but that isn’t anything new. I can write almost anywhere. I once wrote a novella while hiking in the Sierra Nevada mountains and bivouacking under the stars. I used boulders as a desk and wrote the story longhand. The dream is to have office space again one day, of course. It will be a place where I can leave my notes lying around without worrying about interference. It’s special in that sense. Privacy and non-interference from outside forces.

What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?

Escher has been a big influence on my work, a formative influence. I first saw one of his pictures when I was about eight years old, in some book or other, and it was ‘Waterfall’, one of his most famous lithographs. The caption under the picture said something like, “Can you tell what isn’t possible here?” and I studied the image for ages, but I couldn’t see anything impossible about it. Eventually I concluded that the plants in the lower left corner were undersea plants and shouldn’t be on land, exposed to the air. It was several days before I suddenly grasped that the waterfall design was the impossibility in question. I was astounded. Writers mostly talk about their literary influences, and I do that too, but Escher has been almost as important to me as any author. I decided that my ambition was to do with my writing something similar to what Escher did with visual art, to play with paradoxes and impossibilities in a pleasingly aesthetic manner.

If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?

Writing is a full-time job for me at the moment, but it doesn’t earn enough for me to sincerely call it a career. I was an engineer many years ago. I had an interesting life as a consequence because I worked in unusual situations in places that weren’t exactly on anyone’s bucket list in tourism terms. I haven’t been an engineer for a long time. My last proper job was teaching mathematics to undergraduates. Occasionally I will be paid enough money for a story or a novel to keep me going for a few months. But I have a frugal lifestyle. Living in India and Sri Lanka was a lot cheaper than living anywhere in Europe. My writing income almost paid for my daily expenses. Maybe one of my books will break through one day and my writing income will go up as a result but I’m literally not banking on it. On the other hand, I wouldn’t describe my writing as a hobby. It’s more of a compulsion really.

What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?

My target has always been to write 1000 words every day, but it’s very rare that I hit exactly that number. It’s often more than that, often less. I sometimes double that output, even treble it. But there are days when I write nothing. Last year, 2023, was my most productive writing year ever. I wrote 350,000 words of fiction, and that doesn’t include the articles, plays and poems I wrote. I doubt I will ever again have a year as productive as that one. Productivity for its own sake is pointless, of course, but in my case, I really believe in my projects, and I have a lot of projects on the go at the same time. In fact, I am looking forward to slowing down and working on only one thing at any given time. It must be pleasant just to be working on one novel, one story, one play, one essay, instead of being in a whirl of ideas and rushing from one project to another and then back again…

How do you celebrate publishing a new story?

By starting to write a new one. I don’t celebrate my publications. I have a fear of living on past glories. Not that my achievements are glories in an objective sense. I can’t say that. We should be modest. But all the same, I really don’t like thinking about what I have done. The only way I feel happy is by thinking about what I am doing and what I plan to do. I can’t bear even to keep my own books. Not that I am able to keep many books of any kind anyway, as I am constantly moving around and can’t carry too much weight, and I’m unable to read eBooks. I tried hard, I put a kindle app on my phone, but it drove me nuts. I am too wedded to paper books. And yes, a kindle app isn’t the same as a Kindle, but I don’t care. It’s paper books for me or nothing. I have made that resolution. I celebrate my wife’s new publications but not my own. I think that’s fair.

How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?

I don’t. I’m not organized in that sense at all. I write when I can, and I also spend as much time as I can outdoors. I love hiking, mountaineering, and daily exercise is essential to me. I would more happily skip a writing day than an exercise day. I guess some sort of balance happens anyway, but it’s not through conscious choice. It’s just a case of me responding to what urgency compels me at the time, whether to bash out words for a story or stretch my legs on a trek. I am waiting to be reunited with my wife. Bureaucratic rules have kept us apart for four months. In another few months we should be together, fingers crossed. That’s what I’m living for. And in the meantime, I write and hike. I don’t climb dangerous mountains like I did in my youth. I only go up relatively safe ones. The view from the top is often just as good.

Write your eulogy in three sentences.

“He was never really sure what the word ‘eulogy’ meant, and he tended to get it confused with the word ‘epitaph’. He kept looking them up in dictionaries. But he would quickly forget the definitions because they aren’t words he used much…”

What project are you most proud of completing?

