Today I am very excited to be introducing you to a new author James Everington, who I am sure will be a famous writer one day.

I met James online recently after I read and reviewed Oblivious by Neil Schiller. James is also a friend of Neil's and a fan of his work. I was intrigued by the title and cover of James's collection of short stories: The Other Room. The short descriptions of the tales made me want to read the book. I'm glad I did. It's a very original collection full of surprising and well-crafted tales.




James very kindly agreed to answer a few questions and he is also giving away 2 ebook copies of The Other Room to readers of my blog! If you'd like to enter the contest, just 'like' this blog post or leave a comment below. Winners will be chosen on the 13th August 2011.

Here are James's replies to my interview questions:

Are the stories in ‘The Other Room’ a collection of stories you wrote over a number of years, or did you write them specifically for the collection?

They were written over a number of years (a scary number of years now I think of it) although all of have been revised pretty recently. I spent quite a few hours trying to figure out which stories to put in, and in which order. I saved a few stories back I consider some of my best for the next collection - I didn't want to be like one of those bands with a great first album, and then a patchy follow-up because they obviously didn't get any time to write some decent new songs...

Your collection contains horror, paranormal, thrillers, ghost stories, and what has been called ‘weird fiction’; what is your favourite genre to read?

I read a huge variety of things - I think it's pretty important for a writer to read widely, even if what style they write is pretty limited. Which it is for me. I guess it's only in the last few years I've worked out that despite the fact that I read science-fiction, the classics, poetry, popular science, modern literature and so on, I can't write those books. I can just do my own little thing: scary surreal stories with a bit of pretension basically.

In one of your stories, there is a writer who is trying to write a story, but the ‘words wouldn’t reveal themselves’. I thought that was an interesting way to look at writing. I’m always intrigued at how other writers view the writing process. Is that your view of how a writer finds a story, that in a way the words reveal themselves as we write rather than us writing the words?

I'm not sure; that attitude to writing just suited the character of the story and fitted the themes. I think as a writer you have to be flexible about these things. Sometimes the words will just come to you, and it's like uncovering buried treasure. Other times you have to work hard at it, really forcing yourself to get the right sentences. You have to be prepared for both.

In another one of your stories, the character is reading a book and listening to music in the background, and not just an instrumental track but a song. I wondered whether you listen to music when you read, and also whether you listen to music when you write.

Yeah all the time; I love music almost as much as I love books. I guess listening to music as I write comes from living in halls of residence at university - there was always some music blaring through the walls. So the only choice was write to someone else's music, or to my own. I don't find it distracting at all. The only time I wouldn't listen to music is when I'm doing the final edits to a story - I like to read the prose aloud then.

The story 'When The Walls Bend' in this collection was named after a line from a Radiohead song; the title for 'Feed The Enemy' (which is available separately) was poached from a title of a song by the post-punk band Magazine.


I liked all the stories in the collection, but I think my favourite is ‘Red Route’, I just loved the ending because it all came together and is quite awe-inspiring. Do you have a favourite story from the collection, and if so, why is it your favourite?

It's funny, everyone who's picked a favourite so far has picked a different one; I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing...

I'm not sure writers are the best judges of their own work, buy my favourite to write was 'The Other Room' itself. It just about wrote itself. There's a lot of little details in that story that all seem to work together, but I didn't plan any of them. I mentioned writing is sometimes like finding buried treasure above; for 'The Other Room' the treasure just seemed to be lying around on the surface.

Of course the next story I wrote after that was a right difficult sod.

On your website you run a series of guest blogs in defence of short stories. What gave you idea for this, and if you could say one thing in defence of short stories what would that be?

Well, I'd no idea until recently how poorly short fiction sold compared to novels. And that some people, who seem so sane and so well-read, could spout such drivel about the form - really vitriolic stuff! So it came from that really; and I've had some great writers contribute, for which I'm very grateful. It's partly selfish on my part; I only really write short stories so I'm buggered if they keep declining in popularity...

What would I say to people? Just... don't judge short stories by the standards of novels. They're a separate art-form; there's a whole separate world you're missing out on if you don't read short stories. They're not truncated novels, they're something else.

You have only published your short stories as an ebook. Is there a reason why you haven’t made it available in paperback, and do you have plans to do this in the future?

No reason, I'm just new to all this. I wasn't really aware of self-publishing or ebooks at all this time last year; I was going the traditional route of submitting stories to small-press magazines (which I still do). I had one non-horror story called 'Feed The Enemy' which I didn't know what to do with, and then I saw a call for submissions for someone electronically publishing. So I sent it off, not even knowing what it was really. Then rather than rejecting it they sent me a scary looking contract...

So I started to look into ebooks when I knew I'd have a story available in that format, and stumbled across some great writers and helpful people like Neil Schiller and Dan Holloway who were already doing it for themselves. So I jumped in too.

I'd like to do a physical book sometime too, but I've no actual plans at the moment. I'm just seeing how things pan out.

Do you have any tips for someone who is considering self-publishing their own book?

Without wanting to sound too much like a Nike advert, just do it. Provided, that is, that the book is already written. If it's not, then concentrate on writing the best book you can for now; don't even think about how you're going to publish it until afterwards.

Who are your favourite authors and what is it about their writing that you like?

