Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Ring Finger: A Horror Tale of Survival.

Winter's Bone. I'd seen the movie and really liked the atmosphere. Followed up by purchasing the book and while I was reading the book, I knew I'd have to touch base with a character and similar atmosphere, but from a weird, horror-infused point of view. 

Hence, "Ring Finger." 

Looks like this was originally published at least a decade ago. I think it holds up quite well. 

Here's a taste of the opening sequence. The whole tale is less than 2000 words, so give yourself a break and spend some time with Cammie and what she needs to do to survive. There's the link to the SQ Mag page where it was originally published HERE

But first, your teaser: 

***

     Cammie sucked hard on the rolled cigarette, the smoke threatening to warm her frigid innards, but failing. 

     The sky was bright and white and vast—infinite—though charcoal curled the distant edges.  

     Winter came and owned their souls.  Took root in the marrow.  Froze their dreams like Arctic lakes that never thawed. 

     Ragged threads scratched spider-like at her fingertips, the home-made fingerless gloves meant to deter calluses on the palms, but the grip of flesh, of strong fingers, was deemed necessary to swing the axe. 

     White smoke plumed past chapped lips.  Blood filled the creases, polished her cheeks, threatening to warm her again but, as always, failing.

     Warmth was an illusion.  An empty belly grown walnut-tight made that clear.  Life here was all about survival, nothing more.  Happiness, hope…all part of another’s existence.  Not those who existed here.  Claiming they were alive was an insult to the word.   

     Cammie sucked until the bead grew brilliant red, then dead black.  She flicked the corpse to the snow.

     She had work to do.

     Setting her hand on the axe handle, it vibrated at the intrusion as the man in the colorful skins made of strange materiel—Cammie could not imagine the animal that had once worn them--made a noise akin to a punctured tire or, more so, a tire trying to re-inflate itself.

***

That's all you get here, just click on the link HERE to continue.

BONUS: at the bottom of the page, after the story, I noticed the link for the other tale I had published in that magazine, "It's Only Going To End Badly." Fun stuff, completely different. Rather psychologically messed up, when you get to the end. Here's the LINK for that one. 


And remember, you can purchase my Weird Horror Collection, Autumn in the Abyss Redux by clicking on the highlighted title. It is a massive reissue collection, 25 tales, 135,000 words, give or take a few. 


Aaaaand here's a photo to kind of go with the mood of "Ring Finger." Yes, an ax, blood, pertinent stuff within the tale. 






Monday, October 2, 2023

"American Ghost": Jim Morrison, the John Dee's Necronomicon, and Poetry...

 It starts with a window in Messenger popping up, and it's the late, great writer, Joseph S. Pulver Sr. It's late August or early September of 2014 or 2015. I'm in Rome, where I spend my summers with my girlfriend, Alessandra (it's where she lives). He gives me the info about an anthology he's going to edit dealing with the origins and history of the John Dee's version of the Necronomicon, H.P. Lovecraft's diabolical tome. He asks me if I want in. 

It's Joe Pulver in the editing chair--damn straight I want in! 

[from this point onward, everything highlighted in yellow leads to a link, just click on them.]

As we go back and forth, he details how the anthology--The Leaves of a Necronomicon (the TOC is stellar, and the book deserves your attention!) --is to be staged by decades. The 1970's are still available, so I nab it. He mentions something about poetry (this was around the time of my book, Autumn in the Abyss, the title story of which deals with one man's obsessive search for a missing poet whose words wield apocalyptic power via a poem of which the title is the title of the book; you can read it in the expanded reissue of the collection, Autumn in the Abyss Redux), asks if I could maybe add "Soul Francisco" to the tale. I laugh to myself and respond, Sure, though I am uncertain of where it will fit. Yet. We end our chat and I mention the details to Alessandra. She immediately responds, you should add Jim Morrison to the tale. 

What? 

I think she's crazy. 

Twenty minutes later, I've got it all mapped out. 

