Greg Mitchell's Blog, page 9
February 4, 2013
"Rift Jump" Review on Spirit Blade Podcast!
Oh, Paeter, you slipped this one by me. :)
I'm a huge fan of Paeter Frandsen's work over at Spirit Blade Productions. He's been by here on the blog for an interview about his outstanding audio play productions and he's always cool to have me over to the show to discuss whatever project I'm selling at the time.
Back in December (as I discovered last night :p) Paeter included a review of my sci-fi/action/romance/genre-bending novel
Rift Jump
in his Christimastime podcast. John Wilkerson reviews the book and I really appreciated his thoughts. Overall very positive, as well as being honest, firm, and articulate. It's always a weird thing getting someone's reaction on a book you've written--you wonder if they pick up on your subtleties or if they "get" what you were trying to "say" or whatever. But I love it when a Reader has put a lot of thought into what you've written and have formed an opinion about it. It can be a nerve-wracking experience, but I really enjoyed John's thoughts--and what critiques he had--and I hope you guys check it out.
Click here to listen to the podcast.
The review is at the beginning of the podcast. Give it a listen, and then buy the book! Still available in print, Kindle, and Nook, yo!
I'm a huge fan of Paeter Frandsen's work over at Spirit Blade Productions. He's been by here on the blog for an interview about his outstanding audio play productions and he's always cool to have me over to the show to discuss whatever project I'm selling at the time.
Back in December (as I discovered last night :p) Paeter included a review of my sci-fi/action/romance/genre-bending novel
Rift Jump
in his Christimastime podcast. John Wilkerson reviews the book and I really appreciated his thoughts. Overall very positive, as well as being honest, firm, and articulate. It's always a weird thing getting someone's reaction on a book you've written--you wonder if they pick up on your subtleties or if they "get" what you were trying to "say" or whatever. But I love it when a Reader has put a lot of thought into what you've written and have formed an opinion about it. It can be a nerve-wracking experience, but I really enjoyed John's thoughts--and what critiques he had--and I hope you guys check it out.Click here to listen to the podcast.
The review is at the beginning of the podcast. Give it a listen, and then buy the book! Still available in print, Kindle, and Nook, yo!
Published on February 04, 2013 04:00
January 28, 2013
Interview with Author Joshua M. Reynolds
Today we have a very special guest--author Joshua M. Reynolds! I first learned of Josh's writing when we shared page space in last year's occult detective anthology
A Cat of Nine Tales
. I read his story "An Ounce of Prevention" and was introduced to his delightful occult detective characters Charles St. Cyprian and plucky (and sometimes psychotic) sidekick Ebe Gallowglass. It was a rollicking good time that instantly reminded me of Robert Downey Jr.'s turn as Sherlock Holmes--only with monsters. I was hooked on St. Cyprian's stories and Josh's perfect blend of wit, thrills, and horror. I have stalked him on his site for awhile and have read through his Nightmare Men series of short essays that highlights occult detectives of the golden era of pulp fiction. Since meeting Josh, he has been very supportive of my own writing efforts, even letting me take the talking stick for a guest post at his blog, and it's a real treat to have him here.Now, without further ado!
Greg Mitchell: Welcome to the blog, Josh! I look through your resume and you have quite the extensive one! Where did you get your start? Take me back to the beginning of your career.
Joshua M. Reynolds: The beginning of my career is lost in the mists of the distant past; like, Y2K-distant. The early entries on my resume are a sort of ‘best guess’ kind of thing. I wrote between twenty and thirty stories a year, and sold around half of them, but only bothered to keep track of about half of those.
I didn’t really intend to be a writer, y’see. At least not a professional one; so I didn’t think it mattered what I’d sold as long as the check cleared, or the contributor’s copy arrived. The idea of reprint rights, or collections or somesuch, just plain did not occur to me. I was a strict 9 to 5 man, paychecks and time-clocks and employee assessments.
It was a hobby at first. That’s my excuse. By the time I realized that I could do it for a living, that it was a viable career-choice, I had lost most of the floppy disks that held those first fifty or sixty stories. Somewhere, I imagine an ex-girlfriend has a set of floppies held together by rubber-bands, and labeled ‘My Stories’.
I don’t even remember the title of my first story…
GM: What were some of your inspirations growing up?
JR: Whatever I’d read or seen last, honestly; I was a bit of a sponge. If I’d read Chandler, it was Chandler. If I’d just finished Lovecraft, it was Lovecraft. If I’d been watching Thundercats, or Ducktales or reading comic books, that was the sort of thing I scribbled. But, the author who always inspired me--and still does when I need to refresh the well, so to speak—was Manly Wade Wellman.
Wellman wasn’t the writer who convinced me I could write, but he was the one who made me want to write. Whenever my drive to write begins to wane, I turn to Wellman. Whenever I’m having trouble with a story, or in danger of missing a deadline, I read Wellman.
GM: It’s easy to see from your non-fiction Nightmare Men series (which I adore), that you have a long standing fascination and appreciation of that loneliest of crime fighters: The occult detective. As a fan, what was your first exposure to that subgenre of horror?
JR: I’m glad you enjoy reading the Nightmare Men. I enjoy writing them, myself. My first exposure to the concept was William Hope Hodgson’s “The Horse of the Invisible”, featuring Carnacki the Ghost-Finder, in a YA anthology called ‘Ghastly, Grim and Gruesome’. The idea of somebody investigating a haunting, Sherlock Holmes-style, was a bit of a revelation to my tender eight year old self.
I spent the next year hunting down the other Carnacki stories. And from there I hunted down Blackwood’s ‘John Silence’ stories, and, in a belated moment of revelation, realized that Manly Wade Wellman wrote stories about, like, five different occult detectives. By the time I stumbled on Seabury Quinn, I had become a fan of the subgenre in all of its diverse forms and variations.
GM: So, let’s get down to it. Charles St. Cyprian: The Royal Occultist. For those at home who don’t know who he is, who is he?
JR: Well, let’s see…simply, Charles St. Cyprian is Rudolph Valentino by way of Bertie Wooster, with a bit of Manly Wade Wellman’s suave occult investigator John Thunstone thrown in to spice things up. As the Royal Occultist, St. Cyprian, along with his (slightly murderous) assistant, Ebe Gallowglass, is the first, last, and only line of defense between England and various dangers of occult, demonic, divine or otherworldly nature.
GM: What was the inspiration for St. Cyprian? How did he come about?
JR: He had quite a few inspirations, as far as that goes. I’m a fan of characters like John Thunstone and Jules de Grandin, who tend to confront the supernatural with cold steel and hot lead, rather than magic or supernatural abilities. I’m also a Wodehouse fan, and I like the dynamic he perfected, with a semi-competent protagonist and his much more intelligent sidekick/servant. Combine all of that with an abiding love of the old Avengers television show (John Steed and Emma Peel, not Captain America) and stuff like Adam Adamant and the Wild, Wild West, and, hey, presto, you’ve got St. Cyprian and Gallowglass.
As to how he came about, well, originally he was a secondary character in an early draft manuscript that eventually went on to become my 2010 novel, DRACULA LIVES (which is still available from Pulpwork Press, btw). The novel, as originally conceived took place in the 1920s, and saw St. Cyprian confronting a resurrected Dracula and the satanic cult that had done said resurrecting in a Sax Rohmer-esque sort of story that culminated in an extended homage to the film ‘Horror Express’, set on the Orient Express. The book changed between that draft and the final published version, becoming less Sax Rohmer and more John le Carre, and St. Cyprian got cut out entirely as the novel moved from the 20’s to the 90’s.
That same year, I was approached by an editor to propose a series of 10,000 word stories for a new magazine. I dug the character back up, proposed the concept, and wrote a few stories and then, after the first one had been published, the magazines changed direction, and the series was put on hiatus. But, by then, I’d managed to sell a few shorter stories with the characters to other markets, and…well, a few more since. People seem to like the character, and I enjoy writing stories about him, so it’s worked out for the best, I’d say.
GM: You have over a dozen St. Cyprian stories in print through various anthologies. What was the first St. Cyprian story you wrote?
JR: The first St. Cyprian story I wrote was “Sign of the Salamander”, but the first one that people read was “Krampusnacht”. You can read an excerpt from the former here: http://royaloccultist.wordpress.com/2012/08/31/sign-of-the-salamander-excerpt/ and the latter, in its entirety, starting here: http://royaloccultist.wordpress.com/2012/12/21/krampusnacht/
GM: What keeps you coming back to the character and his mythology?
JR: I’m a big fan of series characters, occult detectives or otherwise. I like the idea of multiple, one-off stories, featuring the same character, scattered across anthologies and magazines, like a bread crumb trail for intrigued readers. That sort of thing just appeals to me—I can’t say why. It’s simultaneously formulaic and yet, somehow, exciting.
Too, there’s the whole ‘occult detective’ thing. And, over the course of fourteen or fifteen odd stories I’ve become fond of St. Cyprian and Gallowglass. I *enjoy* writing them—their banter, their mishaps, the inevitable, yet sudden way they wreck their car or burn down a house. I get a kick out of St. Cyprian going head-to-head with cosmic horrors armed only with pluck and an erroneous belief that the mystic sigil he’s carrying will protect him, and Gallowglass’ brave (yet terrifying) assumption that if you fill something with enough bullets, it’ll pack its bags and go bother the French.
GM: Any long term plans for St. Cyprian’s future, or are you taking the series one story at a time?
JR: It’s a little from Column A, and a little from Column B. I take the series one story at a time; it’d be easy to give in to my urge to capitalize on a good thing and write dozens of stories, but unless there’s a market for them, or a commission, there’s not a lot of point.
