Horror Aficionados discussion
Group Reads: Guest Author Invite
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July 2023 Group Read with Guest Author, John Everson





There WILL be... but not until later this fall, I'm afraid!

There WILL be... but not until later this fall, I'm afraid!"
Thanks for the response. That's great news! I definitely want to listen to your book.


P.S. to everybody . . . . If you like John's writing, you need to check out Five Deaths for Seven Songbirds - - a wild homage to giallo films.


Dawn - full disclosure - No. I've seen some seedy places, and once a very long time ago I wandered into a Bondage-A-Go-Go night at The Cat Club in San Francisco, but that's as close as I've come. I talked to some people who had gone to clubs back when I was writing NightWhere... and Anne Rice's Exit to Eden and Beauty books had some influence. But... it's a lot of imagination!



It's early, but I can tell right away that NIGHTWHERE is not for the squeamish.




Monika - So cool to see someone on here who read the Polish edition!!! Thanks!
Elizabeth - yelling at Mark is absolutely right, correct, justified! ;-)
Michael - no, definitely not for the squeamish!!!

Just finished reading their first visit to NightWhere.
Steamy! I needed to wipe the fog off the Kindle app on my iPad.

John, did you find this steamy/sexy? Curious if the sex or the horror came up first in your writing!

For me, I think sex and horror are intertwined because sex is where you really let down all protections -- bare yourself in more ways than one! And so where better for something horrific to strike? When the guard is completely down and you've given yourself over to... whoever/whatever. But then you discover it's not what it seemed at first.
Sex and the erotic are lures to trap you... and that's when the horror begins....
John, NightWhere has been described as Hellraiser meets 50 Shades of Gray. Can you give us a little backstory on how this all came about?

I devoured all of the books, not just the first. I was thoroughly entertained, while also perfectly grossed out and unsettled during many parts, but I couldn't put it down. The imagery was vivid and visceral (the Field of Flesh was creepy beyond belief), and the worldbuilding was top-notch. It felt like both a cautionary tale but also a tale of the darkest temptations, which makes the story stick around to haunt the reader even longer. I definitely see how Anne Rice's Beauty series was an influence, as I felt many of the same emotions after reading those stories years ago.
The characters were so varied, as well, with some I hated (in the best way!) and some I loved (Sinn-D, ftw!). By the end of the trilogy, I had a new crop of favorite characters which I did not expect when I first started the series. I love when an author can make that happen, and I must tell you well done.
Were there any characters you especially enjoyed writing? And do you have any plans of releasing any more short stories or novels in the NightWhere universe?

Omg I was too! But I guess it was good he couldn't let it go, otherwise we would not have the fabulous third book to enjoy :)

Well, I had first thought of the story idea in the early 2000s, probably somewhat inspired by both Anne Rice's Exit to Eden and Gerard Houarner's Painfreak, along with the influence of Clive Barker's Books of Blood: Volume One and probably some of the twisted stories of Edward Lee and Lucy Taylor. Rice's Eden was about a secret BDSM club that is of this world... while Houarner's Painfreak was an otherworldly kind of sexual torture realm. These stories and authors all were hugely influential on me when I first started writing -- I loved how all of them really pushed the boundaries of sex and horror. But when I first scribbled down the idea for NightWhere, I didn't really believe I was skilled enough as a writer to pull it off. So... the rough plot of NightWhere sat in my idea notebook for years. The thing was, I never forgot about it. The idea called to me.
Finally, after I published five novels with them, Leisure Books imploded and I was without a publisher, so I decided to risk it and give it a go. In 2011, I wrote NightWhere.
Ironically, just before NightWhere came out on Samhain Publishing, the Fifty Shades of Grey novel got picked up by a major publisher after making waves as an indie release, and suddenly everyone was talking about bondage. NightWhere was hardly the quiet, sexy, playful bondage of E.L. James' book, however. It was more like spending a night making out with the Cenobites.
So I have to thank the reader who made that 50 Shades meets Hellraiser quote... it was kind of perfect -- especially in the context of 2012, when 50 Shades was all the rage.