In order to get the tale right, to get a special something within the tale right, I buy Morrison's books of poetry. Why, pray tell, did you buy his books of poetry? Because within the tale there would be a poem, one used as the title of the story: "American Ghost." I had to study his lines, get the tone right, the use of specific words, think of him reciting the words as I wrote the poem at the heart of the tale. 

The original version ended with a snippet from "Break on Through to the Other Side" by The Doors, of course, though during the editing process, it was decided rights might be an issue--even as I barely used anything, but I understood completely--so I whipped together the final stanza for the poem, which made for a more appropriate, stronger finale. After too many years--seven or eight--the anthology was finally published and as noted above, is a worthy venture. 

Anyway, it's all here as presented by the intriguing Freezine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, a site that includes a lot of compelling fiction as well as authors such as John Shirley (!!!), Vince Daemon, and the work of the person running the show over there, Shaun Lawton, and many more!  

(I've had a few other tales published there: "Not Breathing" a blending of drug addiction and a living dead aesthetic; "Blood Echo Symphonies," a slightly futuristic SF story that features shape shifting, music--yes, music is a favorite playground for me--and love...kind of; and "The Perfect Pumpkin," for all the Halloween Horror enthusiasts. Check them out, too!) 

For your pleasure, I present for you "American Ghost," one of my personal favorite short stories I've ever written. 

Here's the art Shaun put together for the piece. 

Dig it! 



  

Monday, September 25, 2023

Pseudonymous Me.

 As my girlfriend and I strolled through Rome yesterday, we stopped by a cool bookstore called Libreria Fahrenheit. When you step inside, to the left there's a whole display full of Ray Bradbury Fahrenheit 451 books, as well as posters for the movie scattered throughout the store. But what caught my eye was at the very back of the store, there's an excellent shelf of Horror titles. As I scanned the books, one jumped out at me. "No way," I said, and pulled it down. Inside, among the TOC, was yours truly...though you wouldn't know it if you didn't know I used to write under a pseudonym.

Since my name is John Smith, it almost seemed mandatory to create a pen name, what with the zillion-and-fourteen other John Smiths in the world (I know my estimate might be short, but...). Sketching out possibilities--it's the early 1990's when I did this--I chose an odd one, Kiel Alexander. Kiel, it just sounded right to me--there was a band called Keel in the early 80s that might have been in the back of my mind when I thought of it, since I liked the name--and Alexander, for whatever reason, is a name I have always liked. I rolled with that for a while, but then got into music journalism, writing as J.C. Smith. That interfered with the fiction writing until the early 2000s. When I decided to focus on fiction again, the thought came to me that Kiel, even though I know how it's pronounced, might be dicey for others. Keel or Kyle? I also thought if made send to insert my real first name into the mix, to make it easier for potential readers or...whatever. I lot of oddness goes into thinking about the appeal and function of choosing a pen name.

So, John Kiel Alexander. 

Darkness Rising was published in 2005, a beautiful hardcover collection of horror fiction. I smiled seeing some names on the TOC I knew of then or perhaps more so, now. But there, on page 285, was some bloke named John Kiel Alexander with a tale entitled, "Burning Man in the House of Lies," which, if I remember correctly, I kind of shaped the title in a manner that might have related to a short story collection I was reading at the time by the late, great Tom Piccirilli, me taking his lead and running with it. Or not. The brain remembers as it wants to, whether that's true or not. Right? Right! 

Seeing this book in a small bookstore in Rome brought a smile, as you can imagine. 

I should probably collect that tale in a future collection sooner than later. As a funny aside, I have a whole slew of earlier tales I've yet to insert into a collection. At some point, maybe an early tales' collection will happen. Either that or a few will sneak into collections as they take shape from now on, at least that tales that don't make me cringe. 

