Category Archives: Fiction

Inspiration at Dusk: Interview with Simon Dewar

Welcome back! Today, I’m pleased to feature writer and editor Simon Dewar. Simon is the founder of the Suspended in Dusk anthology series, as well as an accomplished author in his own right.

Recently, Simon and I discussed how he got his start as a writer as well as how he views the journey of an editor’s process.

Simon DewarA couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer?

A few years ago I saw someone on Twitter mention a submission call to an anthology they edit. The anthology was Bloody Parchment, the literary anthology for South African Horrorfest. I sent in a story and was one of those selected for publication. It was a story called “The Kettle” and it was about the horrors of routine, post-natal sleep deprivation and caffeine addiction.  Kinda cool to sell a story to an imprint of Random House on my first go. I didn’t quite think I was some sort of prodigy, but perhaps I thought I wasn’t too bad. I was woefully unprepared for the rejections to come. I’m a little more sanguine about things now.

You are the editor of the acclaimed Suspended in Dusk series. How did you become involved with this project, and what was the initial inspiration?

Originally this idea came about as a project to be co-edited with Nerine Dorman. It was to be a non-themed anthology to be published by Dark Continents Press. We came up with the name because Nerine Dorman is a big Type-O Negative fan and one of their songs is called “Suspended in Dusk.”  For whatever reason, Dark Continents couldn’t run with the project any more (they later closed shop), and while I was collecting stories and finding a new publisher the stories that came through seemed to gel really well with the title. They were all about people stuck between worlds, between the light and the dark, or in times of change. Eventually the book found a home with Books of the Dead Press.

In your experience, what has been the most challenging part of being an editor, and is there a particular aspect that is the most rewarding?

For me, the most challenging part is the administrative aspects… all the emailing of authors, liaising with the publisher, etc.  The actual editing and proofreading stuff is pretty easy and stress-free by comparison.  It was especially easy this time around for Suspended in Dusk 2, as I had an enlarged budget and so had stories come through from some professional writers. There were stories I was afraid to ‘dot an i’ or ‘cross a T’ on, they were near-on perfect when they came through.

Suspended in DuskI don’t want to sound too blase about it, but part of me feels any idiot could sit there and accept submissions of good stories from professional or semi-professional writers and come out with a relatively decent book at the end of it. Certainly, an amount of success and quality in an anthology, comes down to a editor’s taste as to what kind of stories they choose, by whom and how they fit with theme.  One thing I did, with both Suspended in Dusk and its sequel, is select a number of stories by newer, promising writers and work to try and develop those stories and help those writers develop their own skills.  For me personally, these stories were the most work because they required a greater amount of editing, but they were also the most rewarding. I’m not about changing a writer’s voice or rewriting their story for them, but because of the collaborative relationship I build with the writer, I am able to work out what they want to say, what themes they want to address and what feelings they want the reader to feel. Through the editing process, I strive to help them say those things and present their story to the reader in the most effective manner. There’s nothing better than stepping back from a story after several passes of editing and both the writer and the editor thinking, “Wow, this story really shines now.” Or really packs a punch. Or really churns the stomach. Or really severs your heart strings. You get me. It’s also super validating and gratifying for me as an editor when writers want to work with me again because they see the value I help them bring to their work.

In addition to your work as an editor, you are also an author of numerous short stories. What is your personal approach to writing short fiction? Is there an average length of time or number of drafts it takes you to complete a story, and how much outlining do you do in advance?

I go for long stretches without thinking about writing at all to be honest. I also go for long stretches without writing at all. Then, one day—BOOM!!!—a bunch of shit goes down. I might hear the same song on the radio twice in the same day. That’s a motherfuckin’ sign, man.  Maybe then, in my daydreams, I remember something from my childhood… some bully, some school friend, some scene, some sight or smell, some girl. And just maybe, the night before I was watching a horror movie or reading a horror book involving cannibals.  All of a sudden—I’ve got a story that features Mariah Carey, it’s set in a high school much like that of my hometown, two of the main characters are based off a teen friend and our year 9 science teacher, and somewhere along the line it features some rather hungry people. For me the ideas process is a confluence of random things that just come together and scream “Write me, bitch!” and then I must write.