Thanks Jennifer! I don't have any plan at the moment to do more in the world of NightWhere... but I would definitely not rule it out. I think The Night Mother closes any open doors that NightWhere left open but... I could still see a couple of threads to explore further.
As far as characters... Sin-D was a kick to write. I love her. She's every teenage boy's fantasy kicked up 10 notches. If any of those boys got near her, they'd wilt with fear, because she's not just T&A, she's a total smart ass and she would easily outwit as well as outsex them. And you know that she has seen things and knows secrets that would utterly knock you flat. There's a reason she's in all three NightWhere stories (I think the only character in all three?)
Likewise, I really loved Damia - he/she is such a wild card. One hour a man, the next a woman... which Damia will you be getting? Either way, his/her claws are sharper than any tiger's. Damia offers the ultimate darkly seductive experience because he/she can be anything. Do anything. But would you live to tell about it if you engaged? Damia is the embodiment of the lure and danger of the erotic unknown.
There are certainly other characters I loved writing, including the leads, but those two side characters are probably the most "fun" to write. I also really fell in love with Cassie, a new dominatrix character in The Night Mother... but... that's another story :-)


I started my journey into Night Where again ! And It feels like I’m reading it again for the first time



Rosalie - I think my personal sentiment that hopeless romantics always get burned... may be bleeding through there a little!


Soooo many times in the media both topics are wildly misrepresented (looking at you, crime tv shows) so I was hoping this book would be above that. And it is! It has a good mix of the fantasy aspect, while also having that undercurrent of something sinister happening.
The 80s music is also spot on! Unfortunately, the divide in couples' reactions is also spot on, but appreciated. It adds to the realism.
Ironically, in real life, lifestyle and fetish don't really overlap and are two very separate communities. It's nice to read about them together.


So when Lindsay says John is getting some of those details right, that's a great testimonial. John, I think you nailed it!


Question for you... as you leave NightWhere, are you curious to learn more about Selena?


John, out of all the writers I’ve interviewed, you have one of the more interesting places that you utilize to write your books. Can you share that with our readers and how this came about?

Not that interesting, I'm afraid!
I do like to write in bars though. Usually Irish bars. It's perfect really - you find a nice private dark wood booth/cubbyhole or a stool at the edge of the bar away from traffic, hole up for 3-4 hours, maybe order some finger food (nachos are perfect) and you write. Someone periodically brings you a pint of beer and otherwise.... you're not bothered. You're surrounded by people but at the same time, completely alone.
The key is, it has to be a bar with comfortable enough seats to hang for a few hours, has to have a good music selection that is loud enough to hear (to drown out side conversations -- you don't want to start hearing those when you write, or you'll focus on that) and has to have a good IPA that I like. There's an Irish bar in Naperville, IL called Quiqley's that I love to work at, and they have a great patio in the summertime too that's perfect to sit out on and work right beneath the speakers. I've closed the place down many times.
I can't afford to write "out" all the time though - Before COVID (ie, before I went to full-time telecommuting), I used to do a "writing night" once a week where instead of going home from work, I'd stop at the pub and focus on the novel at hand from 7-11 p.m. And then on the weekends I write at home.
At home, there are just a lot more distractions between family, pets and "things that need doing" that you don't get at the Irish pub. A few years ago, when our basement flooded, I built my own oak bar with a proper bar rail in my basement, so, in the winter I can work down there "at the bar" and simulate being at an Irish pub... and in the summer, I have a glass patio bar that I work at -- with outdoor speakers so I control the playlist! Watching the hummingbirds and cardinals can be a bit of a distraction there, however pleasant!
All of the bar writing started, I think, because I used to travel a lot for work. I really hated sitting in hotel rooms at night, so I'd find a good bar somewhere, hole up, and work for a few hours on my laptop. Eventually... I started doing that once a week at home when I wasn't traveling because I realized it was a really productive habit for me. A lot of my novels owe many chapters and inspirations from bars!!!
Books mentioned in this topic
Covenant (other topics)Field of Flesh: A NightWhere Novelette (other topics)
NightWhere (other topics)
The Night Mother (other topics)
The 13th (other topics)
More...
https://www.amazon.com/NightWhere-Joh...