The next one. Always the next one. This is the true answer, but I know it’s not an answer that will be looked on with favour by anyone reading this. It seems evasive, perhaps. I used to say that my best novel was The Percolated Stars, and my best short story collection was Tallest Stories, but I don’t know whether I still agree. Maybe I do. I know that I am certainly very pleased with one of my novellas, My Rabbit’s Shadow Looks Like a Hand, simply because it features so many of the things that I really like about writing, I mean concept-play, wordplay, and tricky layouts, also the mix of a speculative fiction backstory with lots of vignettes that are done OuLiPo style, in other words with a mathematical structure, such as stories written following the Fibonacci Sequence, by which I mean that each sentence of the text has a specific number of letters in it determined by the sequence itself. I love games like that.

Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?

All of them. But once again, I’m aware that’s not a very useful answer. So, I am going to say my novel The Wistful Wanderings of Perceval Pitthelm, which is an adventure story set in the early part of the 20th Century, a bit steampunkish but not quite of that genre, magic realist as far as it goes, quirky, whimsical, inventive. But leaning on readers like this feels uncouth. I have a new novel coming out from the same publisher, Growl at the Moon, which is a weird Western. And from the magnificent Elsewhen Press I have a novel called The Devil’s Halo due out, maybe at the end of 2024. That one I’m really looking forward to seeing in print.

Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?

Now I am going to say something that is probably going to mark me out as a bit eccentric. In any fiction there are only two characters, the author and the reader. The other ‘characters’ aren’t characters, they are just words on a page bundled together and we call them characters as if they are real people, and this convention is so ingrained in our approach as readers that we simply won’t question it. But they aren’t real people. They are facets of the writer’s personality and intentions, and they are interpreted by facets of the reader’s personality and intentions. Thus, my favourite character in all my fiction has to be the reader. I can’t choose the writer as my favourite character because that would be impolite. So, if you happen to be reading any of my stories or my novels, you are my favourite character in them. As for who I would like to take over writing this character, there’s only one answer. Yourself.

Where can your readers find you on social media?

I am on Facebook, and I can be found at https://www.facebook.com/rhysaurus. I am on Bluesky too, but I don’t use it very often. I have very little interest in Instagram or any other social media. I use Goodreads. That’s about it.

Bio:

Rhys Hughes was born in Wales but has lived in many different countries. He began writing at an early age and his first book, Worming the Harpy, was published in 1995. Since that time, he has published more than fifty other books, and his work has been translated into ten languages. He recently completed an ambitious project that involved writing exactly 1000 linked short stories. He is currently working on a novel and several new collections of prose and verse.

Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhys_Hughes SFE: https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/hughes_rhys

Author Interview with Can Wiggins

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: Mmm. At the risk of incurring the wrath of The Worst Cat in The World, I would choose a Hellhound. I have a project started up and a hellhound figures into it. Cerberus? Why not ...

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: I have two distinct sounds, one being jazz (all sorts) for the more noir bent while film and TV scores are my other bag of tricks which include SF, Fantasy, Horror. I also listen to classical music. Always have, probably always will. I don’t/can’t listen to rock while I’m writing.

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
A: I have a small desk I share with Edgar Allan Poe (I’m not kidding) in a corner of my living room, a window on either side. I can look out and see flowers, birds, deer, and the occasional gremlin.

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: This is a tough one as I’m quite visual and make art as well. A favorite artist is Gustav Klimt (all that gold and geometric design). His “Judith” (carrying the head of Holofernes!) is a definite yes for me as is “Athene” and “Hygeia” – strong women who took matters into their own hands for everyone’s betterment. Frida Kahlo, Leonora Carrington are my favourite surrealists, esp Carrington’s sculptures. And William Blake was a visionary, simply put. “Nebuchadnezzar”? Get out of town… what a horrorshow. But to be honest, I often get more inspiration from a phrase or line of dialogue in a movie or book, and often, something someone says in passing will hit me as “that would make a good story”, etc. Words have power.

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Writing is not and never has been a hobby. I’ve always written with an eye towards being published, and/or to entertain readers and listeners. I do work but my dream day job? I would be an editor at a publishing company. Doesn’t have to be one of The Big Four but I think that would be right up my alley. I’ve always had work as a proofreader/editor, often at a newspaper, a law firm, or a design firm. It sounds tedious but it really isn’t. The job is to not only correct typos but to clarify and make the original work/writer “read” even better than they already do.