As far as actual writing process goes: …at heart, I’m a plotter (although I don’t believe in being too rigid about it). Once I’ve got the idea down, I tend to quickly plot out what I feel are the required scenes for a story. Once I’ve worked out what those scenes are, I separate them with Scene breaks and then flesh them out with dot points.  Once I’ve fleshed each scene out as a series of dot points, I return to the start and write the actual story over the top of those dot points. Where the story changes, I relax and let it change. Sometimes I realise things are out of sequence and I move whole scenes around to better rationalise the timeline. Sometimes, I think of a better idea halfway through and then scrap the remaining dot points and just pants the rest.

As a writer, are there any particular themes to which you find yourself returning frequently?

I like, or at least, gravitate to writing about kids or teens. Maybe I do it because childhood and teenagehood are great times in our life for the creating/generating/finding of stories. Maybe it’s because kids are people too and our world is full of them.  I also write a lot of stories about kids who aren’t necessarily good or innocent people. Lots of the kids I write about  do bad things, often times by accident or because they feel they have no choice, or they’ve been conditioned to act that way. Sometimes they do them because kids can be bad people too.  Perhaps, that’s why Suspended in Dusk was my anthology theme. The world of a teenager is a world between worlds, between childhood and adulthood, a time of great change and uncertainty,  a time of growing strength but still vulnerability.  I do suspect that this makes it harder to sell some of my fiction though , perhaps because it’s confronting  and doesn’t fit squarely into adult fiction (child/teen protagonist) or YA fiction (strong themes etc).

Outside of children, I rarely write about good people. There’s a school of thought that people, generally speaking, are innately good or altruistic. I don’t know if I believe this is true. Maybe because I know for me it’s a constant internal battle. There is so much evil in the world…war/racism/sexism/violence/theft/rape/greed/etc… that I have genuine doubts about it.

What upcoming projects are you working on?

Suspended in Dusk 2 is with Books of the Dead Press in their release queue. It should be out in a couple of months.

I’ve found a co-consipirator for an anthology project that I”m hoping to kick off next year. We’ve found most of the writers and will be looking at pitching it soon to publishers.  That’ll probably be my last anthology for a while though as I’d like to focus on my own writing for a while.

I’m also working on putting together my first collection of short stories. I’ve got about 6 of 10 or 12 stories already written. Slowly coming up with the remainder 🙂

Big thanks to Simon Dewar for being part of this week’s author interview series. Find him online at his author site as well as on Amazon and Twitter.

Happy reading!

Homesick for the Sea: The Story Behind “All the Mermaid Wives”

Welcome back, and Happy Friday! It’s been awhile since I’ve blogged about my fiction, and fortunately, today I get to talk about a brand new story! I am so thrilled and honored to announce that last week, my dark fantasy tale, “All the Mermaid Wives,” made its debut on 87 Bedford!

This is an exciting and auspicious occasion all around. For one, it’s my first original work of fiction to be published since May. I was very fortunate over the summer to have a number of stories put back into publication as reprints, but there’s always a special joy in seeing a story debut in the world. This story is also at once covering new ground and revisiting an old love: it’s my very first mermaid-themed story as well as a return to fairy tales, something I deeply enjoy as both a reader and a writer.

Figures of mythology and folklore have always fascinated me, and I love when I discover a great retelling of an old classic. Consequently, the last few years have been wonderful as a reader of short fiction since many fantastic variations on mythology, and mermaids in particular, have been unleashed in the speculative fiction world.  (One personal favorite of mine is Sunny Moraine’s “So Sharp That Blood Must Flow,” an ultra dark reworking of The Little Mermaid.) That being said, I never imagined that I would add my voice to mermaid literature. If it’s not broken, why fix it? But that’s the thing about inspiration–it can lead you down the unlikeliest roads.

Despite being an only child, something I love to explore in my fiction is the dynamic between sisters. Such relationships have been at the forefront in several of my previous stories, including “A Certain Kind of Spark” (Mantid Magazine), “Through Earth and Sky” (Bracken Magazine), as well as the forthcoming “Reasons I Hate My Big Sister” (Nightscript). In the case of “All the Mermaid Wives,” the story’s genesis was most certainly in the bond between mermaid sisters, Galene and Eleniora. They are the hearts of “All the Mermaid Wives,” and their relationship is what inspired me and spurred me on to tell this particular tale.