At some point, before my first OOP book was published--The Dark is Light Enough for Me--I decided to use my real name. Not just John Smith, that would be ridiculous, but the whole thing, as you can see here. John Claude Smith. (And when I say 'real,' is this true? There is evidence through my mother's, um...interesting history, that my name might not be what you read here. Sure, John and probably John Claude, but the last name...? Uncertainty looms... haha...) Nonetheless, I sometimes think I might publish some work from JKA again, though. Hmmm...

Below is a photo of the book, as well as the TOC page. 

Also: a reminder, I have a massive reissue collection out now you might want to check out. Contains some of my best writing and clocks in at 25 stories! Check it out at the link here: Autumn in the Abyss Redux. 






Thursday, September 14, 2023

An Observation About Edits: "The Johnny Depp Thing" 1 & 2

 "The Johnny Depp Thing" is one of my most fully immersive tales. Clocking in at 5600 words, it's a gnarly descent into deeply weird circumstances laced with drugs. Lots of drugs. Sex and violence trim the edges. Anyway, it had slipped my mind that I have two versions of this tale. The tight and taut--well, for 5600 words--version, as well as the original, that stretches out to 6800 words. 

Editing out stuff we love is part of the deal. The shorter version is more on-point, while the longer version is...fun? The details edited out are mostly from the beginning. I'll show you with examples from both. It's a reminder for all the writers to just put down everything in a first draft, then edit appropriately. Mind you, the 6800-word version was what I thought was final, until I remembered a tale I'd sent to a magazine that went defunct before it ever published, and how they loved my tale, "Dandelions," and were going to make it the focus of their debut issue...but they said, "hey, you do know, the tale doesn't start until page four.?"

Page four!

This made me look at what was going on and, yes, I might enjoy everything up to page four, but what is NEEDED to get the story rolling? Right. I edited that opening sequence, even as the magazine folded. 

But it's a thing we all do. Write a lot, whittle down to what we need, what the story needs, more so. 

Here's an amusing example, though, because I like both versions, yet completely understand the shorter one is more what's needed to tell the tale. 

But, again, the extra details in the longer version, they were a lot of fun and perhaps--probably--helped me get to know the two characters better. You'll see. 


First up, the final opening sequence for "The Johnny Depp Thing," short and sharp.  

***


     Erika Jonkers heard the mosquito buzz first, the alphabet stuck at zzzzz, before she watched it land on the back of her boyfriend, Ransom’s, sweaty left hand.  Watched it a beat, two, three, as it punctured his flesh, before he smacked it to smithereens in the palm of his right hand.  He glanced  at the smudge of blood and insect debris and smiled. 

     She turned away, and in the turning, the audio reception shifted from the buzz and smack to something outside her apartment door she couldn’t quite make out.  Something moving around or being dragged.

     Erika looked back up at Ransom, distracted by his throaty expression of satisfaction, and hoped he was done with her.  She slowly raised her thin fingers to her cheek to rub out the sting, only to have him raise his filthy right palm at her.  She finched, set her hand back onto the hardwood floor she’d just landed on, and waited for more violence.

     Ransom only snarled at her, caught in that limbo land of dysfunction where the bliss of the heroin high hindered the possibility of sex.  He stood naked, with half an erection feebly attempting to prop up and point at her, his always circling temper his only line of fire when the habit brought him down, down, down, and Erika’s most persistent efforts couldn’t coax him up, up, up any more than half mast.  He blamed her for his failure.  Blamed her with an open palm and the red imprint that singed her cheek.

     As bad as it was, he’d end up sleeping it off and fucking her later, which she wouldn’t really mind.  Erika once told the guy who worked at the methadone clinic she thought of Ransom’s violent nature as foreplay.  He told her she needed to get out or, at the very least, get to the battered women’s center next door.

     Instead, Erika mulled over escape routes but knew that was useless.  This was her apartment.  This was his dumping ground.  He’d taken much of her stuff already.  If she left he’d claim it all was his and fuck you! 

