Brian Keene's Blog, page 45

November 20, 2019

Defenders Dialogue - Ep 82

The Champions and The Avengers have helped Doctor Doom conquer the world, and only Magneto and The Beast can stop them! Christopher Golden and Brian Keene discuss Super-Villain Team-Up 14 and The Champions 16.

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Published on November 20, 2019 04:57

November 19, 2019

I'm Dreaming Of A White Doomsday - Now Streaming on Prime and X-Box

I’M DREAMING OF A WHITE DOOMSDAY — a feature length horror film written and directed by Mike Lombardo and Executive Produced by me — is now streaming on both Amazon Prime and X-Box Live. It is also available on Blu-Ray and DVD.

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE OR STREAM.











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Published on November 19, 2019 05:22

Темная Лощина Gets 2nd Printing

The first printing of Темная Лощина (the Russian edition of DARK HOLLOW) has sold out, along with the first Russian printing of Edward Lee’s THE BACKWOODS. Both books are getting another printing right now. This proves that Russian e-book piracy can be defeated, if you provide Russian readers with a faithful translation and quality production.

And remember, Темная Лощина is available to American readers, as well in hardcover, e-book, and mass market paperback. CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE.











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Published on November 19, 2019 05:13

November 18, 2019

Love From The Edge Of A Cliff

Yesterday, I revealed the cover and the table of contents for the forthcoming LOVE LETTERS FROM A NIHILIST: THE COMPLETE SHORT FICTION OF BRIAN KEENE VOL. 3.

Like the previous volumes in the series, this one contains an Introduction by another author. This time, that author is Mary SanGiovanni.

My $5 and up Patreon supporters can now read that Introduction as a behind-the-scenes sneak peek. Click here to check it out.

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Published on November 18, 2019 01:25

November 17, 2019

Complete Short Fiction of Brian Keene Vol. 3 - Cover and Contents Reveal

By now, I'm sure you've read BLOOD ON THE PAGE: THE COMPLETE SHORT FICTION OF BRIAN KEENE VOL. 1 and ALL DARK, ALL THE TIME: THE COMPLETE SHORT FICTION OF BRIAN KEENE VOL. 2.

If you haven't, they're available in paperback and for Kindle, Nook and Kobo. Click here to purchase. Go do it now, because coming soon...











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That's the cover, done by Kealan Patrick Burke (who did the covers for the previous volumes). Robert Swartwood is working on layout right now. Lifetime subscribers should expect it with their next package (which I expect will ship after Christmas).

Here's a sneak peek at the Table of Contents. The oldest story was published in 1997. The newest was published earlier this year.

Introduction by Mary SanGiovanni

Foreword

An End To All Things

Growlers

Sheltered in Place

Purple Reign

Pages from a Notebook Found Inside a House in The Woods

The Fairy Princess

The King, in: YELLOW

The Eleventh Muse

Top Five Reasons Not To Get Another Cat

No Sleep in Brooklyn

Customer Service Letter Written by an Angry Old Man on Christmas Eve

Exit Strategies

A Delayed Exit

Greater Is He That Is In Me

Intersectionality

The Last Supper

Mr. Onion

The Sleepwalker

Perchance To Dream

Helpful Guidelines To Keep In Mind When Talking With Children About School Safety

Black Sunrise

All The World’s A Stage

Halloween In Cayuga Creek

Grammar Of The Dead

Through Mirrors Darkly

The Night I Met John Maitlin

Because You Asked

The Burn Barrel

Friday Night In Damascus

The Other

Down Under

Duality

The Ties That Bind

Running Free

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Published on November 17, 2019 06:48

November 15, 2019

The Rise & Fall of ChiZine - The Horror Show with Brian Keene - Ep 244

Brian, Mary and Matt cover the disturbing facts, allegations, and opinions surrounding ChiZine Publications. Plus, editor Stephen Jones declares war on logic!

Listen for free on YouTubeiTunesSpotifyProject EntertainmentiHeartRadio Stitcher

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Published on November 15, 2019 14:10

November 9, 2019

In This Real Life: Quantum Mechanics, Social Media, and Grief

Yesterday, I Tweeted this link to a science article about Sean Carroll, one of my favorite theoretical physicists. (Most of my friends memorize the statistics for their favorite athletes. If theoretical physicists had their own set of trading cards, I would collect them all). The article discusses the evolving and more-and-more likely probability that there are alternate universe versions of ourselves populating a multiverse of realities. This idea should be old news to anyone who’s read more than three of my books or stories. Indeed, it’s a theory which provides the backbone to every fictional thing I have ever written.

This morning, David J. Schow shared a wonderful essay by Laura Lippman entitled The Art Of Losing Friends And Alienating People . One of the things that struck me the most about the article is the comparison about interacting with friends in real life versus interacting with them via social media.

It has been many months since I quit Facebook. I didn’t quit by choice. Facebook gave me no choice. They told myself and a number of other public figures who maintained private pseudonymous accounts that we had to use our real names on those accounts or we’d be banned from the platform. In my case, since that pseudonymous account was directly linked to the Brian Keene Facebook Page, and I didn’t want to lose that real estate, I turned the page over to Ron Davis, Stephen Kozeniweski, and Mary SanGiovanni to operate, and then I quit Facebook.