I am so pleased to have sold “All the Mermaid Wives” to 87 Bedford. It’s always a joy to work with newer publications. Two of the very best experiences I’ve had thus far in my writing career were being featured in the debut issues of Bracken and Mantid Magazine. Judging from the already fantastic stories featured in 87 Bedford as well as the professionalism of the editor, Lichen Han, I predict a long and illustrious life for 87 Bedford. Although the publication is currently closed to regular submissions, keep an eye out for the next open submission period, and I will be sure to include it on an upcoming Submission Roundup as well! A highly recommended speculative fiction site!

So if all this talk of the ocean has made you yearn for salt, waves, and barnacles, head on over to 87 Bedford for “All the Mermaid Wives.” It’s a strange and lonely tale of mermaids & matrimony, homesickness & heartache, and hopefully, it will inspire you to pen a fairy tale of your own!

Happy reading!

Sinister Centipede: Interview with John Claude Smith

Welcome back to another author interview! This week, I’m pleased to feature John Claude Smith. John Claude is the author of the Bram Stoker Award-nominated novel, Riding the Centipede, as well as the scribe of numerous short stories and the collection, The Wrath of Concrete and Steel from Dynatox Ministries.

Recently, John Claude and I discussed his debut novel as well as his writing plans for the future.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

John Claude SmithIt’s not a choice as I’ve always written—don’t all writers say that?—but the point when I realized I should do something serious with writing was in my late twenties.  It was how I spent my free time, and even moments while at work, scribbling notes, poems, tales, etc.  I started submitting short stories—really bad ones, for the most part, but one must start somewhere—to magazines soon thereafter.

As for favorite authors, there are always too many to name, and so many current writers inspire me with every new tale they publish.  We’re really in a prime era for Weird fiction, which is what I enjoy most, but dark, speculative fiction, in general.  So, a few from now: Damien Angelica Walters, Scott Nicolay, Laird Barron, S.P. Miskowski, Christopher Slatsky…and a few from before, though some still write wonderful tales: J.G. Ballard, Clive Barker, Kathe Koja, Lucy Taylor, Charlee Jacob, Joe R. Lansdale, Thomas Ligotti…

Congratulations on all your success with your debut novel, Riding the Centipede! What initially inspired you to write a dark Hollywood noir, and what was the most surprising part of becoming a first-time novelist?

Thank you!  Well, to be honest, as with many writers, the first published novel is not the first novel written. I had written two novels and one other in need of only the finale prior to writing RtC.  The seed for RtC was a short idea I’d written about two guys on a trek to where William S. Burroughs was buried, because they’d heard about the ‘ultimate trip’ one could take by injecting Burroughs’ dead body with some of their blood, then taking the mixture after it incubates, and injecting it into themselves. Hence, the ultimate trip.  I took this idea and fleshed it out.  That’s when Private Investigator, Terrance Blake, came into the picture.  At this point, I let it roll however it wanted to take shape.  That’s when the runaway drug addict, Marlon Teagarden, joined the fray.  The Hollywood background just kind of happened—I don’t ask questions when the Muse is showing me the path.  And then, in the devious ways the Muse works, she introduced me to the nuclear menace, Rudolf Chernobyl…

The most surprising aspect of getting RtC out comes down to two things: from a writing point of view, the fact that I undertook a novel with three perspectives was rather daunting but too much fun. I’d never attempted anything like this.  I feel like I pulled it off, kept everything balanced, fairly well.  From a professional point of view, the great responses to the novel were not exactly a surprise, so much as the overall positive nature of them, including its having been a finalist in the Bram Stoker Superior Achievement in a First Novel category, something I will always cherish. I figured, perhaps I had done something right.

Over the last few years, you’ve written a number of short stories, which have gone on to be published in venues such as Nightscript and The Beauty of Death. How is your process the same or different when you are writing long versus short fiction?

Riding the CentipedeThe difference used to be, short tales were driven by an image or a singular intent, while longer pieces allowed more room to add layers, depth to character, etc.  At this point in my so-called writing career, I sense a desire to write longer pieces most of the time, so every short piece, unless it’s meant to fit into a specific word count, might have more meat added to the bones and become something more than I initially intended.  (When I say meat, I do not mean flab. Never flab. Muscular and lean is what I think of when I read most of my tales, especially the longer ones, which may sound contradictory, but is not…if you read them.)  But, because I enjoy what can be said with more words, the need to keep shorter tales within a certain word count has forced me to sharpen what I say, how I say things, so even the shorter tales might become something more, something stronger.  I sense having written a good number of longer pieces—I love novelettes—this has improved how I go about writing short stories.  The process used to feel much different, but now, perhaps not as much.  I write.  Whatever is necessary for the tale is how I go about writing it, no matter the length.