BUT, I do have long-term plans. There’s a hub-site: http://royaloccultist.wordpress.com/ and the requisite Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/RoyalOccultist. There might be a print collection in the works and some of the earlier stories are getting reprinted this year as well. Too, I’m pondering offering e-book mini-collections (consisting of, say two or three stories) at a later date through the site.
I got plans, basically. Not good ones, or even effective ones, but I got ‘em.
GM: Do I have any hope of reading a full length St. Cyprian novel in the future? If not, lie to me anyway.
JR: Actually, there is. I’m working on the (hopefully) first St. Cyprian novel, tentatively titled BEASTS OF BLACKHEATH. It’s a bit of an origin story, with added were-panthers.
GM: Hey, you had me at were-panthers.
JR: I talk more about it here, if anyone’s interested: http://joshuamreynolds.wordpress.com/2012/11/21/the-next-big-thing-or-blame-jonathan-green/
GM: What’s next for you?
JR: Well, right now I’m hard at work on my next book for Black Library, and then, I’ve got to write something-something and after that it’s something else. Oh, and more St. Cyprian stories, of course!
GM: Certainly! Thanks for taking the time to hang out. Any parting words? Where can people find you and throw large sums of money at you for your books?
JR: Thank you for having me! As to parting words—I hear that ‘Coming Evil’ series is pretty awesome. Y’all should get that.
GM: I heartily agree. There are links to your immediate right. Hurry.
JR: The easiest place to find me is http://joshuamreynolds.wordpress.com/ where you can find an up-to-date list of my works, with handy-dandy links to where they can be purchased for monies.
And if you’re interested in learning more about St. Cyprian and Gallowglass, you could always check out http://royaloccultist.wordpress.com/, which features links to available stories, news about forthcoming ones and even some free fiction!
Special thanks to Josh for stopping by and thanks to you all for reading!
Published on January 28, 2013 04:00
January 22, 2013
Interview with Author/Artist Bob Freeman!
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Today we're continuing our coverage of The Coming Evil tie-in tale,
Lengthening Shadows
, the all-new e-novella that sets up my upcoming novel Dark Hour. Last week, I talked a bit about the thoughts that went into writing Shadows, but today I'm turning the spotlight on author/artist/paranormal investigator Bob Freeman. Bob's been by the blog before. I'm a huge fan of his work and he's been gracious enough to provide two covers for me: the first being my zombie short story
Flowers for Shelly
, and the recently released Lengthening Shadows. Last time Bob was here, we talked at great lengths about his writing, but Bob's wearing his artist hat today as we talk about comics, art...and, well, some more writing :pGreg Mitchell: Welcome back, Bob! You’ve been busy since the last time you stopped by the blog, having released not one, but two Occult Detective comic book issues, worked on A Cat of Nine Talesanthology from Rookhaven and, last but not least, started your own publishing imprint with Caliburn House! What all have you been up to?
Bob Freeman: Too much, I dare say. As you mentioned I recently started my own publishing arm, Caliburn House, where I’ll be releasing my back catalogue of novels ( Descendant , Shadows Over Somerset, Keepers of the Dead) as well as new material soon after. It’s been a lot of work, and there have been some missteps along the way, but it’s exciting to be in the driver’s seat of my career as opposed to feeling like a passenger for the past few years.
My primary focus will be occult detective stories, especially those concerning Dr. Landon Connors , but I also have a sword and sorcery novel in the works (albeit with an occult detective slant). Truth be told, I’m leaning toward a different approach to my writing, shifting to a greater emphasis on short stories and novellas, but with a serial mindset — stand alone stories that have subplots that connect to a larger narrative and mythology.
I’m also dabbling in tabletop board games and pen and paper RPGs, and some paranormal non-fiction.
Like they say, there’s no rest for the wicked, and I’m more wicked than most ;)...
GM: I am forever grateful to you for providing some killer cover art for two of my projects, now. As long as I’ve known you, art has been a part of your storytelling magic bag. I gotta ask, what came first? Drawing or writing? For me, I had hopes of being a comic book illustrator for the longest time before I realized that the breadth of my stories exceeded my rather limited drawing ability.
BF: I’m a storyteller, be it through words or pictures. I think that’s the deep root of it. My passion lies in writing, though. The art thing is a hobby, something I liketo do. Writing is more of a have to proposition.
GM: What were your biggest art influences as a kid? Any particular imagery that stands out as a “I must devote my life to this” kind of moment?
Bob's art from Occult Detective Illustrated, on sale now!BF: I was (and am) really into comics. The first artist that jumped out at me was John Byrne, whose career I’ve followed since Charlton’s Doomsday +1. I spent a lot of hours tracing his stuff. I especially loved his work on Iron Fist, his runs on X-Men and the Avengers, and his Fantastic Fourwas really mind-blowing.
But the artist that punched me right in the face and who I credit with being the single greatest influence on me, in many ways both as a writer and artist, was Frank Frazetta. Frank poured so much emotion into his paintings and his draftsmanship was really unparalleled. I cannot impress upon you how much his work meant to me, how much it still does.
GM: What comics are you reading nowadays? And, dare I ask…Marvel or DC?
BF: Hellblazer is my favorite book right now. Of course it’s being canceled in favor of a new Constantine series beginning soon. I’m a big fan of the entire Hellboy Universe of books from Dark Horse, particularly B.P.R.D. IDW’s Locke & Key is phenomenal. Will be sad to see it go. I’ve been picking up several of the Marvel NOW relaunch, even though I feel burned by the DC New 52 line. It’s a rough time to be a comics fan in a lot of ways these days. I was primarily a Marvel kid growing up, but the industry has changed so much. Sales are abysmal and everything is event driven. Thankfully I have a huge personal collection and I can sink into nostalgia, revisiting stuff like Tomb of Dracula, Werewolf by Night, or Son of Satan whenever the mood strikes me.
I will say this though, I will buy anything written by Cullen Bunn. His Oni Press book The Sixth Gun with Brian Hurtt is spectacular and I’ve really enjoyed his work for the book two as well. I can’t recommend his books highly enough.
GM: No doubt! I just discovered The Sixth Gun last November and have been picking up the trades. It's a great, fun monster book.
Let’s take a look at your own comic featuring Landon Connors. I’ve very much enjoyed his previous outings in comic book form. Any projection date on the next issue of either Connors series?
BF: Occult Detective Illustrated was something I put together while waiting for pages from Chris Wilson, my collaborator on Oddfellows Serenade. I had thought of making it an ongoing series, but unfortunately the sales don’t really warrant it. It’s kind of a niche thing, so instead I’m going to publish it online as a series of serials on my website once The Parker Brothers: Father Knows Best serial is complete.
Page 16, Oddfellows Serenade Issue 1I really wish I could give you a firm date on the Oddfellows Serenade graphic novel. The artist is working on the final pages and then I have to format and letter them. I’m hoping we’ll have it ready by October, but I’ve had similar thoughts before. We’ve been at this for over three years now. There’s an old saying, “Some spells when cast take their dear sweet time to become manifest, and wizards are seldom known for their patience.” Well, this is one wizard whose patience is wearing mighty thin.
GM: I subscribe to your blog and it’s always a treat to find a new post in my Inbox. One of the things I love most about your posts is your frequent trips down Memory Lane. As do most monster fans, I’m sure, my strongest monster memories are firmly rooted in my childhood. I love experiencing your childhood—and others—and find a deep kinship in hearing about what it was like for others who first discovered the macabre at a young age. I’ve often reflected on why I love monsters and the like so much—often on this very blog. But now I turn the tables on you. What drew you to writing and drawing your monstrous tales? What lured you to studying real-world occult and lore? What’s the draw for you?
BF: The heart of it, I suppose, lies in my Arkansas roots, and the folk tales and legends my family brought from there and elsewhere, and those discovered in my native Indiana. I loved to hear scary stories as a little guy, and some of my earliest (and fondest) memories are of me hiding behind my dad’s recliner while he watched late night horror movies hosted by the incomparable Sammy Terry.
I was not your “normal” child. I stumbled upon magical tracts that had belonged to my great grandmother, most notably Unseen Forces by Manly Palmer Hall, and had a firm belief in the supernatural at an extremely young age. By nine years old I was sneaking out of the house and spending the night in the cemetery just up the road from where we lived.
When other kids were reading James and the Giant Peach, I was reading books like Sybil Leek’s Book of Curses, Hans Holzers’ Ghosts I’ve Met, and Francis King’s Ritual Magic. When they were playing Mouse Trap at sleepovers, I was pulling out the Ouija Board.
GM: Thanks for stopping by to hang out. Always a pleasure. Any parting words?
BF: There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t feel truly blessed. I have a wonderful family, the best friends a guy could hope for, and an outlet to express myself creatively. We live in an age undreamed of. Our only limits are those we set upon ourselves.
In closing, I want to thank you for being such a huge supporter of my work. I have become a huge fan of yours and I wish you continued success. You’re a breath of fresh air, my friend. It has been an honor and a privilege to know you and I look forward to us working together again in the near future.
GM: Thank you so much, Bob. That means a lot :)
That does it for another interview. Next up in the queue, we'll have another author familiar to occult detective fans--Joshua M. Reynolds, who will stop by for an insightful talk. In the meantime, drop some dollars and pick up one of Bob's books, will ya? We writers got families to feed!
Published on January 22, 2013 04:00
January 14, 2013
"Lengthening Shadows"--Commentary
In case you missed it, last week I released a brand new tale set within The Coming Evil Trilogy. Lengthening Shadows is an e-novella set between Enemies of the Cross and Dark Hour. It sets the stage for that final book in The Coming Evil Trilogy--due to hit the market in February 2013. So, here we are for a commentary on the new story. However, because Lengthening Shadows introduces many concepts that will be explored in full in Dark Hour, I'm saving the commentary on those aspects for Book Three's commentary.