     She sighed and the passage of air was matched in inflection by the sounds from outside her door.  As if whatever those sounds were, they could hear into her apartment.

     Erika shoved her curiosity aside.  She didn’t know what she wanted anymore.  Forty-five rising up like a cobra about to spit venem and leave her swaggering to a too early grave if she didn’t figure out what she wanted for real, damnit.  She was no spring chicken.

      She thought again about getting up and leaving, but knew he’d find her and, again, this was her apartment.  Didn’t want to lose all her stuff to this fucker.  Her boyfriend, lover, and bane of her existence.   She thought about at the very least getting to the bathroom as she wanted to rinse the salty tang of his dirty cock from her mouth.  At least it didn’t taste like pussy.  Sometimes it did, but he told her it was her imagination, he loved only her.  She figured she was just being paranoid. 

***  


And here's the extended version, one of the few I've actually kept and quite enjoy. 

*** 


     Erika Jonkers heard the mosquito buzz first, the alphabet stuck at zzzzz, before she watched it land on the back of her boyfriend, Ransom’s, sweaty left hand.  Watched it a beat, two, three, as it punctured his flesh, before he smacked it to smithereens in the palm of his right hand.  He glanced  at the smudge of blood and insect debris and smiled. 

     She turned away, and in the turning, the audio reception shifted from the buzz and smack to something outside her apartment door she couldn’t quite make out.  Something moving around or being dragged.

     Erika looked back up at Ransom, distracted by his throaty expression of satisfaction, and hoped he was done with her.  She slowly raised her thin fingers to her cheek to rub out the sting, only to have him raise his filthy right palm at her.  She finched, set her hand back onto the hardwood floor she’d just landed on, and waited for more violence.

     Ransom only snarled at her, caught in that limbo land of dysfunction where the bliss of the heroin high hindered the possibility of sex.  He stood naked, with half an erection feebly attempting to prop up and point at her, his always circling temper his only line of fire when the habit brought him down, down, down, and Erika’s most persistent efforts couldn’t coax him up, up, up any more than half mast.  He blamed her for his failure.  Blamed her with an open palm and the red imprint that singed her cheek.

     As bad as it was, he’d end up sleeping it off and fucking her later, which she wouldn’t really mind.  Erika once told the guy who worked at the methadone clinic she thought of Ransom’s violent nature as foreplay.  He told her she needed to get out or, at the very least, get to the battered women’s center next door.

     “What you lookin’ at?  Evidence of your inadequacy as a whore, whore?”  Ransom laughed, obviously amused by his crude insult.  Erika wondered, as she often did, why she loved him.

     She figured it was because he was right, she was inadequate.  Not feeling too pretty most of the time, either, what with the constant reminders of his love often decorating her skin.  Punching bag tattoos.  She always felt this way around the men she loved.  Strong men, like her father.  Sometimes crazy, too, but she figured that was just a man being a man. 

     Erika had started to contemplate it all a bit deeper than surface level ever since she began taking classes at the adult school six months ago.  Her mindset was to better herself and get a real job so she could afford the drugs and what-not that kept Ransom happy and her sane and able to deal with him.  Hell, she’d already bought him another bass guitar to go along with the one he had when she met him at Blister, the punk club in the city.  Fell in love then and there, more so lust, but whatever it was, it was the way her world worked.  As usual, though, here she was again, crawling away from him as he simmered in confusion over what the fuck she was doing, or perhaps what the fuck she was.  She expected she looked like some kind of freaky animal doing a funky crab-like shuffle from the hardwood floor of the kitchen to the carpeted floor of the adjacent front room. 