Your collection, The Wrath of Concrete and Steel, is available now from Dynatox Ministries. What can we expect from this title (gorgeous cover, by the way!)?  

When Jordan Krall, the head of Dynatox Ministries/Dunhams Manor Press, showed me the cover, my response was immediate: I loved it!  As for the “collection,” it’s less a collection and more a three-pack of weird tales written with an urban backdrop.  The tales are in a way perhaps subtler than some of my work, but I say this then realize there’s a scene here and there that might make the reader step back, so who knows? I do know the first tale, “The Land Lord,” a 15.6k novelette, and the last tale, “The Wounded Table,” a 4.9k short story, are amongst what I consider to be my very best writing…so far.

An aside: I recently, with the impending release of Wrath, have thought of my books in music terms, ahem.  I’ve got two full-length albums (my collections, The Dark is Light Enough for Me, and Autumn in the Abyss), a full-length concept album (Riding the Centipede), three limited edition singles (my single-tale chapbooks, Dandelions, Vox Terrae, and The Anti-Everything) and now, my first E.P.!

As a horror writer, what do you hope to see in the future for the genre?

This is actually a hard question, because what I want from any writing is simply better writing—writing that sings—and tales that capture the imagination.  Period.  Stories that connect on a human level, then take that connection and really shake things up, inspiring awe or dread or any number of responses.

As for specifically horror, perhaps growth away from the tropes, not that there’s not a place for them, but expanding the vision of what we do seems a more relevant move.  Diversity of voices and a broader scope of ideas really inspire my own writing as well.

What upcoming projects are you working on?

There’s so much in the mix.  I’m presently writing two novellas/short novels, one of which should be completed by, say, the end of August.  It actually deals with one of those aforementioned tropes, and spins it on its head.  I also have three more tales to write to complete my longest collection of short stories.  Two if not all three of the tales promise to have some meat on them, being novelettes if not a novella for one of them.  A couple short stories for anthology requests fills out the rest of this year, though at all times there’s the possibility of a new tale here and there…

Big thanks to John Claude Smith for being part of this week’s author interview series. Find him online at Facebook and Twitter as well as his blog, The Wilderness Within.

Happy reading!

Lady Death: Interview with Jamie Wargo

This week, I’m excited to feature author Jamie Wargo. Jamie is the scribe of numerous short stories as well as a first reader as part of Sanitarium Magazine’s Faculty.

Jamie and I recently discussed her inspiration as an author as well as what writing plans are in store for her burgeoning career.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

Jamie WargoI think I’ve always wanted to write, but it wasn’t until the last few years that I actually started writing. I remember my second grade teacher handing out blank books and instructing the class to write a short story, my classmates grumbled but I couldn’t wait to get started.
As far as my favorite authors, I would have to say Stephen King has always been at the top of my list, as well as Anne Rice, HP Lovecraft, HG Wells, Poe, and way too many short fiction authors, yourself included, to list. By the way, “All the Hippies Are Dying” is great!

You’re a slush pile reader at Sanitarium Magazine. When you’re reading a story, are there certain things you’re looking for that help you determine whether you will say yes or no, or is it more of a feeling that a story inspires in you?

I guess it would be the feeling that a story inspires in me. When I’m reviewing a submission, I look for that “wow” factor. If it make me think the rest of the team really needs to see it, it’s definitely getting sent over for further review. It’s a team effort at Sanitarium but the final decision comes down to our Editor in Chief, Barry Skelhorn.

You’re currently based in my beloved home state of Ohio. Do any local landmarks or even the general Rust Belt aesthetic of the area ever creep its way into your work?

SanitariumDefinitely! A couple of the stories I’ve written are based on a friend’s property in Noble County, it’s in southeastern Ohio so it’s more rural than Rust Belt. I actually wrote “Residual Haunting” while on a camping trip there.The story is fictional but the house is real, and it sits on the property where we camp. I looked at the old house one night and thought, “there is a creepy ghost story in there somewhere.” I spent the next day writing on a cabin porch, thirty feet away from the actual house.

I also have a story I’m finishing up called “Coyote Ridge.” It’s another one based on that property. We found a coyote den not far from the camp site and my writer brain went “what if they aren’t normal coyotes?”