There is one thing that Lengthening Shadows has that marks it as a unique entry in the saga--the inclusion of The Arbigast Group.
An early roster of the Arbigast Group appeared in my short story "Flesh and Blood" found within the pages of The Midnight Diner Vol. 3. The Arbigast Group is my answer to the grizzled monster hunters--a not-so secret passion of mine. I get a thrill at the idea of a group of guys getting together for the sole purpose of hunting evil. I've always imagined what kind of brotherhood might exist in such a group, facing nightly terrors that the world refused to believe in. I imagined it would be a life of quiet sacrifice and no glory--save for the moment you were slaying some unthinkable creature.
More specifically, the Arbigast Group, and its inclusion in The Coming Evil Trilogy, was informed by two sources: John Carpenter's Vampires (based on the amazing John Steakley novel Vampire$) and that Schwarzenegger flick End of Days.
The leader of the Group--Jon Arbigast--is a thinly veiled homage to James Woods in Vampires. He's crude, loud, a bit egotistical, and a drunk. But, at the heart of him, he's a man who loves his team and would gladly die for them. I'm pretty sure Vampires was a flop at the box office and pelted by critics as being misogynistic. I suppose some of the latter criticism is warranted, but there is such a tenderness that Woods adds to his tough guy monster hunter that really left a lasting impression on me. I wanted to create a character like that to explore. Being knee-deep in my Buffy obsession at the time, it was refreshing to see hunters struggling to win. I had become so used to a hunter who barely had to fight to defeat a hellborn foe--and always had a cutesy comeback, to boot--that it was quite shocking to be reminded of how "blue collar hunters" had the harder battle. These guys had to rely on their teammates and their quick thinking and every inch they gained in the war against vampires was won only with blood and tears. I wanted to write hunters like THAT, not like Buffy.
Years passed. 2003 rolled around and I was looking to break into writing for the Halloween film franchise--ironically enough, also a John Carpenter movie. I wrote a script that saw a group of mercenaries--either originally built by Dr. Loomis or inspired by the wild-eyed bogey chaster--hired to hunt down Michael Myers. I even pitched it as "John Carpenter's Vampires meets Halloween". This team was called The Loomis Group. I made a lot of contacts that year in the Halloween machine (which would eventually lead me to write "White Ghost") and knocked on Dimension Films' door in order to pitch it. But, things fell through, no one returned my calls, and the script languished. Same old story. I was pretty bummed, even though looking back, I can already tell that my super action movie take on a Michael Myers movie would have probably ticked off quite a few diehard fans. Perhaps, then, it's better it didn't get made. Nevertheless, I really liked the concept and I liked the characters. Seeing as how I'm not a guy who likes to let a good idea go to waste, I started thinking about turning this script into an original story and bringing this group to life in an original work.
However, I couldn't very well call them "The Loomis Group" anymore (Well, I guess I could, but I didn't want to). I was aware that John Carpenter took the name "Loomis" from Hitchcock's Psycho. I decided to return to that source and mine Psycho for another name. Ironically I turned to the closest thing to a "monster hunter" you could get in the movie--that of private investigator Milton Arbogast, coolly played by Martin Balsam. I spelled the name phonetically, though, making for a one-letter difference. After giving the characters a name-change, I had a handful of gunslinging spook killers, but no one to pit them against. I said my other inspiration for the Arbigast Group came from End of the Days . Now, I've only seen that movie once, and that was in the theater on opening weekend way back in 1999, but I remember that I did not like it at all. Back then, I was just starting to formulate the early versions of The Coming Evil in my mind, and it struck me that a big muscle guy with lots of guns and a mean snarl wouldn't do a lick of good against the Strange Man. The entire point of the Strange Man was that he had to be fought with faith, so, early on, I had the question of what would happen if the traditional Hollywood tough guy went toe-to-toe with my monster. So, after 2003, it finally clicked that I could bring in my Arbigast Group into The Coming Evil Trilogy.
The results are found in Lengthening Shadows.
That idea rotated in the back of my mind for a number of years, until I finally brought the Arbigast Group into the first manuscript of Dark Hour. But, honestly, I had so many things going on in that draft and was well over 200 thousand words (Enemies of the Cross was 120k for a point of reference) that I had to cut something. So, I took all the scraps from Dark Hour, re-fitted them, and produced Lengthening Shadows--a prequel tale.
Still, though, I struggled just a bit with whether to bring the Group into the world of The Coming Evil. Now understand that practically everything I write "fits together" into a single mythology. From Rift Jump to The Coming Evil to most (if not all) of my short stories. So, from the moment I first wrote the Group in "Flesh and Blood", I knew they were connected, but I hesitated on making that connection blatant. Why? Because the Group hunts various kinds of monsters, but I wasn't sure how open my Coming Evil readers would be to the idea that more supernatural creatures than the Strange Man existed in this world. The Coming Evil is rooted very firmly in a Christian worldview, and I was aware that most of my readers also adhered to such a view. How would they feel about me dropping in werewolves, vampires, and the like into their belief structure? Especially since I couldn't give the "Coming Evil explanation" for werewolves and vampires in this book, due to time constraints.
I essentially had to drop the bomb that traditional monsters were real without giving any explanation for them at this time. I wasn't sure how that would go, or if I was going to stretch the bounds of believability in the fictional universe I had created. In hopes of diffusing the tension a bit, I was careful when describing the things that Arbigast faces not by their traditional names, but by the somewhat vague description of "ghouls, ghosts, phantoms, things in the closet, things under the bed, flesh eaters, dead walkers, blood drinkers, savage man-beasts, unnatural predators, everything people feared as children and grew up to laugh at, before they discovered they were real".
I thought this would suffice to get across the idea of the things Arbigast faced without having to get TOO specific. Ideally I'd like to continue writing Arbigast stories sometime in the future, and then I can get more into the specifics of my versions of the classic monster mythologies. We shall see.
There is, at the moment, one other short story with ties to the Arbigast Group slated for publication and that's "Divide and Conquer" coming soon in the Monsters! anthology. That story also connects the Group to my other monster-chaser character Vinnie Caponi: Urban Mythologist who made his debut in last Halloween's A Cat of Nine Tales occult detective anthology. Could there be a full-length Arbigast Group novel in the future? Honestly, I'd love that, but at the moment, my plate is full enough for two Greg Mitchells. I need to clear that away before I'd be able to dive into such a project. But the Group definitely has more stories in them, and it would be great to finally cut loose and just write about some denim-clad gunslingers traveling the American backroads, blasting away every kind of monster I can think of. Sigh... Only time will tell.
Thanks for sticking around for these end notes to Lengthening Shadows. I hope everybody checks out the e-novella. It's available for $2.99 at Kindle and Smashwords. And most importantly, be here in February when we release Dark Hour !
Published on January 14, 2013 04:00
January 8, 2013
The Coming Evil: Lengthening Shadows--Now Available!
Mornin'.
Look what came out today, just in time for Elvis' birthday?
I'm happy to announce that Lengthening Shadows --the brand new e-novella nestled within The Coming Evil Trilogy--is now available in all ebook formats! Hit up Kindle or Smashwords to download a copy for your platform of choice for $2.99.
Lengthening Shadows is an original tale that serves as an "inbetweenquel", bridging the gap between The Coming Evil, Book Two: Enemies of the Cross and the trilogy's final installment Dark Hour , headed your way in February. Shadows sets up some of the new characters you'll meet in Dark Hour, as well as laying the groundwork for that final tale. Think of it as an extended prologue, to get you ready for the trilogy's mind-shattering conclusion! Mind-shattering, I tells ya!
Buy your copy today, and stay tuned to this blog as I'll write up a couple posts about Lengthening Shadows, leading to the release of Dark Hour. You won't want to miss it.
ABOUT THE NOVELLA: st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) }
The Resistance Has Begun.
Rebellion is in the air as the demonic visitor known as “The Strange Man” begins his takeover of Greensboro. Promising prosperity and hiding his true identity, the creature adopts the name “John Graves” and makes himself at home in his position as the town’s new mayor.
It is a time of sedition as former pastor Jeff Weldon and a small band of faithful warriors plot to overthrow the hellish regime. By day, they carry on in their quiet lives, but at night they venture into haunted Greensboro on dangerous missions. A war is brewing in the town’s shadows as even the remnants of the Committee—the original conspirators who helped pave the way for the Strange Man’s arrival—now plot to betray him, hiring a group of hardened mercenaries to kill the monster once and for all.
In the middle of the conflict is Annie Myers, still reeling from the grim fate that befell her older sister Rosalyn. Annie’s blossoming faith is put to the test as she encounters a new and fearsome monster on the outskirts of Greensboro who is taking control of the skies.
As the Dark Hour draws nigh and the shadows lengthen, it becomes all the harder to determine who is friend and who is foe, and if anyone will survive the battle to come.
"Lengthening Shadows", an original e-novella, serves as the bridge between "Enemies of the Cross" and "Dark Hour", Books Two and Three of "The Coming Evil Trilogy".
Look what came out today, just in time for Elvis' birthday?
I'm happy to announce that Lengthening Shadows --the brand new e-novella nestled within The Coming Evil Trilogy--is now available in all ebook formats! Hit up Kindle or Smashwords to download a copy for your platform of choice for $2.99.
Lengthening Shadows is an original tale that serves as an "inbetweenquel", bridging the gap between The Coming Evil, Book Two: Enemies of the Cross and the trilogy's final installment Dark Hour , headed your way in February. Shadows sets up some of the new characters you'll meet in Dark Hour, as well as laying the groundwork for that final tale. Think of it as an extended prologue, to get you ready for the trilogy's mind-shattering conclusion! Mind-shattering, I tells ya!
Buy your copy today, and stay tuned to this blog as I'll write up a couple posts about Lengthening Shadows, leading to the release of Dark Hour. You won't want to miss it.