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I try to make time every day for writing, which can be tough. My goal is at least 500 words a day but if I’m in the zone, I go until I run out of steam, and I’ve popped out a couple of thousand words in a first go. I write between breakfast and early afternoon, but I often write after the rest of the house has gone to bed and I can work completely uninterrupted.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: Oh, I’m terrible. I tell everyone, haha. Then I jump on another story.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: Outside life. That’s a good one. I like a little boob tube plus I garden and listen to music. I try to visit friends. I read a LOT. I have a very supportive partner who is a great cook, as well as a good beta reader.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: Allow me to do this in one: “Now I’ll really raise hell.”

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: There’s a series I’ve been on for a while that I’m hoping to wrap up this year. Let’s leave it at that.

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
A: I have a Weird West tale that also could be considered an off the chain SF/Weird story.

Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?
A: Sweet Betsey from P.I.K.E. The titular character from this story is a tough bird and a smartass which is what she needs to be in her line of work. Sadly, a lot of people do not know/remember the Old West ballad “Sweet Betsy from Pike”, which is a shame. That gal had adventures! I can’t think of anyone who could continue the character. NOT because I don’t think they could, I just don’t think anyone else would want to be saddled with a postapocalyptic P.I. who has to drag people back into their own timeline or else…

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: I’m mainly on Facebook as Can Wiggins. I’m working on more of a presence with an author’s page or Substack or whatever. If anyone can help me, let me know! I keep threatening to name it “Miss Wiggins Can Be Difficult” which is how my doctor once described me to an intern. 

Bio: Can Wiggins never met a monster she didn’t like … except one. She’s been published by Planet X Publications, Oxygen Man Books, Alien Sun Press, shoggoth.net and the Atlanta HWA anthology, Georgia Gothic. Her cowritten screenplay “Eidolon” is a modern take on “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and starts filming summer 2024. A member of HWA as well as The Outer Dark community, she’s been a regular contributor to Weird Fiction Quarterly since its 2022 inaugural issue. She lives in Athens.

Author Interview with Lindsey Goddard

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: Hard question, as the endless possibilities made my mind race with the following thoughts: What about a Mogwai? No. It might turn into a Gremlin. What about Alf? No. He might eat the cat. What about the talking worm from Labyrinth? No, evil scientists would try to capture him to run tests and experiments. So, I have come to the conclusion that I cannot handle the moral responsibility of a fantasy pet and must decline but thank you for offering.

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: Metal symphony!

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
A: I have two desks in two rooms, yet I end up writing in bed on my laptop, which is terrible for my posture and my bad wrist, I know. What can I say? Depressed goth girls love their beds. Perhaps because there is always a pillow to scream into. I’m working on sitting at a desk more often, though (she types from her bed)

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: I’m often inspired by the drawings of children. Kids are bold and unfiltered when they express themselves, and I think that’s why children’s drawings are the focal point of a lot of horror movie scenes. They don’t worry about how people will respond to their art. They simply draw the world as they see it.

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Oh boy. The dreaded ‘J’ word. Job. I’ve had over thirty of those! People like to ask each other, “What do you do?” but very little of what I’ve done to make ends meet has anything to do with who I am. Jobwise, I am a woman of many hats. The only thing that’s a constant in my life is the drive to create. Nothing else holds my attention. I used to think this made me defective, but I’ve learned to appreciate it. Is writing a hobby? No. It’s my whole identity. It’s who I am underneath
the many hats. And it’s likely the only hat that matters in the end.

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I write a few times a week. I’m happy to get 500 words, but more is always nice.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: It has been a while since I’ve had a new one come out, but July is a big month for me. I have at least three stories coming out in different publications that month. I’m going to celebrate by doing games and giveaways on my page.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: Poorly, to be honest! Sometimes I neglect the writing until I must eventually lock myself away and catch up. I wish I was more structured. It’s like Franz Kafka said: “The non-writing writer is a monster courting insanity.” I can’t bottle it up. Sometimes I forget that. It’ll come out with fury. Haha.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: If you should ever think of Lindsey Goddard and miss her--write a poem, beat a drum, paint a picture, sing a song, count the colors in the garden, or watch the birds in the sky. Because those are the moments that she enjoyed the most. And those are the moments worth living.