If forced to choose, which is your favorite part of the writing process: developing characters, crafting dialogue, or creating atmosphere or setting?

I would say I like to create setting. In “Residual Haunting,” the setting was a real house but I added some fictional elements and changed the layout to make it work for the atmosphere I needed. In another project, I played with the landscape, adding a dry creek bed that becomes a hazard for a character, and a forest line the characters need to get to, but it’s too far away. Throw in a cloudy night and an explosion, and you end up with a very intense scene.

What upcoming projects can we expect from you?

I am currently working on a couple of novellas, but I think they want to be novels so I am just along for the ride at this point. I hope to have them finished before the end of the year. I have a few short stories I’m getting ready to send out and with a little luck something will be published soon.

Where would you like to see your writing career in five years?

I would like to be writing full time, from my own lake house.. A girl can dream, can’t she? In case that doesn’t happen, I would be happy to see my work on a bookshelf, even if only a shelf in my office.

Big thanks to Jamie Wargo for being this week’s featured author. Find her online at Facebook and Twitter!

Happy reading!

Poetic Perfection: Interview with Wale Owoade

Welcome back! For this week’s interview, I’m thrilled to spotlight poet Wale Owoade. Wale is the widely published author of numerous poems as well as an interviewer at his site, The Strong Letters.

Recently, Wale and I discussed his genesis and his inspiration as a writer, his work as an interviewer, and his plans for the future.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

Wale OwoadeI wrote my first poem in 2010, that was when I was working as a school librarian. I started writing seriously in 2011 when I left the library and moved to Ilorin, North Central Nigeria. I was in love with literature and at that time I was obsessed with the realization that I could ‘create’ my own literature and I kept creating and creating. Today, I am close to completing my undergraduate study of History and International Studies, I think of myself as more of an artist than a writer because I am more interested in writing than being a writer. I write because I love writing and I become sad if I don’t write for a long time. My favourite authors includes Uche Nduka, Ocean Vuong, Sylvia Plath, Pablo Neruda, Tarfia Faizulah, Saeed Jones, Safia Elhillo, Warsan Shire, Phillip B Williams, Meghan Privitello, Fatimah Asghar, Aziza Barnes, Niyi Osundare, Nick Narbutas, Laura M Kaminski, Lauren Camp, Mary McCarthy, Saddiq Dzukogi, David Ishaya Osu, Linda Ashok, Ladan Osman, Gbenga Adesina, Clifton Gachagua, [and] Jumoke Verissimo.

You are a widely published poet with pieces appearing in The Bombay Review, Radar Poetry, and Apogee Journal, among other venues. What subjects serve most often as your inspiration?

My inspirations are my breath, my body, art, poetry, music, violence, grief, life, love, lust, loss, loneliness, death, water, the moon, shadows, books, and I can go on and on. Poetry to me is a sacred art, a conversation between the poet and the universe at large. My inspiration is the world I exist in, a world characterised and defined by natural and artificial elements and events. I see metaphors in everything around me, I see on every face, stories begging to be shared.

I recently read your poem, “After,” in The Indianola Review, and it was truly one of the best works I’ve read in a long time. The language is so stark and evocative, and the images have stayed with me even weeks after my initial reading. What is the story behind this particular piece?

The Indianola ReviewI am glad you liked the poem and I am happy to know it said something to you. The first story behind the poem is that one night, I decided to write and I wrote the poem. The second is that I wrote the poem when I was working on equally ‘dark’ poems for a chapbook manuscript. The third is that the poem is the first from a long break from writing, so I was loaded with metaphors when I sat on my desk. I mostly start writing with a feeling, not a story in mind. ‘After’ was meant to be the last poem of the manuscript I was working on, so it was written like a concluding remark.

In addition to your poetry, you are also an interviewer, with spotlights of authors appearing on your blog, The Strong Letters. What made you want to start this site, which also features book reviews?

I began The Strong Letters in January of this year but I remember that two years ago, I read a book that I fell in love with and I was very much interested in knowing some things about the author, the choice of the language of the book and its style. I searched the web for interviews with the author, I read like three and I was disappointed that the interviews didn’t ask any of the questions I have in mind. I made a mental note that day to start an interview series where I can ask important and ‘strong’ questions. I couldn’t start it until the beginning of this year. I am currently working on creating a dedicated website for the project. I actually look forward to getting very serious with it like I did with EXPOUND. The thing is, I am very much interested in literary activities and I don’t think I can ever stop doing them. Starting from my first project, Artbeat Africa to Black Communion, EXPOUND, and The Strong Letters, the primary reason why I engage myself in this kind of project is because I find joy in doing them.