     It wasn’t much of a front room, though.  The whole apartment was tiny and tinier still because it was crammed with Ransom’s shit.  Bass guitars and amps, leather and denim in piles.  His CD collection and what he’d already confiscated from her collection, claiming it was his.  “You know I brought all the Fear CDs with me, right?  Right?”  As if she could deny it with his eyes glaring and his fists clenched.  Some vinyl, too, same as the CDs: “This Fang record’s a fave,” and slipping her LP into his ratty cardboard box, one of five, full of similar late 70s to present punk, hardcore, thrash, and anything else aggressive and usually cranked up loud enough to melt brain cells into oatmeal.  Big names and names nobody ever heard of—eBola Milkshake, Blasted Heath, even his own band, Pus Junkies—filled the boxes to bursting while Erika’s collection and wherewithal dwindled with exponential speed.

     Why did she persist to fall in love with capital L Losers like him?

     She always ended up reaching a point where a momentary gob of good sense would hit her square in the forehead like a loogie lobotomy, dismantling her love for another punk rock, hardcore asshole who only showed his love with his scarred knuckles, expecting the world and mostly her to cower at his feet.  Jerks made of testosterone and attitude, scraped off the shoes of those who made careers out of the lifestyle, while all they did was flounder and blame her.    

     Any number of hers, really.

     “What the fuck you doing, baby?”  Ransom almost sounded loving, though barely sounded human.  Where did that come from?  At least he wasn’t slinging whore or bitch at her, again.  Christ, what was she doing with him?  With any of them?

     Erika mulled over escape routes but knew that was useless.  This was her apartment.  This was his dumping ground.  He’d taken much of her stuff already.  If she left he’d claim it all was his and fuck you! 

     For now, her only gameplan was to be as far away from him as she could be, under the circumstances.  So she finished crawling toward the wall next to the front door and pulled her knees up to her chin.  With distance, she could massage the sting from her cheek.  He only watched, dumbfounded or just dumb, as he slumped into the ripped brown recliner her friend, Mike the Spike, had brought to her apartment a year ago, saying he was tired of sleeping on her floor whenever he crashed there, so hey, how about this?

     Mike the Spike didn’t pursue sex or drugs, just drink.  The nickname was not a drug reference, he just molded his hair into greasy spikes like those that rode Godzilla’s spine.  He simply enjoyed the shows in The City By The Bay and made way over the bridge and back to the East Bay afterwards, where he led a normal life with a steady job and a girlfriend, Maxie, he was madly in love with.  He just enjoyed punk, Maxie didn’t.  Late nights with more than reasonable alcohol consumption meant crashing at Erika’s apartment.  They’d known each other going on twenty years.  Only in this capacity, though.

     Erika thought about how that relationship didn’t bring bruises or welts, yet in all their time together, dozens, hundreds of shows, that’s all she had from him.  The shows.  No substance.

     In one way or another, all men failed her.

     She sighed and the passage of air was matched in inflection by the sounds from outside her door.  As if whatever those sounds were, they could hear into her apartment.

     Erika shoved her curiosity aside.  She didn’t know what she wanted anymore.  Forty-five rising up like a cobra about to spit venem and leave her swaggering to a too early grave if she didn’t figure out what she wanted for real, damnit.  She was no spring chicken.

     Ransom groaned, punched the arm of the recliner.  “Fuck you!” he said, as he grabbed the  remote control for the TV that no longer worked from on top of the open box of LPs to his left and tossed it with ferocity toward her.  She ducked as broken plastic and batteries rained on her head.

     “Damnit, Ransom, honey…”

     She immediately brought a hand up to her face, eyes wide with understanding.  She knew what was coming before it slammed into her like a fist, though it wasn’t a fist, not this time.  Just Ransom leaping up from the recliner and hovering over her, his erratic erection becoming more engorged. 

     “You bitch about anything, bitch, and I’ll tear you a new asshole and fuck it to Texas.”

     Erika could barely contain a snort of derision, even under the precarious circumstances.  Over the eight months they’d been together, he’d rage-fucked her to Japan, New Jersey, Barcelona...Bumfuck, Egypt…hell, she’d experienced the world at the tip his angry erection.  But she didn’t snort, laugh, or make any sound.  She kept it under lock and key as she knew that might inspire physical abuse or worse, whatever that might be. 