ABOUT THE NOVELLA: st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) }
The Resistance Has Begun.
Rebellion is in the air as the demonic visitor known as “The Strange Man” begins his takeover of Greensboro. Promising prosperity and hiding his true identity, the creature adopts the name “John Graves” and makes himself at home in his position as the town’s new mayor.
It is a time of sedition as former pastor Jeff Weldon and a small band of faithful warriors plot to overthrow the hellish regime. By day, they carry on in their quiet lives, but at night they venture into haunted Greensboro on dangerous missions. A war is brewing in the town’s shadows as even the remnants of the Committee—the original conspirators who helped pave the way for the Strange Man’s arrival—now plot to betray him, hiring a group of hardened mercenaries to kill the monster once and for all.
In the middle of the conflict is Annie Myers, still reeling from the grim fate that befell her older sister Rosalyn. Annie’s blossoming faith is put to the test as she encounters a new and fearsome monster on the outskirts of Greensboro who is taking control of the skies.
As the Dark Hour draws nigh and the shadows lengthen, it becomes all the harder to determine who is friend and who is foe, and if anyone will survive the battle to come.
"Lengthening Shadows", an original e-novella, serves as the bridge between "Enemies of the Cross" and "Dark Hour", Books Two and Three of "The Coming Evil Trilogy".
Published on January 08, 2013 04:00
January 1, 2013
Happy New Year!
2013 is upon us. 2012 was a very busy year for me, writing-wise, and 2013 is already shaping up to be just as hectic. My New Year's Resolution for 2013 is to whittle down my projects so that, by 2014, I might just work on ONE novel at a time. ...Or maybe two. But hopefully no more of this seven novels at once nonsense. I need a break. I've got a certain story that I want to tell (no, I won't tell you what it is yet :p) and I want to be able to give it my full attention. Beyond that, I'd like to just rest and enjoy life for a little while.
Having said that, here's a quick rundown of what you can expect from me in 2013!
--Coming up in the next couple weeks will be the release of my e-novella, nestled in between Enemies of the Cross and the final book in the trilogy (see below). The e-novella is called Lengthening Shadows and introduces a new element to The Coming Evil mythology--that of the hardened monster hunter. The Arbigast Group--my gang of gunslinging monster killers from my short story "Flesh and Blood" in The Midnight Diner--will be moseying on in to Greensboro to see what they might do about this Strange Man spook. I've been dying to bring these guys into the story, proper, so it'll be fun to see what kind of trouble they might get themselves into. But more on them and that closer to the e-book's release.
--In late February/March, the trilogy will be complete as The Coming Evil, Book Three: Dark Hour will be released by Splashdown Darkwater. Everything has been building to the final moments in this book and I am on pins and needles to share it with you all. I shed many a tear writing this final story and count it as one of the most personal and heartfelt things I've ever written. It is going to be epic.
--In December of ye olde 2012, I turned in my first draft for my Unofficial Timeline to Back to the Future for Hasslein Books. In the months ahead, we'll be editing through that and hopefully have that released to you sometime this summer, depending on how fast we can put this thing together. If you've seen the Back to the Future Lexicon that's already available (and if you haven't, you need to buy it right now), you'll know that this is a massive endeavor, but, I think, worth every penny.
--I'm working on the sequel to last summer's release Rift Jump. The book is tentatively titled Sara's Song and wraps up the story begun in Rift Jump quite nicely, I think. It's going to be a very dramatic send-off of this story that's meant a lot to me growing up. The characters of Michael and Sara have been with me since I was a young teenager, and this is, in many ways, my good-bye to them. There could be more Rift Jump books in the future, but if not, Sara's Song will definitely bring about a tearjerking conclusion that will, hopefully, leave you as satisfied as I feel writing it. There are quite a few surprises in store for you in this book, so go buy Rift Jump now and get all caught up!
--In addition to that, I've finished a new occult/crime novel and am in the process of shopping that around to different publishers. If you've read my story "Metamorphosis" in Rookhaven's Cat of Nine Tales anthology last Halloween, then you've already met one of the main characters, Vinnie Caponi: Urban Mythologist. More on this project as it develops.
--I still have two short stories that will be released in the coming months. One about a bigfoot!
--Somewhere in all of that, I'm also slated to write the next installment in author Frank Creed's technothriller Underground series! It's a tremendous responsibility to write in another's universe and I take it very seriously. I can't say much about the book, at this point, except to say that it will feature Big Hoss Dupree, the character I created for Frank's Underground anthology released last year. I really have a soft spot for the grumpy Ex-Communicator and look forward to telling another tale. If you've yet to get started on Frank's series, you've got three books to catch up on! Start with Book One: Flashpoint and get to reading! It's a wild ride through a futuristic cyberpunk world, perfect for fans of The Matrix and the Shadowrun RPG.
So that's what I'm working on right now. Also, once Dark Hour is released, you can look forward to my usual coverage, including interviews, maybe a blog tour, as well as commentaries, and a soundtrack for your listening pleasure as you read the concluding chapter of The Coming Evil Trilogy. I hope to see you all every step of the way.
Happy New Year. May you make the most of it, tear down the walls, and seize your dreams--but also take time to enjoy the ones you keep close.
I'm exhausted just listing all these projects, so I'm giving myself the night off to order in a pizza and watch Quatermass and the Pit!
Having said that, here's a quick rundown of what you can expect from me in 2013!
--Coming up in the next couple weeks will be the release of my e-novella, nestled in between Enemies of the Cross and the final book in the trilogy (see below). The e-novella is called Lengthening Shadows and introduces a new element to The Coming Evil mythology--that of the hardened monster hunter. The Arbigast Group--my gang of gunslinging monster killers from my short story "Flesh and Blood" in The Midnight Diner--will be moseying on in to Greensboro to see what they might do about this Strange Man spook. I've been dying to bring these guys into the story, proper, so it'll be fun to see what kind of trouble they might get themselves into. But more on them and that closer to the e-book's release.
--In late February/March, the trilogy will be complete as The Coming Evil, Book Three: Dark Hour will be released by Splashdown Darkwater. Everything has been building to the final moments in this book and I am on pins and needles to share it with you all. I shed many a tear writing this final story and count it as one of the most personal and heartfelt things I've ever written. It is going to be epic.
--In December of ye olde 2012, I turned in my first draft for my Unofficial Timeline to Back to the Future for Hasslein Books. In the months ahead, we'll be editing through that and hopefully have that released to you sometime this summer, depending on how fast we can put this thing together. If you've seen the Back to the Future Lexicon that's already available (and if you haven't, you need to buy it right now), you'll know that this is a massive endeavor, but, I think, worth every penny.
--I'm working on the sequel to last summer's release Rift Jump. The book is tentatively titled Sara's Song and wraps up the story begun in Rift Jump quite nicely, I think. It's going to be a very dramatic send-off of this story that's meant a lot to me growing up. The characters of Michael and Sara have been with me since I was a young teenager, and this is, in many ways, my good-bye to them. There could be more Rift Jump books in the future, but if not, Sara's Song will definitely bring about a tearjerking conclusion that will, hopefully, leave you as satisfied as I feel writing it. There are quite a few surprises in store for you in this book, so go buy Rift Jump now and get all caught up!
--In addition to that, I've finished a new occult/crime novel and am in the process of shopping that around to different publishers. If you've read my story "Metamorphosis" in Rookhaven's Cat of Nine Tales anthology last Halloween, then you've already met one of the main characters, Vinnie Caponi: Urban Mythologist. More on this project as it develops.
--I still have two short stories that will be released in the coming months. One about a bigfoot!
--Somewhere in all of that, I'm also slated to write the next installment in author Frank Creed's technothriller Underground series! It's a tremendous responsibility to write in another's universe and I take it very seriously. I can't say much about the book, at this point, except to say that it will feature Big Hoss Dupree, the character I created for Frank's Underground anthology released last year. I really have a soft spot for the grumpy Ex-Communicator and look forward to telling another tale. If you've yet to get started on Frank's series, you've got three books to catch up on! Start with Book One: Flashpoint and get to reading! It's a wild ride through a futuristic cyberpunk world, perfect for fans of The Matrix and the Shadowrun RPG.
So that's what I'm working on right now. Also, once Dark Hour is released, you can look forward to my usual coverage, including interviews, maybe a blog tour, as well as commentaries, and a soundtrack for your listening pleasure as you read the concluding chapter of The Coming Evil Trilogy. I hope to see you all every step of the way.
Happy New Year. May you make the most of it, tear down the walls, and seize your dreams--but also take time to enjoy the ones you keep close.
I'm exhausted just listing all these projects, so I'm giving myself the night off to order in a pizza and watch Quatermass and the Pit!
Published on January 01, 2013 14:45
December 13, 2012
Coming Soon--The Coming Evil: Lengthening Shadows
Little bit of news today for those of you who've been waiting. Back when I announced that the third and final installment of The Coming Evil Trilogy was headed your way early '13, I made mention of a special "inbetweenquel" e-novella to be released in a few weeks. Ready for more details? Howabout we start with this outstanding cover, whipped up by occult investigator/author/buddy Bob Freeman!
Nice, yeah? Now, here's what the book's about:
----------
THE RESISTANCE HAS BEGUN
Rebellion is in the air as the demonic visitor known only as “The Strange Man” begins his takeover of Greensboro. Promising prosperity and hiding his true identity, the creature adopts the name “John Graves” and makes himself at home in his position as the town’s new mayor.
It is a time of sedition as former pastor Jeff Weldon and a small band of faithful warriors plot to overthrow the hellish regime. By day, they carry on in their quiet lives, but at night they venture into haunted Greensboro on dangerous missions. A war is brewing in the town’s shadows as even the remnants of the Committee—the original conspirators who helped pave the way for the Strange Man’s arrival—now plot to betray him, hiring a group of hardened mercenaries to kill the monster once and for all.