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: I’m getting ready to release my novel, Ashes of Another Life. It was released in 2016 as a novella, but it has been expanded. I have always loved this story, and it’s even better now. Can’t wait to drop it!

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
A: Ohhhhh, just a little thing called WeirdWideWeb.org where we hold writing contests, write blogs, and record a podcast.
Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book who would you choose and why?
A: My character Tara Jane Brewer from Ashes of Another Life left behind a polygamist cult at the age of fourteen and has a whole new life ahead of her. I’d pick her. Who to write her? A strong female voice such as Catriona Ward, Mercedes M. Yardley, Laurel Hightower, or Caitlin Marceau. I’ve read them all, and it amazes me how they capture the fragile yet enduring human condition.

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: I would LOVE more followers on X! My profile is: X.com/lindseybethgodd
Insta: https://instagram.com/lindseybethgoddard
BlueSky: lindseygoddard.bsky.social

Bio: Lindsey Goddard lives in Missouri but wishes she didn't. Her first short story collection, Respect for the Dead, was published through Total Darkness Press in 2011. Her first novella, Ashes of Another Life, was released through Omnium Gatherum Media in 2016 and is slated for release as a full-length novel in 2024. Her fiction has been published by Dark Moon Books, The Sinister Horror Company, ZBF Books, and more. Lindsey Goddard has three short story collections, a poetry book, and runs WeirdWideWeb.org.

Author Interview with J.C. Macek III

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: I have to go with the dragon, regardless of how common that answer may be. A noble, loyal flying creature that can also breathe fire at its enemies? Sign me up, amigos!

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: Classic Rock. I try to keep the complexity and timelessness of an album-oriented rock track and still surprise the reader when the story goes from light and melodic to heavy and terrifying at the shift of a drumbeat.

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
A: I tend to write anywhere inspiration hits. I’ve been known to pull my car over to the side of a busy freeway to type out a few paragraphs I don’t want to forget. Sometimes I’ll keep a window open on my computer while at my day job and work out some plot points. I’ve even written long passages and outlines while on a machine in my gym.

I suppose my favorite place to write is in my leather recliner with my lap desk, just in the comfort and coolness of my living room surrounded by my Beatles images.

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: I have cowritten an upcoming story in the Hand of Doom anthology called “La Maison Infernale” that took some inspiration from German Renaissance artist and woodcarver Michael Pacher’s painting The Devil Presenting St. Augustine with the Book of Vices. I was looking for a terrifying demon for this cursed house and I was inspired by his representation of hell spawn. The anthology contains stories inspired by Black Sabbath, so I didn’t base the story on Archbishop Pacher’s work, but he definitely influenced it.

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Writing has been my lifelong passion, and I wouldn’t call it a hobby. It’s more of a necessity for my soul.

Until I hit high points on the bestseller list, I still have my day job as a computer programmer. Finishing programs isn’t the same as finishing a novel but it still feels great and some of the same effort goes in. If only a missed plot point would result in “SYNTAX ERROR”!

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I’ve noticed a lot of writers monitor how long and how much they write and stick to that. It could be my severe ADHD, but I never really could do that. When I’m inspired, I write. When I’m blocked, I don’t. I’ve tried forcing myself to write and it doesn’t work for me. So, sometimes I’ll write nothing at all. Other days, I’ll get twenty-five thousand words in and will only stop when my head hits the keyboard in exhaustion.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: Usually, I’ll post about it on social media and tell a few people, but I stay low key on these things. I try to dive back into the next story as quickly as I can.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: It’s never easy, especially when people want to talk as soon as I start writing.
I have to prioritize my day job to stay alive, my workouts to stay healthy and my family, of course, because they’re my heart. That’s probably why I write in such strange places and times. When it has to come, it has to come.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: “They said he couldn’t be killed. They said he would last forever. Oh, shit, they were right, he just got up and left!”

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: Definitely The Black Dahlia (2024) from Spellbound Books, LTD.
I have been lucky that my best writing has been my most recent writing. Good short stories are flowing. But my latest novel The Black Dahlia took so much time and effort and actually came out satisfactorily that I’m proud of every page of that book. Readers love it too so far.