Out of your published works, do you have a personal favorite?

This is hard. If there is a poem I am happy is out there, it is ‘The Volume of Grief, Love and Music’ on Cordite Poetry Review. My favourite poems are still unpublished and have only been read by one or two people. Let me also add that I am more in love with the poems I have not written.

Where would you like to see your writing career in five years?

In the next five years, I want to be writing.

Where can we find you online?

I have poems in Vinyl, About Place Journal, The Missing Slate, EXPOUND, The Bombay Review, Apogee Journal and several other outlets. I am also on Twitter and on Facebook.

Big thanks to Wale Owoade for being this week’s featured author!

Happy reading!

Retro Talent: Interview with Anya Martin

Welcome back! This week, I’m pleased to spotlight the multi-talented Anya Martin. Anya is a writer of fiction, nonfiction, and comics, and she also serves as the associate producer of The Outer Dark.

Recently, Anya and I discussed her inspiration as a writer as well as her many upcoming projects, including Word Horde’s Eternal Frankenstein anthology.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

Anya MartinAs a child, I was acting out stories in elaborate pretend games with stuffed animals, little dinosaurs and real-live little girls as long as I can remember. Note: never dolls. They always creeped me out. I drew picture books for my parents, and in elementary school, I was always writing plays—some of which were actually performed. I still thought I’d be a paleontologist or an archaeologist or an astronomer or an actress until high school, when I started realizing I could be a writer as an actual career and embarked on a never-completed epic fantasy novel packed with empowered female characters. Maybe one day I’ll return to it and really up the Weird.

Favorite authors are always tough because it’s a moving feast. Right now I’m reading mostly contemporary Weird authors and there are so many I worry I’ll forget someone egregiously. So I’ll stick to a list of writers who impacted me in my formative writing years and who stuck with me: C.L. Moore, Fritz Leiber, William Hope Hodgson, Philip K. Dick, Ted Sturgeon, Octavia Butler, Isak Dinesen, James Joyce, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Angela Carter, James Tiptree Jr., Ursula K. LeGuin, James Ellroy, Cormac McCarthy, Jack London, Tove Jansson, Samuel Beckett, Harry Crews, Olaf Stapledon, Margaret Atwood, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, Federico García Lorca, Mary Shelley. I’m sure by the time I read this online I’ll be shooting myself for someone crucial I left out.

As a fiction author, a comic book writer, a podcast producer, and a blogger, you have such a fantastically eclectic career! How do you juggle such a wonderful and vast array of roles?

I wonder myself, though I should add my “pay-the-bills job” as a freelance journalist literally ate up all my fiction writing time and energy for many years. In the last few years, I lucked into a steady gig with a major national newspaper writing just one business article a week. Also I had a major life change which kicked me into gear that if I didn’t get serious about fiction, I’d never do it. I’d done some comics work in the ‘90s, but the opportunity to contribute to Womanthology, an amazing all-women comics anthology with about 160 writer and artist contributors, was really the jumpstart of this stage of my writing life. In keeping with the book’s “Heroic” theme, “Stuffed Bunny in Doll-Land,” was based on two of my real-life toys, and I was lucky to collaborate with Mado Pena, a kickass artist based in Barcelona. The summer/fall of 2012 became a kind of rock star jaunt across comic cons, and it was exciting to see all the fan enthusiasm for the project, but ultimately I decided the challenges for women in comics were sadly not commiserate with the pay rates. For now, I’m back to just prose though Mado and I have talked about extending the project into a full graphic novel or an illustrated book. We went so far as to launching a website dedicated to the project, so maybe it’ll happen one day.

The return to fiction gradually led me to discover a new home in the current vibrant Weird fiction community and meeting a lot of great writers including Scott Nicolay, the host of The Outer Dark podcast which features conversations with contemporary Weird and spec-lit writers, as well as publishing news. Scott and I have collaborated on a number of nonfiction endeavors and we share a commitment to promoting diversity in our literary community, so that organically evolved into me taking on my producer role. Scott does the interviews, recording and the audio editing which can be a real challenge in his rural location. I do the beta-listening, show notes, Web design and some big-picture marketing. As for my blog ATLRetro.com, about Atlanta things to do for people stuck in the 20th century (burlesque to rockabilly to classic movies), I still act as overall editor and occasional writer, but it now exists largely thanks to the hard work and dedication of a great managing editor Melanie Crew and writing staff.