In the middle of the conflict is Annie Myers, still reeling from the grim fate that befell her older sister Rosalyn. Annie’s new and blossoming faith is put to the test as she encounters a new and fearsome monster on the outskirts of Greensboro who is taking control of the skies.
As the Dark Hour draws nigh and the shadows lengthen, it becomes all the harder to determine who is friend and who is foe, and if anyone will survive the battle to come.
Stay tuned here in the weeks to come to read more about this new novella and to purchase your own e-copy upon its release!
Nice, yeah? Now, here's what the book's about:
----------
THE RESISTANCE HAS BEGUN
Rebellion is in the air as the demonic visitor known only as “The Strange Man” begins his takeover of Greensboro. Promising prosperity and hiding his true identity, the creature adopts the name “John Graves” and makes himself at home in his position as the town’s new mayor.
It is a time of sedition as former pastor Jeff Weldon and a small band of faithful warriors plot to overthrow the hellish regime. By day, they carry on in their quiet lives, but at night they venture into haunted Greensboro on dangerous missions. A war is brewing in the town’s shadows as even the remnants of the Committee—the original conspirators who helped pave the way for the Strange Man’s arrival—now plot to betray him, hiring a group of hardened mercenaries to kill the monster once and for all.
In the middle of the conflict is Annie Myers, still reeling from the grim fate that befell her older sister Rosalyn. Annie’s new and blossoming faith is put to the test as she encounters a new and fearsome monster on the outskirts of Greensboro who is taking control of the skies.
As the Dark Hour draws nigh and the shadows lengthen, it becomes all the harder to determine who is friend and who is foe, and if anyone will survive the battle to come.
Stay tuned here in the weeks to come to read more about this new novella and to purchase your own e-copy upon its release!
Published on December 13, 2012 04:00
November 21, 2012
Next Big Thing--"Dark Hour"
Last week, Weird Western author Ed Erdelac was tagged as part of the "Next Big Thing" Tour, where he was posed 10 questions about his latest book Terovolas (read his post here). As per the rules of the tour, Ed tagged another batch of authors to answer the same questions this week. Ed tagged me, so here I am, talking about my upcoming novel Dark Hour, the epic finale to The Coming Evil Trilogy, slated for an early 2013 release. Read it, yo!
1) What is the working title of your next book?
The Coming Evil, Book Three: Dark Hour
2) Where did the idea come from for the book?
Dark Hour is the final installment in The Coming Evil Trilogy, and the entire basis of this mega-story was my childhood desire to take my love for roller coaster monster movies like The Monster Squad and fuse it with my passion for the Bible. I am captivated by the struggles of the people of faith in the Bible, and how God used unremarkable people to accomplish feats of hope and inspiration. So, you know, I wanted to write that—only with tons of slimy, snarling, flesh-eating monsters.
3) What genre does your book fall under?
Christian Horror! It’s my goal to pit a group of Christian believers against a chthonic terror outside our perception of reality. It’s very Lovecraftian in the sense that it reveals how tiny we humans are in the cosmos, yet whereas Lovecraft’s characters despaired or fell to madness in the face of such truth, my characters have to stack that against their faith and worth in God. It’s a test of belief. Some will fail the test, some will pass. Therein lies the drama.
4) What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
Since The Coming Evil Trilogy originally began as a screenplay back in the late 1990s, I’ve thought about this question a lot. Over the years, my answers have changed. For the main character of Dras (drAHz), I think of Shia LaBeouf now, while I used to envision a young Ethan Embry back in 1998. They’re both boyish and squirrely enough to pull it off. For Dras’ best friend/soul mate Rosalyn, I imagine an I Know What You Did Last Summer-era Jennifer Love Hewitt. For the dastardly Strange Man who seeks to tear Dras and Rosalyn apart, I’m torn between Johnny Depp and, surprisingly Tom Hiddleston who recently played Loki in Thor/The Avengers. I need someone who can pull off creepy, but alluring as well. And he’s gotta be able to grin like a sadistic devil.
5) What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
As the demonic Strange Man’s master edges closer to Earth, a small band of monster fighters will have to make their final stand for the soul of their town.
6) Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
The book will be released by Splashdown Darkwater.
7) How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
At least a couple years of actual writing, but many more years before that of formulating in the back of my mind. The real kicker is the road to publication. I finished my first draft back in 2009, but then I went to work finding a publisher and getting the first two installments of the saga published!
8) What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
Ah, books are tough. I’m a movie guy and, again, this started as a movie. I still think of it as a movie in book form. At its heart, Dark Hour is a war/invasion novel. I think of Battle Los Angeles or either major film adaptation of War of the Worlds in terms of intensity and scale and human drama with an alien invasion for a backdrop. Most recently, it’s a lot like the TV show Falling Skies. Very much about an outside force taking over and a ragtag resistance struggling to overcome their own bickering to do any good. And, of course, there are copious amounts of destruction.
9) Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Humanity. That’s a really broad and pretentious answer, but Dark Hour is all about the best and worst of humanity. We can be a sickening, hateful, arrogant bunch, but every once in awhile, one of us does something that is so outstanding and selfless and admirable that it captures the attention of the world. I think most people want to be “good people”, but we so easily lose our way. The road to hell, and all of that. Also, Hebrews 11 in the Bible has a big influence on me and this book. It’s often nicknamed “The Faith Chapter” and it gives a passionate overview of some of the most notables heroes of faith in the Bible—those who shut the mouths of lions and overthrew kingdoms and what not. But, what strikes me most is the latter part of that chapter that lists a plethora of unnamed saints who were brutally murdered in various horrible ways for their faith. They never saw the fruits of their efforts, but they died with their head held high and their sight on Heaven. The Bible said the world was not worthy of such as those. Those are my heroes—the nameless ones who gave everything for what they believed in. I hope that, when push comes to shove, I would have that kind of courage.
10) What else about the book might pique the reader's interest?
The first two parts of The Coming Evil Trilogy are available online and in stores everywhere. Look for The Strange Man and Enemies of the Cross and get all caught up before war breaks out when Dark Hour hits early 2013! Plus, readers might be intrigued to read my most recent novel release Rift Jump . It’s a teen-angst romance adventure story through the multiverse with parallel dimensions and the unknowable evil lurking in the dark spaces in between the worlds! Rift Jump is a cosmic take on my uber-mythos and gives some perspective on where all those nasty monsters in The Coming Evil Trilogy hail from. I also recently did an interview (with Ed, ironic enough) about the book. Check it out!
***Now it's my turn to tag more authors! Be sure to check out these blogs next Wednesday (the 28th) for their answers to these questions!
Bob Freeman
Frank Creed
1) What is the working title of your next book?
The Coming Evil, Book Three: Dark Hour2) Where did the idea come from for the book?
Dark Hour is the final installment in The Coming Evil Trilogy, and the entire basis of this mega-story was my childhood desire to take my love for roller coaster monster movies like The Monster Squad and fuse it with my passion for the Bible. I am captivated by the struggles of the people of faith in the Bible, and how God used unremarkable people to accomplish feats of hope and inspiration. So, you know, I wanted to write that—only with tons of slimy, snarling, flesh-eating monsters.
3) What genre does your book fall under?
Christian Horror! It’s my goal to pit a group of Christian believers against a chthonic terror outside our perception of reality. It’s very Lovecraftian in the sense that it reveals how tiny we humans are in the cosmos, yet whereas Lovecraft’s characters despaired or fell to madness in the face of such truth, my characters have to stack that against their faith and worth in God. It’s a test of belief. Some will fail the test, some will pass. Therein lies the drama.
4) What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
Since The Coming Evil Trilogy originally began as a screenplay back in the late 1990s, I’ve thought about this question a lot. Over the years, my answers have changed. For the main character of Dras (drAHz), I think of Shia LaBeouf now, while I used to envision a young Ethan Embry back in 1998. They’re both boyish and squirrely enough to pull it off. For Dras’ best friend/soul mate Rosalyn, I imagine an I Know What You Did Last Summer-era Jennifer Love Hewitt. For the dastardly Strange Man who seeks to tear Dras and Rosalyn apart, I’m torn between Johnny Depp and, surprisingly Tom Hiddleston who recently played Loki in Thor/The Avengers. I need someone who can pull off creepy, but alluring as well. And he’s gotta be able to grin like a sadistic devil.
5) What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
As the demonic Strange Man’s master edges closer to Earth, a small band of monster fighters will have to make their final stand for the soul of their town.
6) Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
The book will be released by Splashdown Darkwater.
7) How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
At least a couple years of actual writing, but many more years before that of formulating in the back of my mind. The real kicker is the road to publication. I finished my first draft back in 2009, but then I went to work finding a publisher and getting the first two installments of the saga published!
8) What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
Ah, books are tough. I’m a movie guy and, again, this started as a movie. I still think of it as a movie in book form. At its heart, Dark Hour is a war/invasion novel. I think of Battle Los Angeles or either major film adaptation of War of the Worlds in terms of intensity and scale and human drama with an alien invasion for a backdrop. Most recently, it’s a lot like the TV show Falling Skies. Very much about an outside force taking over and a ragtag resistance struggling to overcome their own bickering to do any good. And, of course, there are copious amounts of destruction.
9) Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Humanity. That’s a really broad and pretentious answer, but Dark Hour is all about the best and worst of humanity. We can be a sickening, hateful, arrogant bunch, but every once in awhile, one of us does something that is so outstanding and selfless and admirable that it captures the attention of the world. I think most people want to be “good people”, but we so easily lose our way. The road to hell, and all of that. Also, Hebrews 11 in the Bible has a big influence on me and this book. It’s often nicknamed “The Faith Chapter” and it gives a passionate overview of some of the most notables heroes of faith in the Bible—those who shut the mouths of lions and overthrew kingdoms and what not. But, what strikes me most is the latter part of that chapter that lists a plethora of unnamed saints who were brutally murdered in various horrible ways for their faith. They never saw the fruits of their efforts, but they died with their head held high and their sight on Heaven. The Bible said the world was not worthy of such as those. Those are my heroes—the nameless ones who gave everything for what they believed in. I hope that, when push comes to shove, I would have that kind of courage.