     It wouldn’t be the first time she’d experienced worse. 

     That would have been Daryl from Psycho Blight.  Yes, another punk boyfriend, ex-punk boyfriend, more so ex-psychobilly madman.  He was incarcerated in Pelican Bay State Prison up north for murder, taking out his drug-induced sexual failure on a homeless man sleeping outside of Erika’s former apartment complex one brisk September morning and beating him to death with his bare hands.  When he came back inside, he had her bandage him up before he beat her in a drug haze.  Erika remembered staring at his blurry figure as he exited, saying he’d be right back, for what, she had no idea.  He’d done enough damage.  Moments later, she heard barking from one alpha-male to a handful of like-minded frothing dogs dressed in blue.  She listened to the tussle, heard the swift crack, crack, crack of a baton, heard Daryl’s bleats of pain and protest.  She figured the cops were checking out his bloody handiwork staining the sidewalk when he stepped outside.   The details didn’t matter to her.  She was glad he was deleted from her life pronto, which wasn’t soon enough. 

     Ransom hung over her, a Leaning Tower of Pissed Off, veins pulsing, arms flexed, while his cock went limp.  He scampered back to the recliner and said, “You leave and you’re dead,” before instantly dropping off to sleep, mouth hanging open and drool coating the four-barred Black Flag tattoo on his chest.

     Erika thought about getting up and leaving.  But she knew he’d find her and, again, this was her apartment.  Didn’t want to lose all her stuff to this fucker.  Her boyfriend, lover, and bane of her existence.   She thought about at the very least getting to the bathroom as she wanted to rinse the salty tang of his dirty cock from her mouth.  At least it didn’t taste like pussy.  Sometimes it did, but he told her it was her imagination, he loved only her.  She figured she was just being paranoid. 

*** 


Ha! If this was a much longer piece, I might have kept it all, what the heck? 

Anyway, the final version of "The Johnny Depp Thing" can be found in my expanded reissue version of Autumn in the Abyss, called Autumn in the Abyss Redux. <<--that's the link, click it and see for yourself, buy a copy for maximum enjoyment! 


And here's some quirky art featuring the many faces of Johnny Depp. 




Thursday, August 24, 2023

The Blurb-apocalypse.

 What? 

Well, with the publication of Autumn in the Abyss Redux, which collects all of Autumn in the Abyss, all of Occasional Beasts: Tales, and six stories from The Dark is Light Enough for Me, and looking to get some new reviews or at least having anybody who has read any of those books and reading this willing to dump the old reviews on Amazon or Goodreads for the new, expanded collection, thought I might drop some of the original blurbs in a blog post to drum up some interest. 

When we released the new book, it was done on the fly, without any pre-order period because I was dealing with Life stuff and when it was ready, I was just happy to get it out. That said, most of the time--and especially for a new book--the plan will be to have an ample period beforehand to contact reviewers and even set up interviews and/or podcasts to discuss the books; again, this is the mindset for new material, though I would gladly get into any- and every- thing promotion-wise with this book and the forthcoming re-issue of Riding the Centipede, my Stoker-finalist debut novel.

So, that's where I am with this post. Blurbs galore. The Blurb-apocalypse, as noted in the title. 

Here goes: 

A few of the original Autumn in the Abyss blurbs: 

These five emotionally complex tales ask, above all, what it means to be human in a tempestuous universe. What part of ourselves do we owe to the pursuit of goodness, especially if there's no apparent advantage to being good? How can we define ourselves in the absence of moral authority? Blurred lines of identity, the role of the artist, and the nature of temptation are explored in these stories of sacrifice and self-destruction. Autumn in the Abyss is another dark and captivating collection from a writer who isn't afraid to plumb the depths of our greatest and most dangerous desires. --S.P. Miskowski Shirley Jackson Award nominated author of The Skillute Cycle