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
A: I am editing the anthology Symptom of the Universe: A Horror Tribute to Black Sabbath. I have over thirty great stories (including some by me), all inspired by the music and lyrics of Black Sabbath. Very exciting stuff. It’s coming this summer.

Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?
A: Jake Slater, Private Investigator, has become my favorite character. He’s a flawed human being with his fair share of issues and he’s far beyond merely “driven” to solve his cases the best way he can. That doesn’t mean he always wins. Many of his victories are Pyrrhic. What he does do is fight through every obstacle so that his clients (living or dead) get their wins.

You can see this play out in The Black Dahlia.

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: Instagram @Kneumsi https://www.instagram.com/kneumsi/

Twitter @kneumsi https://twitter.com/Kneumsi/

Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/JakeSlaterMystery/

My GoodReads author page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15259619.J_C_Macek_III

My Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B07111NTNF

Bio: J.C. Maçek III is a professional journalist, novelist, columnist, interviewer, critic, actor, musician and producer. Since creating WorldsGreatestCritic in 2003, he has written thousands of reviews and historical articles. This led to his work at PopMatters, one of the largest Arts and Culture magazines in the world, where he writes the popular film column The Next Reel. At PopMatters he also conducts celebrity interviews (with the likes of Aerosmith, Faith No More, Judas Priest, The Zombies, The Cult and more) and has written hundreds more reviews, articles and film history features. He has been syndicated to such print publications as The Sacramento Bee and has also contributed reviews for SpectrumCulture and political articles for The Hill. His first novel Seven Days to Die: A Jake Slater Mystery was published in 2016 and has met with acclaim. The J.C. Maçek III produced motion picture thriller [Cargo] was released in 2018 and a novelization of the [Cargo] motion picture by J.C. Maçek III was published by Bloodhound Books on January 21, 2018. After [Cargo], J.C. returned to Jake Slater’s mysteries with 2022’s The Antagonist: A Jake Slater Mystery. His latest novel is The Black Dahlia, a meticulously researched True Crime thriller based entirely on real life events. He currently resides in Southern California with his wife and family.

Author Interview with Glynn Barrass

Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: Hmmm a difficult one, as my cat Tiber is the only pet I’d ever want! He’s my best friend.
Let’s go for a Manticore though. They look cool, could fly me places, and really f**k up
my enemies with that scorpion tail of theirs.

Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
A: That truly depends on what genre I’m writing in. I listen to movie scores and soundtracks
while I’m writing, so I guess you could say orchestral?

Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
A: It’s just a desk in a corner of my front room, so nothing particularly special about it. It has
been there a long time though!

Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
A: I would have to say pieces, many pieces, and that’s art by Chrisopher Shy. He’s an
amazing artist and his paintings have inspired many stories. You can find some of his
great images here: https://www.artstation.com/studioronin

Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
A: Well preferably my day job would be rich dilettante ha-ha, otherwise I have no idea.
Writing is more of a hobby for me than anything else, because I can’t imagine any day
job being this enjoyable.

Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
A: I write every day, shortly after getting up. Word count is variable, and I’m satisfied if I
get 300 words written in one sitting, if they’re good words.

Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
A: Nothing special, just the feeling of satisfaction, I guess.

Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
A: I have no outside life ha-ha. I am quite the recluse by nature and happy with that.

Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
A: I would use the Howard Phillips Lovecraft couplet from The Nameless City:
“That is not dead which can eternal lie,
And with strange aeons even death may die.”

Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
A: Another difficult one! I’ve completed many projects so it’s impossible to choose just one.
The anthologies I edited for various publishers make me equally proud, followed by the
campaign book I wrote with Brian M. Sammons for Chaosium: A Time To Harvest.

Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
A: Absolutely! My most recent anthology, co-edited with Brian M. Sammons. Mystery,
Murder, Madness, Mythos, is a collection of stories that blend the Cthulhu Mythos with
the Murder Mystery genre, and our authors did a fantastic job. It was published by PS
Publishing and is available from their site and all major book outlets.

Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a
popular author to continue writing this character in another book who would you choose
and why?
A: My favorite character is Cassandra Bane, a female Private Detective based in Red Hook,
New York. I’ve written over a dozen stories featuring her encounters with threats from
the Cthulhu Mythos to more traditional horrors. Who would I want to carry her torch?
Perhaps William Gibson? He’s one of my favorite authors, and she would certainly fit in
with his style and imagination.

Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
A: There’s my website:
https://strangeraeons.godaddysites.com/
And my Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/glynn.barrass/

    Bio: Glynn Owen Barrass lives in the North East of England and has been writing since late 2006. He has written over two hundred short stories, novellas, and role-playing game supplements, the majority of which have been published in France, Germany, Japan, Poland, Portugal, the UK, and the USA.

    To date he has edited and co-edited ten anthologies: Anno Klarkash-Ton, Atomic Age Cthulhu, The Children of Gla’aki, Eldritch Chrome, In the Court of the Yellow King, Murder Mystery Madness and Mythos, Steampunk Cthulhu, The Summer of Lovecraft, Through a Mythos Darkly, and World War Cthulhu.

    He has been the co-recipient of two Ennies awards for his gaming work.

    Writing A Prequel Novel to Case #7

    Here’s a little taste of the story in this collection. I would like to write a prequel novel where the characters are introduced to one another. What type of case would you like to see them investigate? Comment below and I might use your suggestion.

    So what would a good prequel be to the case for characters to meet based on the first two pages of this case? I would like to write a novel. Is there a case you would like to see characters meet investigating? They are strictly a paranormal team.

    Markets I Plan to Submit to During Clarion West Write-A-Thon 2024

    I just wanted to give my readers a list of the markets I have been researching for writing stories, so you know I am very serious about writing daily as I have promised to my donators. I want to be loyal to all of you and continue to earn your trust and hopefully, more pledges as the Write-A-Thon continues through July to help disadvantaged authors be able to attend wonderful workshops with great teachers to help them hone their crafts. You can donate to my fundraiser here. So far, I’ve reached 34% of my $500 goal. Please consider helping me reach my goal. If I do, I will up my goal to $700 and see how far I can get. Thank you to everyone that has helped me so far!

    I would like to add I have already submitted to thirteen publications this June. 🙂 And I am still planning on starting a novel, a prequel to a short story as well. I will post the short story in its entirety on here for you to read, as it has been published for some time. Have a great writing day!

    You might ask why you should consider donating to Clarion West Workshops and here is an informational link about what the foundation is all about and where your donations go.

    If you would like to support other writers participating in this year’s Write-A-Thon for Clarion West, there is a list of participants to choose from as well.

    https://horrortree.com/event/taking-submissions-dracula-beyond-stoker-issue-5-2/

    https://horrortree.com/taking-submissions-the-earth-bleeds-at-night/

    The First line: https://www.thefirstline.com/submission.htm

    Closeup shot of glass marbles

    Dolls in the attic by Terrorcore Publishing

    https://www.fairytalemagazine.com/ Mashups

    submissions: htmlhttps://www.westavenuepublishing.co.uk/p/anthology-submissions.html

    https://duotrope.com/magazine/fraidy-cat-quarterly-36876

    https://horrortree.com/event/taking-submissions-silence/

    https://horrortree.com/taking-submissions-black-cat-tales-early/
    https://www.fartheststarpublishing.com/post/portals-gateways-and-doors-oh-my

    https://thegrinder.diabolicalplots.com/Market/Index/17345

    https://horrortree.com/taking-submissions-disability-in-fantasy-anthology-title-tbd/

    Sudden Fictions Podcast: July theme is Fire

    Shallow Waters Flash Fiction Contest

    http://www.manawaker.com/manawaker-studios-flash-fiction-podcast/

    https://horrortree.com/taking-submissions-punk-goes-horror/

    Chicken Soup for the Dog’s Soul

    Author Interview with Roxanne Bland

    Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
    A: A ky’un. They’re house pets, like miniature Komodo dragons, and vicious. Little savages.

    Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
    A: That depends on what I’m writing. For edgier works, it’s usually something like heavy metal, or other types of music with a driving beat. For those that aren’t so edgy, softer orchestral works, like Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.

    Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
    A: Well, I wouldn’t say it’s special. At least I don’t think of it as a special space. It’s just my office. But it’s a single room with a door, and when I’m in there writing, the world could blow up and I wouldn’t notice as long as the electricity and internet stayed on. If they don’t, yeah. The world is gonna have problems with me.

    Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
    A: Interesting question, because I honestly can’t say that any work of art has inspired a story, even though I’m an art collector. I’ve never looked at my pieces that way. I admire them for their beauty and the emotions they evoke in me. Maybe I’ll try it!

    Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for you?
    A: Having had a day job for over 30 years and recently transitioning to full-time writing, I can’t imagine having a day job again. I can’t even imagine what I’d do. I suppose I could say a day job that doesn’t require heavy thinking.

    Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
    A: I don’t have a schedule. Might be a good idea for me to create one. I’m usually on my computer doing various things, and when an idea strikes me, I just pull up the manuscript and write. Now that I think about it, yeah, a schedule is a good idea. As for word count, I have no idea. I stopped doing that ages ago. Giving myself a set number makes me anxious, like it’s some kind of test, and if I don’t make the count, I get demerits. And honestly, I don’t pay attention to word count, period. It takes as many words as it takes to tell the story. My books usually top out in the 100,000 range. But if the story tells itself in 80,000, that’s what it’ll be.

    Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
    A: I don’t. There’s a sense of satisfaction, of course. But I don’t celebrate, like having a glass of wine or taking in a movie. I suppose I celebrate by maybe taking a nap, reading another author’s work, and then starting the next project.

    Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
    A: Outside life? What’s that? Really, I’m more than a bit of a recluse. I can interact with people if a have to, and even come off as well-balanced and sane. But I don’t want to. I simply prefer being alone.

    Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
    A: Roxanne Bland was a fugitive from reality. In death, reality believes it has caught up to her, but it hasn’t. Roxanne is far beyond reality’s clutches now.

    Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
    A: The Underground, because it was my first book. I was sure I could write a novel, but hadn’t a clue how to go about it until my first editor took me under his wing. I learn something new every time I write a book, but this one’s special because it was the vehicle that took me into a whole new world. And you know what? I think I’ll stay.

    Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?”
    A: At present, I’m writing Liberation, the 3rd book in The Underground series, which dadgummit, I’m going to publish by the end of this year! (I said that last year, too). After that, it’ll be Homeward, the 4th and last book in that series. I’m not through with that universe, but I’m eyeing taking a break from it and work on other projects that are now titles of a folder with nothing in them.

    Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book, who would you choose and why?
    A: Honestly, I don’t have a favorite. I can see myself hanging out with any one or all of them. As for another author, I don’t think I would. My characters are facets of my personality, and unless the author could get into my head, I don’t think they could do it justice. And I do not recommend said author getting into my head. It’s a dangerous neighborhood in there.

    Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
    A: Lots of places.

      Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100029694768624

      Twitter: https://x.com/AuthorBland

      LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/roxanne-bland-61b354273/

      Instagram: roxanneblandauthor1

      ROXANNE BLAND has been a fugitive from reality for as long as she can remember. Defying the laws of physics at every turn, she is now No. 1 on the Albert Einstein Bureau of Enforcement’s Most Wanted list. The Underground Series is the fictional memoir of her life on the lam (so far).

      Author Interview with Blaze Ward

      Q: If you could have a fantasy pet, what would you have and why?
      A: Strawberry Dragon. Someone reminded me of the book I wrote by that name, and I had to
      stop and remember how silly those folks got. And why I need to circle back there one of
      these days and continue the adventures of Fairchild and her friends.

      Q: What type of music best describes your writing?
      A: That’s messy. I wore out cassettes for Willie Nelson and Meatloaf in high school. My
      music collection runs some 800 CDs and is kinda all over the place.
      Grand and lyrical, I suppose. Meatloaf or Freddie Mercury. Also been listening to a lot of
      modern classical, and Peter Boyer speaks to me of stories that get into your soul and take
      root.

      Q: Tell us about your writing office/space and why it’s special to you.
      A: Standing desk looking out over the backyard, the fruit orchard, and my wife’s house. GREEN,
      except when it snows, then white. Sun in my face for a few minutes first thing if the sky is clear.
      Standing so I can pace back and forth, and the coffee is close at hand. And my wife can wave at
      me.

      Q: What is your favorite piece of visual art that has inspired a story or two?
      A: This is the picture that turned into Jessica Keller’s wedding dress. And inspired the
      entirety of how her wedding went in Book 9/Petron. I am a fashion nerd, so often I have
      used outfits to frame characters, or even entire civilization.