10) What else about the book might pique the reader's interest?
The first two parts of The Coming Evil Trilogy are available online and in stores everywhere. Look for The Strange Man and Enemies of the Cross and get all caught up before war breaks out when Dark Hour hits early 2013! Plus, readers might be intrigued to read my most recent novel release Rift Jump . It’s a teen-angst romance adventure story through the multiverse with parallel dimensions and the unknowable evil lurking in the dark spaces in between the worlds! Rift Jump is a cosmic take on my uber-mythos and gives some perspective on where all those nasty monsters in The Coming Evil Trilogy hail from. I also recently did an interview (with Ed, ironic enough) about the book. Check it out!
***Now it's my turn to tag more authors! Be sure to check out these blogs next Wednesday (the 28th) for their answers to these questions!
Bob Freeman
Frank Creed
Published on November 21, 2012 04:00
November 12, 2012
Interview with author Ed Erdelac--Will the real Van Helsing please stand up?
A little “apology” for this interview before we get started:
When my buddy Ed Erdelac started talking about his new book Terovolas (originally entitled "Van Helsing in Texas", which was awesome!), my ears perked right up. Of course, it’s me: I love all things monster hunter. Ed and I talked and I offered, as I usually do, to have him stop by the blog for an interview. He agreed and I immediately purchased a copy of the e-book at JournalStone Publishing’s website. I dove right in and was at once captivated by the tale of Van Helsing’s tragic adventures following the close of Bram Stoker’s original Dracula novel. This thing is a direct sequel, a really great approach that Ed seemed to get right when so many others had done it wrong. But, the more I read, the more I felt very unsettled by the prose. Much like Stoker’s original, this book is split up into supposed diary entries of the great Monster Hunter himself, as well as newspaper articles and whatnot. They were just so detailed and I marveled at the care Ed had gone to in creating these fictional documents. I’ve always known Ed to be a history buff and he excels at making you feel like you’ve got your very own time-traveling DeLorean, but, in Terovolas, Ed managed to really outdo himself. The things he described in the book, though, were so vivid, that it really stayed with me after I put my Nook down. I wrote him and told him as much and that’s when he let me in on the big secret: He didn’t write it. He, in fact, claims he only compiled it from Van Helsing’s notes—the realVan Helsing.
At first I responded “Rad!” and left it at that, figuring Ed was just being geeky, but the more we talked about it, the more I realized that he was serious. Or, at least, thinks he’s serious. He spelled out the whole account of how he stumbled upon the real Abraham Van Helsing’s papers and began compiling them. I listened intently, at first intrigued, then growing more and more bothered. I hesitantly asked Ed if he intended on telling the reading public what he told me. He said he was considering it, and I told him not to. I still wasn’t convinced he wasn’t just trying to pull off some lame publicity stunt and I thought it was kind of weird.
Then, lo, he posted his entire first-person account on his blog just a few weeks ago.
I wrote him back and told him I didn’t think that was a good idea. I also wasn’t so sure I wanted to interview him anymore to be honest, but Ed’s really been there for me, pulling for me in my career, so as a friend, I decided to treat him the same. So, here’s our interview, for better or worse, pieced together from a number of back-and-forth e-mails. After compiling it, I debated posting it, as it gets pretty intense and, above all, I don’t want you to think ill of Ed Erdelac. I tried to steer the interview towards ambiguous waters, treating the work as fiction, but, well…you’ll see. I guess there’s no such thing as bad publicity, right? So here we go:* * *
Greg Mitchell: Thanks for stopping by, Ed! Your new book Terovolas just came out from JournalStone Publishing! Tell us about it.
Ed Erdelac: Thanks for having me, Greg! Terovolas concerns the period of 1891, directly after the events of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, when Professor Abraham Van Helsing was checked into Dr. John Seward’s Purfleet Asylum suffering from a bout of violent obsessive fantasies stemming from his killing of the count’s three vampire brides. Seward diagnosed Van Helsing with melancholic lycanthropea and treated him for a number of months. Upon his release, and seeking some downtime, Van Helsing volunteered to bear the ashes and personal effects of Quincey P. Morris (the Texan who died fighting Dracula) back to the Morris family ranch in Soreftoot, Texas. He found Quincey’s estranged brother Cole Morris involved in an escalating land war with a neighboring outfit of Norwegian cattle ranchers led by a charismatic man named Sig Skoll. When a few residents and animals started turning up horribly slaughtered, Van Helsing began to suspect a supernatural force was at work, but worried it was the delusions of his previously disordered mind returning.
I’ve got to point out that this is not a work of fiction. It’s a true account culled from some of the same source documents Stoker used in writing Dracula, chief among them, Van Helsing’s personal journal, which Seward translated and compiled along with an array of substantiating documentation from contemporary primary sources including the diaries of Sorefoot Picayune editor and founder Alvin Crooker, and local horse trader Aurelius Firebaugh among others. I’ve hunted down archived copies of some of these accounts, especially the relevant old articles from the Picayune, thanks to the historical society in Bastrop.
I don’t want to take up a lot of space here with how I came into the possession of these documents. Those interested can read my own post about it here. GM: I understand your original working title was “Van Helsing in Texas”, which I thought was awesome, if not a little campy (though that probably made it even more awesome). Why the switch?
EE: Believe it or not, the publisher told me the name Van Helsing wasn’t bankable and was played out. It baffles me that they thought an obscure Arcadian Greek surname was more evocative. The funny thing is, I’ve heard similar things a dozen or more times from agents and publishers I shopped the manuscript around to. ‘We love this, but we wouldn’t know what to do with it.’
I jokingly referred to it as ‘The Van Helsing Curse’ to my wife, but taking into consideration it’s taken me fifteen years to get this book published and the fact that Van Helsing was cursed at least a half a dozen times (perhaps most memorably and potently by a Zulu umthakathi yemithi, who, as part of the curse, told Van Helsing that his life would go ‘unremembered by man’in 1878 or so), I’ve come to believe there’s something to it.
Or maybe it’s something else. I hate to use the word conspiracy because I fully understand the negative connotations. I don’t want to say much about that. I don’t want to come off as a nutcase.
GM: You take a really interesting approach to this book that’s markedly different from your previous works, in that it’s built as a non-fictional document. Did you find that type of formatting difficult?
EE: Well Greg, as I’ve told you, it is real. The ironic part of the whole thing is that this has been the easiest book I’ve ever ‘written’ in terms of format, because Seward had basically assembled the relevant documents into a publishable form and was shopping it around the world in the 30’s. Only his death in the London bombings by the Luftwaffe stopped him from publishing the book himself.
Again, I’d urge your readers to take a look at the account on my blog.
GM: Okay, okay, ha ha, let’s be serious for a second. Don’t you think this whole “It’s real!” thing is going a little far? What if people start taking you seriously?
EE: If people start taking me (and Dr. Van Helsing) seriously, only then have I gone far enough, Greg. And I really wish you’d start taking this seriously.
I don’t know, maybe something of Dr. Seward’s spirit clings to these documents, or maybe it’s Van Helsing’s, but I feel sometimes as if they’re at my shoulder, urging me on, even when I’ve shoved it in the corner of a closet (long before I realized I needed to store the papers more securely) and tried to forget it. Every book I’ve written, every bit of fiction, The Van Helsing Papers always nag at the back of my mind.
I really think I need to get them out there before my own time’s up. Maybe if I don’t, my own ghost will wind up sitting on this old box of papers with the unquiet spirits of Van Helsing and Seward.
GM: But even working by your own logic, you go to great lengths to talk about how producing Dracularuined the lives of Van Helsing and Seward. Why would you, therefore, do the same thing? People are going to think you’ve got a warped sense of reality.
EE: Van Helsing definitely learned his lesson from the controversy surrounding Dracula. That’s why he asked Seward not to publish his papers until a year after his death. I can’t imagine why Seward didn’t decide to leave the papers to someone else with the same stipulation considering he’s mentioned several times throughout the documents in conjunction with events far more fantastic and difficult for the layman to believe than what was put forth by Bram Stoker. Maybe he had given up on his professional clout. He was never very well respected, and after Purfleet closed and his wife was killed in the Battersea Railway crash, I think he was resolved to see the documents published and the hell with what anybody thought. Seward was very devoted to his wife. It was years before he even thought about courting anyone after what happened to Lucy Westenra, and it took a special woman to draw him out again. I think when she was killed so suddenly, it put his mind in a very careless place.
And don’t worry about my sense of reality. If anything, it’s clearer than it ever was.
GM: Just for the sake of argument, let’s say that you are absolutely right. Ed, you and I have talked about this—if this is real, if creatures like Dracula and the wolf-men in Terovolas are real, you are putting your family in actual danger. That’s my biggest concern. Haven’t you thought about what this will do to them?
EE: Oh, I don’t think there’s much danger to my family to be had from anything in Dracula or Terovolas. I think history has dropped a sufficient pallor of dust on the parties involved to protect them from scrutiny. We’re talking about people and beings who have had what? Over a hundred and twenty years to cover their tracks?
But you do bring up an interesting point. If they ever see the light of day, there are individuals and organizations mentioned elsewhere in The Van Helsing Papers (and I’ve talked to you privately about some of these, Greg, without naming actual names, I want to add) that may still be around, and may have a definite problem with their activities being brought to light. Let’s just say I’m taking precautions.