The stories in John Claude Smith's new collection take their characters to the limits of human experience, the places where our bodies come asunder in the face of the abyss. Positioning his stories in the seams of our cultural history, Smith chronicles the efforts of artists of all stripes--poets, musicians, sculptors, filmmakers--to break through our common experience to another, more essential one that is painted in blood. It's a quest that draws these artists into proximity with the serial-killer in the book's single and singular tale of a police detective's obsessive manhunt. Whether with pen or carving knife, Smith's characters will not stop until they have gone too far, into a space where revelation and terror are part of the same, vast thing. --John Langan, author of The Wide, Carnivorous Sky and Other Monstrous Geographies

The Rhythmic flow of John's words instantly absorbs you into his world, bringing not only his words to life, but the story as well. --Joe Mynhardt, Crystal Lake Publishing

 

...and a few of the original Occasional Beasts: Tales blurbs: 

"John Claude Smith's collection Occasional Beastsis a dark mosaic of the weird, the surreal, and the bizarre. These stories willdig into your brain-meat and take up permanent residence there. Highly recommended!" -- Tim Waggoner, author of The Mouth of the Dark

"Smith has mastered the delicate art of dread, transcending genre to put his stamp on weird horror. Provocative and terrifying, he groundsOccasional Beasts in the human condition while warping the walls of reality in fourteen tales that are not for the faint of heart." -John Foster, author of Mister White and Dead Men

"Occasional Beasts is yet another dazzling collection of dark imaginings from the mind of John Claude Smith. His evocative prose,mastery of atmosphere, and wildly original concepts manage to cast a spell on the reader that is as alluring as it is unsettling. There is a certain glorious madness that permeates this collection, as well as a fearless, visceral writing style that demands your attention. Smith's beautifully rendered and complex characters show us the uncomfortable truth about the occasional beastlinessthat dwells within us all." -- Taylor Grant, Two-time Bram Stoker AwardNominee, The Dark at the End of theTunnel

"A tumble down a dark slide with stories extremely dark, poetic and metaphysical, Occasional Beasts feels like holding hands witha demon while an angel whispers in your ear. Not to be missed for those predisposed." -- John Palisano, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Nerves andAll That Withers 

"John Claude Smith's Occasional Beasts lurks in the subconscious long after the last page. Despair becomes peace, and the soul is left a scream in the darkness as these tales churn through your psyche. As if traversing into an unknown forest refusing to give way to sanity, each story creeps deeper and deeper into nightmare and terror. Occasional Beasts: Tales is a must-read, but do so with the lights on." --Alex Scully, editor Firbolg Publishing


Here's the link for Autumn in the Abyss Redux.


And here's a fantstic photo of My Love, Alessandra...and Joe Landsdale, back when Occasional Beasts: Tales, was just out and she went to one of his readings in Rome, Italy. 






Thursday, July 20, 2023

The Pinworm Factory: A Tribute to Eraserhead

 Scott Dwyer of Plutonian Press has published some stellar anthologies (Phantasm/Chimera: An Anthology of Strange and Troubling Dreams, Pluto in Furs: Tales of Diseased Dreams and Seductive Horrors, Pluto in Furs 2, and The Pinworm Factory: A Tribute to Eraserhead), as well as a fantastic collection, Carrion Men by Jeffrey Thomas. I've been lucky to have tales in some of the collections. I look forward to every publication from this amazing small press because of the distinct, unique vision Dwyer brings to the table with what he wants, which is definitely not familiar horrors. He likes to dig deeper into places one might rather avoid, which has also been one of my primary goals as a writer of weird horror fiction. 

I enjoy working with Scott because he brings honest, unflinching perspectives to the tales I've brought him. He's made suggestions that have pushed me to explore a different avenue within a tale that made the tale stronger, as I did with the ending of "Chrysalis," from Phantasm/Chimera was completely rewritten, while a suggestion in shifting the ending of another moved us back to the original. He's not set in the mindset that his suggestion will be the right one, though it comes with a lot of thought, he just wants to see something within the tale from a different angle, trying to find the true strength in what it can be. I always like working with editors who do this, the give and take of the process being inspiring for me.