Probably too many to mention, but some I think have been particularly influential on my writing are Ramsey Campbell,Franz Kafka, and Shirley Jackson.

They all have certain things in common, in that they write strange, somewhat surreal fiction, but in an intelligent, literary way. (I think of Kafka as being very much part of the tradition that includes the best 'horror' writers.) And they all have done some of their best work in short story form. 'The Companion', 'The Metamorphosis' and 'The Lottery' - hard to think of better trio of short stories than those.

Is there a book you own that you’ve read more than once?

God I think I've read most of them more than once; what's the point in owning books otherwise? Ones I've definitely read at least three times include: The Lord of the Rings,Mrs. Dalloway,The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and Girlfriend in a Coma. Plus books by the authors above, of course.

What was the last book you read?

I tend to read more than one book at a time, so there's a few: Cold Hand in Mine; Loisaida -- A New York Story;and 'The Magical Maze', a book about maths and fractals and other fascinating stuff.

Are you reading a book at the moment?

Of course! Again, more than one: The War of the Worlds, and Ice Age - a great collection of weird, surreal horror tales. Oh, and a book about Bob Dylan too.


How important are reviews for you as a writer?

Very important; not so much the content or the rating, although that is important, but just knowing that someone took time out of their busy day to put some words down about my book. That's a good feeling. Of course I've been lucky that I've not had a bad review yet, so my attitude could change! I've probably just jinxed myself by saying that too.


I must say that the title and cover of your book really caught my eye and I just knew that I wanted to read it. How did you go about choosing the cover for your book?

Funny you should ask, because the photo it's based on was taken by someone I know you know - Neil Schiller. I liked his covers for Oblivious and The Haiku Diary so I asked him how he created them, and he was generous enough to let me use one of his photos. His covers are arty black and white; I messed about with mine and put a filter on to make it appropriately spooky.


What are you working on now?

A novella called The Shelter. It's a story I wrote when I was about seventeen, and recently I found the battered manuscript and read it again - it was dreadful obviously. Clichéd and stilted. But it struck me the plot itself was pretty good, and seemed far more commercial and straight forward than the stuff I write nowadays. I was just discovering writers like Stephen King and Dan Simmons then.

So I've decided to rewrite it completely from scratch - hopefully I can combine the youthful ideas and energy with the strengths I have now - namely knowing a dreadful sentence when I write one, which I obviously didn't then. We shall see if it works...

Where can people buy your book?

You can get The Other Room in these places:

Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Other-Roo...

Amazon US: www.amazon.com/The-Other-Room/dp/B004...

Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...


Oh and I blog and talk general rubbish at: http://www.jameseverington.blogspot.com/

Thanks for being a very entertaining guest, James!

You might also like to check out James's other books:

Feed the Enemy

The Psyche Corrupted

I know I will be! :)

Remember, if you'd like to enter to win a copy of The Other Room, just 'like' this blog post or leave a comment below. Good luck!
11 comments
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Published on July 30, 2011 10:05 • 441 views • Tags: author, author-interview, ebooks, giveaway, horror, interview, james-everington, short-stories, supernatural, weird-fiction
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message 1: by Bandit (new)

Bandit Great interview, I love the idea of a collection of "weird fiction".


message 2: by Maria (new)

Maria Thanks, Bandit! Good luck in the draw :)


message 3: by Julie (new)

Julie Powell Another great interview. Love Stephen King but Dean Koontz has the edge for me - bit more hope though usually shrouded in mystery.


message 4: by James (new)

James Everington Thanks both for the comments; although Julie I have to guess I've never really rated Dean Koontz. Watchers was all right, but otherwise...

And thanks again to Maria for her kind words!


message 5: by Darcia (new)

Darcia Helle As you know, Maria, James graciously allowed us to include his story 'Red Route' in our upcoming BestsellerBound Short Story Anthology Volume 2. Ever since I read that one, I've been wanting to read the rest of the stories in 'The Other Room'.

James, I love your writing style and I'm looking forward to telling the world that I knew you before you became famous! :)


message 6: by Maria (new)

Maria Darcia, you're going to love the collection :)
Good luck in the draw!


message 7: by Julie (last edited Aug 02, 2011 08:53am) (new)

Julie Powell Having Maria on your side is better than one of those guardian angels that are never there when you need them!

And Darcia - been trying to contact you about a submission of one of my stories for the next anthology but can't seem to get through? I've one ready if you want it.

James - I absolutely love Dean Koontz - it's certainly worth reading the Frankenstein series though, for me, it's difficult to choose. The dialogue between characters can't be beaten in my opinion.


message 8: by Darcia (new)

Darcia Helle Julie, I answered your first email. Apparently cyberspace swallowed my reply. I've got your second email but just haven't had a chance to answer. Yes, we'd love to include you in our next anthology! I'll send you the info I need, hopefully this afternoon.


message 9: by Julie (new)

Julie Powell Great!


message 10: by James (new)

James Everington Thanks Darcia, glad you liked Red Route...

Everyone else - you'd do worse in life than checking out the BestsellerBound anthologies volumes 1 and 2. I'm in the second.


message 11: by Maria (new)

Maria Thanks to everyone who entered the contest :) If you're a lucky winner James will be contacting you soon!


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