GM: It just smacks of cheap sensationalism to me. You could have easily released this book and not told anyone that it was “a true story”, and you’d probably be hailed as the next bestseller, but you instead “revealed” this whole behind-the-scenes story. Are you that starved for attention that you would put your family in harm’s way for a book?
EE: I hardly expect Terovolas will be a bestseller considering the forces allied against it, and the powers that will probably seek to suppress it. I’m really surprised JournalStone has had the gumption to do it, and I applaud Christopher Payne and Norm Rubenstein for taking a chance on it, though I suspect that they, like you, are choosing to overlook my claims as some kind of artsy eccentricity.
I could have put Terovolasout the same way Stoker did Dracula, as fiction, and done the usual blog posts and book signings, tweets and banal Facebook solicitations, same as I’ve done with my Merkabah Rider series and all my other work. But I’d be doing Van Helsing and Seward a disservice if I didn’t reveal the whole truth. I really wish these papers had fallen into the hands of a Stephen Ambrose or I don’t know, Ken Burns or somebody. But unfortunately for Van Helsing, they came to a guy who writes ghoulie stories. I can’t change that.
And believe me, the kind of attention The Van Helsing Papers could potentially generate, I don’t want. You know this, Greg.
GM: I can’t support you in this, Ed. You’re treading a dangerous line for something as tawdry as sales. You really should be ashamed of yourself. You’re either a liar at best or a plagiarist at worst and I expected more from you. I’m here for you, bro, but I can’t stand by you in this. I’ve got my own family to think about. I’m sorry, man.
EE: I totally understand your position, and I want you to know I’m not angry. I guess technically I must be a plagiarist, slapping my name on the diligent work of a better man (and certainly a more learned man) than I am, but if I’m a liar, it can only be because all I know is a lie. And my research has led me to believe that I don’t think it is.
Also, I know the type of person you are, and I suspect that if you were in my place, knowing what I know, you would be doing the same thing. I hope you’ll still consider publishing this interview, and telling your readers about the book. Yes, everythingabout the book. Don’t worry about me coming off as a whack job or a liar. The only thing that matters is that the book finds its way to the people who will recognize the truth when they read it. If you shake your head at me telling you to do it for Van Helsing, then do it for me.
* * *
There you have it, folks. I suppose all I can do at this point is direct you to Ed's controversial book Terovolas and let you decide for yourself. But, please, read it at your own risk.
When my buddy Ed Erdelac started talking about his new book Terovolas (originally entitled "Van Helsing in Texas", which was awesome!), my ears perked right up. Of course, it’s me: I love all things monster hunter. Ed and I talked and I offered, as I usually do, to have him stop by the blog for an interview. He agreed and I immediately purchased a copy of the e-book at JournalStone Publishing’s website. I dove right in and was at once captivated by the tale of Van Helsing’s tragic adventures following the close of Bram Stoker’s original Dracula novel. This thing is a direct sequel, a really great approach that Ed seemed to get right when so many others had done it wrong. But, the more I read, the more I felt very unsettled by the prose. Much like Stoker’s original, this book is split up into supposed diary entries of the great Monster Hunter himself, as well as newspaper articles and whatnot. They were just so detailed and I marveled at the care Ed had gone to in creating these fictional documents. I’ve always known Ed to be a history buff and he excels at making you feel like you’ve got your very own time-traveling DeLorean, but, in Terovolas, Ed managed to really outdo himself. The things he described in the book, though, were so vivid, that it really stayed with me after I put my Nook down. I wrote him and told him as much and that’s when he let me in on the big secret: He didn’t write it. He, in fact, claims he only compiled it from Van Helsing’s notes—the realVan Helsing.
At first I responded “Rad!” and left it at that, figuring Ed was just being geeky, but the more we talked about it, the more I realized that he was serious. Or, at least, thinks he’s serious. He spelled out the whole account of how he stumbled upon the real Abraham Van Helsing’s papers and began compiling them. I listened intently, at first intrigued, then growing more and more bothered. I hesitantly asked Ed if he intended on telling the reading public what he told me. He said he was considering it, and I told him not to. I still wasn’t convinced he wasn’t just trying to pull off some lame publicity stunt and I thought it was kind of weird.
Then, lo, he posted his entire first-person account on his blog just a few weeks ago.
I wrote him back and told him I didn’t think that was a good idea. I also wasn’t so sure I wanted to interview him anymore to be honest, but Ed’s really been there for me, pulling for me in my career, so as a friend, I decided to treat him the same. So, here’s our interview, for better or worse, pieced together from a number of back-and-forth e-mails. After compiling it, I debated posting it, as it gets pretty intense and, above all, I don’t want you to think ill of Ed Erdelac. I tried to steer the interview towards ambiguous waters, treating the work as fiction, but, well…you’ll see. I guess there’s no such thing as bad publicity, right? So here we go:* * *
Greg Mitchell: Thanks for stopping by, Ed! Your new book Terovolas just came out from JournalStone Publishing! Tell us about it.
Ed Erdelac: Thanks for having me, Greg! Terovolas concerns the period of 1891, directly after the events of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, when Professor Abraham Van Helsing was checked into Dr. John Seward’s Purfleet Asylum suffering from a bout of violent obsessive fantasies stemming from his killing of the count’s three vampire brides. Seward diagnosed Van Helsing with melancholic lycanthropea and treated him for a number of months. Upon his release, and seeking some downtime, Van Helsing volunteered to bear the ashes and personal effects of Quincey P. Morris (the Texan who died fighting Dracula) back to the Morris family ranch in Soreftoot, Texas. He found Quincey’s estranged brother Cole Morris involved in an escalating land war with a neighboring outfit of Norwegian cattle ranchers led by a charismatic man named Sig Skoll. When a few residents and animals started turning up horribly slaughtered, Van Helsing began to suspect a supernatural force was at work, but worried it was the delusions of his previously disordered mind returning.I’ve got to point out that this is not a work of fiction. It’s a true account culled from some of the same source documents Stoker used in writing Dracula, chief among them, Van Helsing’s personal journal, which Seward translated and compiled along with an array of substantiating documentation from contemporary primary sources including the diaries of Sorefoot Picayune editor and founder Alvin Crooker, and local horse trader Aurelius Firebaugh among others. I’ve hunted down archived copies of some of these accounts, especially the relevant old articles from the Picayune, thanks to the historical society in Bastrop.
I don’t want to take up a lot of space here with how I came into the possession of these documents. Those interested can read my own post about it here. GM: I understand your original working title was “Van Helsing in Texas”, which I thought was awesome, if not a little campy (though that probably made it even more awesome). Why the switch?
EE: Believe it or not, the publisher told me the name Van Helsing wasn’t bankable and was played out. It baffles me that they thought an obscure Arcadian Greek surname was more evocative. The funny thing is, I’ve heard similar things a dozen or more times from agents and publishers I shopped the manuscript around to. ‘We love this, but we wouldn’t know what to do with it.’
I jokingly referred to it as ‘The Van Helsing Curse’ to my wife, but taking into consideration it’s taken me fifteen years to get this book published and the fact that Van Helsing was cursed at least a half a dozen times (perhaps most memorably and potently by a Zulu umthakathi yemithi, who, as part of the curse, told Van Helsing that his life would go ‘unremembered by man’in 1878 or so), I’ve come to believe there’s something to it.
Or maybe it’s something else. I hate to use the word conspiracy because I fully understand the negative connotations. I don’t want to say much about that. I don’t want to come off as a nutcase.
GM: You take a really interesting approach to this book that’s markedly different from your previous works, in that it’s built as a non-fictional document. Did you find that type of formatting difficult?
EE: Well Greg, as I’ve told you, it is real. The ironic part of the whole thing is that this has been the easiest book I’ve ever ‘written’ in terms of format, because Seward had basically assembled the relevant documents into a publishable form and was shopping it around the world in the 30’s. Only his death in the London bombings by the Luftwaffe stopped him from publishing the book himself.
Again, I’d urge your readers to take a look at the account on my blog.
GM: Okay, okay, ha ha, let’s be serious for a second. Don’t you think this whole “It’s real!” thing is going a little far? What if people start taking you seriously?
EE: If people start taking me (and Dr. Van Helsing) seriously, only then have I gone far enough, Greg. And I really wish you’d start taking this seriously.
I don’t know, maybe something of Dr. Seward’s spirit clings to these documents, or maybe it’s Van Helsing’s, but I feel sometimes as if they’re at my shoulder, urging me on, even when I’ve shoved it in the corner of a closet (long before I realized I needed to store the papers more securely) and tried to forget it. Every book I’ve written, every bit of fiction, The Van Helsing Papers always nag at the back of my mind.
I really think I need to get them out there before my own time’s up. Maybe if I don’t, my own ghost will wind up sitting on this old box of papers with the unquiet spirits of Van Helsing and Seward.
GM: But even working by your own logic, you go to great lengths to talk about how producing Dracularuined the lives of Van Helsing and Seward. Why would you, therefore, do the same thing? People are going to think you’ve got a warped sense of reality.
EE: Van Helsing definitely learned his lesson from the controversy surrounding Dracula. That’s why he asked Seward not to publish his papers until a year after his death. I can’t imagine why Seward didn’t decide to leave the papers to someone else with the same stipulation considering he’s mentioned several times throughout the documents in conjunction with events far more fantastic and difficult for the layman to believe than what was put forth by Bram Stoker. Maybe he had given up on his professional clout. He was never very well respected, and after Purfleet closed and his wife was killed in the Battersea Railway crash, I think he was resolved to see the documents published and the hell with what anybody thought. Seward was very devoted to his wife. It was years before he even thought about courting anyone after what happened to Lucy Westenra, and it took a special woman to draw him out again. I think when she was killed so suddenly, it put his mind in a very careless place.