My mental health has improved tenfold since then, as has my blood pressure. And I wasn’t even aware there was a problem with the first.

One of the detriments to quitting, however, was that there are a lot of friends who interact with others primarily through Facebook only. Take, for example, director Mike Lombardo. I have known Mike since he was seventeen years old. I have watched him grow from an eager and talented kid into one of the most promising, talked about indie-horror directors of his generation. I legitimately think of Mike as another son. But even though he only lives 30 minutes away, I haven’t heard much from him since I left Facebook. So a few weeks ago, while I was still battling that infection, and had convinced myself that the antibiotics weren’t going to stop it and that this was in fact how I was going to die, I called Mike just to check in. We ended up talking for a good half hour, and he caught me up on everything that was going on in his life. That connection made me laugh. It made my day.

Tomorrow, November 10th, J.F. Gonzalez will have been gone five years. The morning of his passing is still a vivid memory for me. I remember every detail as clearly as I remember the births of my children. I have tried for five years to heal from that wound, and while I have succeeded in building up a tough scab, not a week goes by where I don’t leak some blood from around the seams. That’s tough for any human being. It’s doubly tough for a high-functioning sociopath like myself. We have a tendency to push away anything that might hurt us. But you can’t push away ghosts.

A friend asked me why I thought it was tougher for me to make peace with Jesus’s death than it was Dallas (Jack Ketchum) Mayr’s or Tom Piccirilli’s. After all, next July, Pic will join Jesus in the hallowed halls of the Been Gone Five Years club. I was as close to Pic as I was Jesus, and I loved Dallas like…not a father figure, but the best uncle I’ve ever had.

I think it comes down to real life interactions. Jesus lived nearby. I saw him in real life all the time. We got together frequently for lunch or coffee or to visit used bookstores or comic shops or concerts. Sometimes we got together with Robert Swartwood or Chet Williamson or Mike Lombardo. Sometimes we hung out in an extended group with Geoff Cooper, Kelli Owen, Robert Ford and others. Sometimes we hung out with my kid or his kid. (One of my favorite memories is he and I taking his daughter to see the Evil Dead remake, and noticing him noticing just how much like him his daughter was becoming).

Pic, by contrast, I only saw at conventions, or if I was passing through Colorado, or if he was out here on the East Coast. And as we both got more popular, which leads to being busier, we did fewer conventions. Thus, we had to rely on email and phone calls and social media. Pic and I used to send each other care packages. I’d send him comics and music. He’d send me crime novels and weird foreign films. Those regular monthly packages brought us both great joy, and were much better than a comment on a Facebook status update, because they felt personal. And it was the same with Dallas. I saw him at conventions, or if I was in New York, and we’d spend the evening drinking in his favorite bar. But as his health began to fade, there were fewer and fewer of those times.

There’s an alternate reality out there where I died instead of my friends. And there are alternate realities out there where none of us have died yet. There’s an alternate reality where Dallas and I got to write the KETCHUM-KEENE collaboration we’d begun making notes on right before he got sick for the final time (you know those stickers on the backs of cars that show how many kids and dogs someone has in their family? A serial killer choosing his victims based on those). There’s an alternate reality where Pic and I got to write that Defenders relaunch we’d always dreamed about doing together. There’s an alternate reality where Jesus and I went on to write four more Clickers novels together. I know this to be true.

But in this reality, in this real life, I grieve my friends still, and I grieve Jesus the most because of the consistent real-life interactions that are now missing.

Tomorrow, in honor of Jesus, instead of posting to your friend’s wall on Facebook, go visit them in person. Or, if that’s not possible, then give them a call. Speak to them. Instead of reading a comment from them on social media, give them a call and hear their voice.

It’s important to do that. Because at some point in this reality, that voice will fall silent, and all the social media interactions in the world won’t help you remember what they sounded like.












Brian Keene and J.F. Gonzalez.





Brian Keene and J.F. Gonzalez.























Brian Keene and Tom Piccirilli.





Brian Keene and Tom Piccirilli.























Brian Keene and Jack Ketchum





Brian Keene and Jack Ketchum

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Published on November 09, 2019 05:32

November 7, 2019

Somer Canon Returns - The Horror Show with Brian Keene - Ep 243

Somer Canon joins Brian, Mary and Matt to discuss her new novel THE HAG WITCH OF TRIPP CREEK, folklore, impostor syndrome, Wesley Southard, and more. Plus support for Karen Runge and M.M. Schill, and the blacklist gets a new member.

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Published on November 07, 2019 16:02

Shades Cover Reveal

SHADES - a supernatural coming of age novel by Geoff Cooper and myself - came out in hardcover back in 2007. Since then, it has only been available as an e-book. That changes next January, as Poltergeist Press releases a brand-new paperback edition. Here’s a sneak peek at the cover.











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Published on November 07, 2019 10:31

November 5, 2019

Defenders Dialogue 81

Christopher Golden and Brian Keene return, and real-life mirrors fiction as both Hercules and Brian take a punch, in this recounting of Avengers 163, featuring the second titanic team-up between The Champions and Iron Man. Plus, Chris shares a story about working with the legendary Jim Shooter.

Listen for free on iTunes – YouTube – Project Entertainment – iHeartRadio – Stitcher

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Published on November 05, 2019 16:15