You’ve written a great body of work as a short fiction writer. When you were growing up, was there a particular short story that made you think “I want to do that!”?

Hmmm, actually I was pretty intimidated by short stories growing up, and for a long time I thought, no, I couldn’t do that and was pretty dissatisfied with my short story attempts. I always thought there wasn’t enough space and I’d be better at novels, plays and movies—any kind of longer form. That being said, from a genre/weird standpoint, C.L. Moore really packed an incredible punch of dread-filled atmosphere, ill-advised romance, monsters and action into her stories. I know girls aren’t supposed to grow up loving monsters, but I preferred them to princes as far back as I can remember. I also liked fairy tales, the darker, disturbing, older versions. And Jirel was a female protagonist more badass than the male action heroes I grew up with such as Conan and Tarzan thanks to my First Fandom dad. Moore’s stories combined all that, so she seemed like she was almost writing for me personally. My dad gave me a copy of “Black God’s Shadow,” which collected all of Moore’s Jirel stories, sometime in my early high school. It’s hard to pick a favorite, but maybe “Black God’s Shadow,” the even darker, weirder sequel to the first Jirel story, “Black God’s Kiss.”

Speaking of short fiction, your story, “The Un-Bride, or No Gods and Marxists,” will be featured in the upcoming Eternal Frankenstein anthology from Word Horde. How did you become involved with the project, and what can you reveal about this particular story?

Eternal FrankensteinI’d placed two stories in Word Horde anthologies (“Sensoria” in Giallo Fantastique and “The Prince of Lyghes” in Cthulhu Fhtagn!) and both those times I just asked editor Ross Lockhart if I could submit, and he thankfully said yes. So I already had a history, but as I recall, this time he asked me while we were talking at a room party at the 2015 NecronomiCon. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein had a big impact on me, and I’m also a big fan of the James Whale Universal movies. As soon as I found out about the project, I knew I wanted to write about Elsa Lanchester and make it a sort of “true”/alt-history story, but honestly I had no idea where the plot would go and if I could pull it off up until January when the deadline loomed ominously. I was reading through Elsa’s autobiography Elsa Lanchester Herself, jotting down odd notes, feeling really stressed about other stuff in my life and worried as Hell. I knew I wanted an opening scene with Elsa, her husband Charles Laughton and James Whale to mirror Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley and Lord Byron in The Bride of Frankenstein, but I wasn’t sure if the action would take place during the filming of the movie or at an earlier point in Elsa’s life.

Then the other stress suddenly lifted, and with it the creative floodgates opened. From then on, the words just seemed to channel through me. I don’t want to give away anything too key, but the three things that really got the plot ticking were an incident with a “Lazarus” frog raised from the dead, her account of children’s electro-shock parties orchestrated by her brother Waldo who would go on to become a famous puppeteer, and the fact that Elsa’s mother, an atheist radical feminist with whom Elsa had a stormy relationship, had been secretary to Eleanor Marx, the daughter of Karl, who committed suicide in 1898. When I read that Elsa’s theater career pretty much launched with an ingénue role as the Larva in the Čapek Brothers’ Insect Play in 1923, that pinpointed the time, including an unnamed “White Russian” lover who also plays a key role in the story. Coincidentally, Jan Svankmajer just completed a successful Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for a movie based on The Insect Play. Soon Elsa was speaking to me, dictating the story as it were. I completed the first draft in about eight days, and ended up with a 11,671-word novelette.

Do you have any rituals as a writer, such as writing at the same time every day or listening to certain music as you work?

I tend to write mostly at night, though once I get deep into a story, I’ll start adding day work time. The way that I write probably isn’t the best for regular productivity. When I am working on a story, I’m very intense about it and that’s all I want to do. I don’t want to do my day job or anything else. This worked well with some stories like “The Un-Bride” or “Old Tsah-Hov” (Cassilda’s Song, Chaosium) which literally moved so quickly I can’t even say how I accomplished them—deadline pressure probably lit a fire under my muse’s ass, too! Both of those and “Resonator Superstar!” (Resonator, Martian Migraine Press) also required a lot of research, so maybe that gave me an extra layer of discipline to work through them machine-like from start to finish.