And don’t worry about my sense of reality. If anything, it’s clearer than it ever was.
GM: Just for the sake of argument, let’s say that you are absolutely right. Ed, you and I have talked about this—if this is real, if creatures like Dracula and the wolf-men in Terovolas are real, you are putting your family in actual danger. That’s my biggest concern. Haven’t you thought about what this will do to them?
EE: Oh, I don’t think there’s much danger to my family to be had from anything in Dracula or Terovolas. I think history has dropped a sufficient pallor of dust on the parties involved to protect them from scrutiny. We’re talking about people and beings who have had what? Over a hundred and twenty years to cover their tracks?
But you do bring up an interesting point. If they ever see the light of day, there are individuals and organizations mentioned elsewhere in The Van Helsing Papers (and I’ve talked to you privately about some of these, Greg, without naming actual names, I want to add) that may still be around, and may have a definite problem with their activities being brought to light. Let’s just say I’m taking precautions.
GM: It just smacks of cheap sensationalism to me. You could have easily released this book and not told anyone that it was “a true story”, and you’d probably be hailed as the next bestseller, but you instead “revealed” this whole behind-the-scenes story. Are you that starved for attention that you would put your family in harm’s way for a book?
EE: I hardly expect Terovolas will be a bestseller considering the forces allied against it, and the powers that will probably seek to suppress it. I’m really surprised JournalStone has had the gumption to do it, and I applaud Christopher Payne and Norm Rubenstein for taking a chance on it, though I suspect that they, like you, are choosing to overlook my claims as some kind of artsy eccentricity.
I could have put Terovolasout the same way Stoker did Dracula, as fiction, and done the usual blog posts and book signings, tweets and banal Facebook solicitations, same as I’ve done with my Merkabah Rider series and all my other work. But I’d be doing Van Helsing and Seward a disservice if I didn’t reveal the whole truth. I really wish these papers had fallen into the hands of a Stephen Ambrose or I don’t know, Ken Burns or somebody. But unfortunately for Van Helsing, they came to a guy who writes ghoulie stories. I can’t change that.
And believe me, the kind of attention The Van Helsing Papers could potentially generate, I don’t want. You know this, Greg.
GM: I can’t support you in this, Ed. You’re treading a dangerous line for something as tawdry as sales. You really should be ashamed of yourself. You’re either a liar at best or a plagiarist at worst and I expected more from you. I’m here for you, bro, but I can’t stand by you in this. I’ve got my own family to think about. I’m sorry, man.
EE: I totally understand your position, and I want you to know I’m not angry. I guess technically I must be a plagiarist, slapping my name on the diligent work of a better man (and certainly a more learned man) than I am, but if I’m a liar, it can only be because all I know is a lie. And my research has led me to believe that I don’t think it is.
Also, I know the type of person you are, and I suspect that if you were in my place, knowing what I know, you would be doing the same thing. I hope you’ll still consider publishing this interview, and telling your readers about the book. Yes, everythingabout the book. Don’t worry about me coming off as a whack job or a liar. The only thing that matters is that the book finds its way to the people who will recognize the truth when they read it. If you shake your head at me telling you to do it for Van Helsing, then do it for me.
* * *
There you have it, folks. I suppose all I can do at this point is direct you to Ed's controversial book Terovolas and let you decide for yourself. But, please, read it at your own risk.
Published on November 12, 2012 04:00
October 31, 2012
Major Announcement--"Dark Hour" Cover and First Details!
This year, October has been an unusually busy month for me, between my first movie being released to DVD and a plethora of short stories I've written over the last couple years finally seeing print. But today--on Halloween--we have saved the best for last.
Here is the cover for the third and final installment in The Coming Evil Trilogy-- Dark Hour !
Not only do we have the cover for you today, but I come with a major announcement: The Coming Evil is moving to a new home for its last act. None other than my pal Grace Bridges at Splashdown Darkwater will be publishing Dark Hour in 2013. Grace and I had so much fun working together when Splashdown published Rift Jump , and I'm looking forward to teaming up with her, once again, on this most important book. Dark Hour is my favorite book of The Coming Evil Trilogy. Absolutely everything I have written--really in my entire career--has been building up to this book. If you thought you knew The Coming Evil, you haven't seen anything yet. I have poured my heart and soul into every page of Dark Hour and for about 15 years now, I've been dying to finally reveal it to you all. The first two books in the Trilogy were only a prelude--this book is for all the marbles. To me, The Coming Evil was never three individual books, but one long epic told in three parts. Now, the story will be told in full.
While the first two books were released in February over the past couple years, I can't guarantee another February release for Dark Hour. With the move to Splashdown, I expect a small delay. But don't worry, it's coming and it's going to be epic.
So two big bombshells this morning--but I have one final announcement to make on this, All Hallow's Eve. In the weeks leading up to Dark Hour's release, I'll be releasing a brand new Coming Evil novella--for e-readers only--that will serve as an "inbetweenquel" bridging the gap between Enemies of the Cross and Dark Hour! That's all I'm willing to say on that front, right now, but needless to say, we're wrapping up this Trilogy with a bang.
Now is the perfect time to get caught up on the other two books in the Trilogy! Together, the three form one complete story. The Strange Man and Enemies of the Cross are both available in stores, as well as on Amazon and Barnes & Noble--in both print, Kindle, and Nook versions. Don't delay! The End is Near!
Enough talk. Ready for the details on Dark Hour? Read on and, in case you missed it, check out this interview I did yesterday over at New Author's Fellowship where I talk about my love for and approach to horror and, most specifically, "Christian Horror"! Happy Halloween everyone!
__________
st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } THE END IS HERE
Greensboro has fallen.
Swayed by the demonic Strange Man, the townspeople of Greensboro have sacrificed their freedom for prosperity. Monsters lurk in every shadow and the few who oppose the new regime have been chased out of town, forced to wage their war in hiding. For ex-reverend Jeff Weldon and those under his care, it is a losing battle, but the tide begins to turn with the return of his brother, Dras. Dras arrives at his hometown to find it has descended into darkness—but the worst is yet to come. The Strange Man’s final plan is falling into place and the Dark Hour is close at hand. Dras, Jeff, and the last of Greensboro’s protectors work frantically to unlock the Strange Man’s secrets and uncover the key to stopping the Dark Hour before all is lost. But when Dras discovers the fate of his best friend—Rosalyn Myers—he will realize that he has more to lose in this battle than he ever imagined.
Dark Hour is the explosive final act in Greg Mitchell’s The Coming Evil Trilogy. All bets are off as the remnant of light clash with the armies of darkness. The final fates of Jeff, Isabella, Dras, and Rosalyn, along with all of Greensboro, will be decided in a desperate last stand.
Here is the cover for the third and final installment in The Coming Evil Trilogy-- Dark Hour !
Not only do we have the cover for you today, but I come with a major announcement: The Coming Evil is moving to a new home for its last act. None other than my pal Grace Bridges at Splashdown Darkwater will be publishing Dark Hour in 2013. Grace and I had so much fun working together when Splashdown published Rift Jump , and I'm looking forward to teaming up with her, once again, on this most important book. Dark Hour is my favorite book of The Coming Evil Trilogy. Absolutely everything I have written--really in my entire career--has been building up to this book. If you thought you knew The Coming Evil, you haven't seen anything yet. I have poured my heart and soul into every page of Dark Hour and for about 15 years now, I've been dying to finally reveal it to you all. The first two books in the Trilogy were only a prelude--this book is for all the marbles. To me, The Coming Evil was never three individual books, but one long epic told in three parts. Now, the story will be told in full.
While the first two books were released in February over the past couple years, I can't guarantee another February release for Dark Hour. With the move to Splashdown, I expect a small delay. But don't worry, it's coming and it's going to be epic.
So two big bombshells this morning--but I have one final announcement to make on this, All Hallow's Eve. In the weeks leading up to Dark Hour's release, I'll be releasing a brand new Coming Evil novella--for e-readers only--that will serve as an "inbetweenquel" bridging the gap between Enemies of the Cross and Dark Hour! That's all I'm willing to say on that front, right now, but needless to say, we're wrapping up this Trilogy with a bang.
Now is the perfect time to get caught up on the other two books in the Trilogy! Together, the three form one complete story. The Strange Man and Enemies of the Cross are both available in stores, as well as on Amazon and Barnes & Noble--in both print, Kindle, and Nook versions. Don't delay! The End is Near!
Enough talk. Ready for the details on Dark Hour? Read on and, in case you missed it, check out this interview I did yesterday over at New Author's Fellowship where I talk about my love for and approach to horror and, most specifically, "Christian Horror"! Happy Halloween everyone!
__________
st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } THE END IS HERE
Greensboro has fallen.
Swayed by the demonic Strange Man, the townspeople of Greensboro have sacrificed their freedom for prosperity. Monsters lurk in every shadow and the few who oppose the new regime have been chased out of town, forced to wage their war in hiding. For ex-reverend Jeff Weldon and those under his care, it is a losing battle, but the tide begins to turn with the return of his brother, Dras. Dras arrives at his hometown to find it has descended into darkness—but the worst is yet to come. The Strange Man’s final plan is falling into place and the Dark Hour is close at hand. Dras, Jeff, and the last of Greensboro’s protectors work frantically to unlock the Strange Man’s secrets and uncover the key to stopping the Dark Hour before all is lost. But when Dras discovers the fate of his best friend—Rosalyn Myers—he will realize that he has more to lose in this battle than he ever imagined.
Dark Hour is the explosive final act in Greg Mitchell’s The Coming Evil Trilogy. All bets are off as the remnant of light clash with the armies of darkness. The final fates of Jeff, Isabella, Dras, and Rosalyn, along with all of Greensboro, will be decided in a desperate last stand.
Published on October 31, 2012 04:00


