Angry Johnny

boc2


Book of Cthulhu II


In the summer of 2011 I stayed at my brother’s house in the mountains of Montana, a few miles as the crow flies southwest from the town of Lincoln. I spent those months in sequestration. That’s where I wrote “More Dark” and the majority of The Croning. It’s also where I put together a novella about a 1920s mob enforcer named John Cope. Hand of Glory was a kind of therapy. I’d never tried anything quite like it, but had wanted to for a long time. I needed to write a tale about the Roaring 20s, flappers, gansters, Tommy guns, sons versus fathers, and sons versus the ghosts of their fathers, and the occult fucking it all up. It emerged in a white hot blaze over the course of three weeks. As is often the case in matters of serendipity, I embarked upon the journey when I damned well should’ve been doing something else.


I didn’t sleep much that summer; my various deadlines were a real weight upon my shoulders, and during the creation of Cope’s universe, three or four hours a night was a luxury. Ross Lockhart did a hell of a job making the novella presentable, and he wound up soliciting it for The Book of Cthulhu II. A few days ago, it was nominated for one of the major awards in our genre, and considering Johnny Cope’s provenance, it’s an unlikely and amazing outcome.


Here’s a little something I put together at the time in celebration of completing Hand of Glory.


Meet Johnny Cope, enforcer for the Arden family of c. 1920s Olympia, WA.


This is Johnny at work:


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This is Johnny’s Chicago Typewriter:


When Johnny runs low on ammo he reaches for this little honey:



Johnny took piano lessons as a boy:


This is Johnny’s girl:



This is what Johnny drinks:


This is what Johnny smokes:



This is what Johnny Drives:



This is where Johnny lives:



Johnny is going to pay his respects to the boss of Ransom Hollow. Good luck, Johnny.



 



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Published on August 20, 2013 06:49
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