      Q: If you didn’t write full-time what would your day job be? Is writing a hobby for
      you?
      A: I used to be a database architect and developer, before turning writing into a full-time gig and if I had to get a day job again, I would prefer something in an office where I don’t have to
      deal with people, and writing would still be a side hustle. Hopefully, it never comes to that.

      Q: What is your writing schedule and how many words do you write in a sitting?
      A: Up around 6:30 in the morning. Have a cup of coffee. Check mail, comics, and social
      media for a while. Usually start writing by 8:00. Work all morning, taking breaks every
      hour or so to get more coffee, goof off, recharge.
      If everything is on, I try to get about 4,000 words, five days per week. Works out roughly
      to Pulp Speed One (84k/month, 1M/year)

      Q: How do you celebrate publishing a new story?
      A: Don’t generally. I’ve published at least one novella or novel monthly since late 2017.
      Often publish 16-20 projects per year. None of them are going to make me rich, but each of them adds a few nickels each month and keeps me from having to have a real job.

      Q: How do you balance your outside life with your writing life?
      A: Stop writing at noon. Spend the afternoon doing stuff. Farm work around the property. Go into town for mail or errands. Goof off. After dinner, I might edit something for me, the Fabulous Publisher Babe™, or one of my magazines.

      Q: Write your eulogy in three sentences.
      [Ain’t dead yet… 😉 ]
      He told a lot of stories, then one day she explained that he could make money at it.
      He wasn’t just thinking outside the box, but outside the warehouse.
      He never stopped trying to learn new things, even before he discovered the Anti-Stodgy
      Campaign.

      Q: What project are you most proud of completing?
      A: Probably Jessica Keller. Twelve novels and two novellas. About one million words
      combined, I think. EPICLY grand space opera that never loses sight of the people
      involved. And created an entire “modern” universe that I have put a whole bunch of other
      projects into, including First Centurion Kosnett (the first sequel series).

      Q: Do you have any projects you would like to tell your readers about?
      A: I got lots. Right now, Books 3 and 4 of the Corsac Fox are coming out (Summer 2024).
      Lords of the Endless Plains and Warlord of the Spinward Reaches. More epic military
      space opera with lots of aliens, lostech, lost civilizations, grand wars, and an enemy that
      will stop at nothing short of conquering the entire galaxy.

      Q: Who is your favorite character from any of your stories and why? If you had to
      choose a popular author to continue writing this character in another book who
      would you choose and why?
      A: I got lots. Lady Moirrey/Pintsized from Jessica et al. R’wn the Strawberry Dragon, M’nth
      the blacksmith dragon, and N’drn the Professor of Comparative Religions dragon. Suka
      Kuri the Exemplar of the Arts, Moss School. If I had to let someone else play with my toys, I might try to blackmail Daniel Keys Moran into writing something in one of my (how many?) story universes. He’s one of the best writers I know, and amazing, though semi-retired these days.

      Q: Where can your readers find you on social media?
      A: @blazeward7 on mastadon.social
      https://www.facebook.com/KRPBlaze on facebook
      http://www.blazeward.com/books
      http://www.knottedroadpress.com/shop
      http://www.boundaryshockquarterly.com
      http://www.thrillridemag.com
      http://www.blazewardpresents.com

      About the author:
      Sign up for Blaze’s VIP newsletter: http://www.blazeward.com/newsletter/

      Blaze Ward writes science fiction in the Alexandria Station universe (Jessica Keller, The Science Officer, The Story Road, etc.) as well as several other science fiction universes, such as Star Dragon, the Dominion, and more. He occasionally writes odd bits of high fantasy with swords and orcs. In addition, he is the Editor and Publisher of Boundary Shock Quarterly Magazine. You can find out more at his website www.blazeward.com, as well as Facebook, Goodreads, and other places.

      Blaze’s works are available as ebooks, paper, and audio, and can be found at a variety of online vendors (Kobo, Amazon, and others). His newsletter comes out twice a month (Publishing newsletter and Anti-Stodgy/Redneck Chef newsletter), and you can also follow his blog on his website. He really enjoys interacting with fans and looks forward to any and all questions—even ones about his books!