Anyway, beside the point and moving forward, here's the ad copy for his latest venture, The Pinworm Factory: A Tribute to Eraserhead.

Smoke-stained skies. Abhorrent bodies hidden in shadow. Squirming fetuses under your blankets. Dark wet abysmal holes. Welcome to the world of Eraserhead. David Lynch's filmic dream of strange and troubling things. Now with The Pinworm Factory, we plunge deeper into that world. The Pinworm Factory is a literary homage to Eraserhead, seeking to further explore its themes and ideas. Inside this factory, you will find nightmares and body horror crafted just for you. This short story collection features works inspired by Eraserhead by such amazing authors as Michael Cisco, Mike Allen, LC Von Hessen, Adam Golaski, Roland Blackburn, and Kurt Fawver among others.

Included 'among others' is yours truly with a psycho-sexual nightmare called, "Emma Unbound." It is one of my personal favorite tales I've written, but with the TOC of top-notch writers, there's much to devour here for those into uncommon horrors. 

(Excuse me. I went to Dwyer's FB page to snag the full list of contributors as well as credit for the fabulous cover art. Here ya go: "Cover art by the amazing Don Noble. Featuring stories by Michael Cisco, Sara Century, Adam Golaski, Sam Richard, K. H. Vaughan, John Claude Smith, Rhys Hughes, Kurt Fawver, LC Von Hessen, Brendan Vidito, Mike Allen, Maria Barnes, Liliana Carstea, and Roland Blackburn." That's a killer list, I must say!) 

It all sounds like too much grim fun to me, so why don't you pick up a copy today?! One more time, as I've put a bunch of hyperlinks in this post for all of the Plutonian Press titles, as well as the label's blog, that will lead you to hours of excellent weird/body/erotic horror for your reading pleasure. Buy your copy of The Pinworm Factory: A Tribute to Eraserhead Here


***

     “Welcome home, sweetie,” a voice said. A voice without definition or gender. A voice threaded with something artificial, as if it were a machine, yet not a machine, an organic quality caressed the edges. A voice seething with menace. 

***

And here's the captivating cover. 




 

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Waffle House: I May Be A Horror Writer But...

...I also write poetry that is all over the place when it comes to focus. Sure, a lot of it is dark, the themes veer from obsessions to addictions to many other off-ramps leaning into darkness. Dread is a favorite subject. Horror creeps into some, of course. And weirdness is threaded through many of them. 

Occasionally, I need a break or assume, as I am putting together a poetry collection, the reader might need a break from the heaviness, while still keeping it weird and/or amusing. 

Which brings me to Waffle House, a poem based on a true experience. Really, c'mon, for somebody just passing through the Southwest--Louisiana, to be precise--one has to eat at a Waffle House at least once, to see what it's all about. 

This, my friends, is the truth about what it is all about. Vague as it may be. 

Enjoy!


***

Waffle House

 

I have no idea what she said

Menu options spoken in an

Alien language

Stared dumbfounded as her lips moved

Its lips moved

It could not have been of this earth

I nodded and said “sure”

Not knowing what I was agreeing to

Anal probes or a side of grits

The woman sitting across from me

A transient partner just passing through

Shrugged as we laughed

The outcome of our vague decisions

Still up in the air

Perhaps with The Mothership

Or the Starship Enterprise.

 

Waffle House, man

Good for a hearty breakfast

In the Twilight Zone…

***

I kid you not. That was one weird experience. 


While I am here, I will remind you I have a new, expanded reissue of my second collection that is looking for your eyes to read and perhaps your pen or keyboard to type up a review. Here's the link. Autumn in the Abyss Redux - Kindle edition by Smith, John Claude. Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.


And here's Waffle House!