On the other hand, stories like “The Prince of Lyghes” or “Grass,” a novella I just completed, each took about two years to germinate. I had an overarching idea of what I wanted to convey and in each case, knew the beginning and the conclusion, at least in broad terms. The middles, however, came to me in spurts, with frustrating in-betweens when I tried to write and made very little progress. On the positive side, the longer process led the ends to ferment and evolve with some twists I didn’t expect when I started. With “Grass,” I also took a research trip down to the marshland of the Georgia coast which ended up doubly as a personal journey. As for music, I usually listen to instrumental music—lately jazz and soundtracks—though I may throw on something more melodic or punk rock before I start writing to get into the mood. For “Resonator Superstar,” of course, I listened to a lot of Velvet Underground.

Out of your published works, do you have a personal favorite?

Obviously each story has a special place in my heart, but yes, there’s one that has an extra sweet spot –“A Girl and Her Dog.” I’ve been fortunate to share my life with several generations of dogs, and collies in particular. Pets become friends and family members with a bond of unconditional love that’s rarely achieved among humans, so their loss can be devastating. This story was my weird way of addressing that contrast between human and dog love. It’s also a female perspective, which most of my stories come from. The title is not an explicit play on Harlan Ellison’s famous story which was made into a movie, but rather my way of saying “A Girl and Her Dog” is completely different. I had trouble placing the story for a while, I think because editors had trouble seeing the horror in it—though other writers and readers seemed to have no such trouble. I am grateful to Jordan Krall for publishing it in the second issue of Xnoybis, the Weird fiction journal published by his Dunhams Manor Press, which came out last December.

Where can we find you online?

You can keep up with my fiction at www.anyamartin.com, find The Outer Dark at This Is Horror, and check out my blog about 20th century things to do in Atlanta at www.ATLRetro.com. Thank you very much for your interest in my work and interviewing me.

Big thanks to Anya Martin for being part of this week’s author interview series! Also, keep an eye out for Anya’s new story forthcoming in the second issue of Mantid Magazine!

Happy reading!

A Perfect Daymare: Interview with Kenya Moss-Dyme

Welcome back! For this week’s interview, I’m thrilled to spotlight author Kenya Moss-Dyme. Kenya is the amazing writer behind many short stories and novels, including A Good Wife, Daymares, and Prey for Me.

Recently, Kenya and I discussed her inspiration as a writer, her upcoming releases, and her invaluable tips on time management.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who were some of your inspirations?

Kenya Moss-DymeI know this is a common response in our world but I actually have been writing since I was a child. I wrote my first “book” in the 4th grade, so I was about 9. My school district would have a Scholastic Writing Contest each year with winners at every grade level. I won with my book about a cricket that dreamed of becoming an astronaut. The story was insightful, thrilling and really made adolescent readers question the meaning of life and their place in the universe. But seriously, it had the honor of being bound inside of a cover made of construction paper and illustrated with crayon, then placed in the library for students to check out. I wrote a few more warm and fuzzy stories after that, stuff about kids doing what kids do. But I didn’t get really excited about anything I wrote until Patchwork, my first full length story that I wrote at age 21. I typed it on a typewriter (gasp) over a few days at work, mailed it (in an envelope) to my now retired and eternally favorite teacher Marla Jackson, and she praised it; that did it for me.

I started out years ago with the usual favorites, Poe, Bloch, King, Koontz, Saul, Campbell, McCammon – see the pattern? There wasn’t much horror widely available or promoted by authors who looked like me, which was concerning because here I am devouring it but getting the message that the horror market was dominated by white males. Then somewhere around my early teens, I discovered not only Shirley Jackson and Anne Rice, but also Octavia Butler and I went….oooh. I also read books by Toni Morrison, J. California Cooper and Edwidge Danticat; not horror, but they create characters that follow you around for years after you’ve closed the book.

Since I’ve joined the indie author community, I’ve become familiar with so many outstanding writers that may not get the numbers of the big guys but their work is just as affecting. I always encourage readers to check out the indie authors of whichever genre you follow, because there’s tremendous talent out there waiting to join your list of favorite authors!

With a number of books already available and several more forthcoming, you are an incredibly prolific writer! What helps you to stay inspired as a writer, and what tips can you offer for other writers on time management?

Thank you! I keep a running spreadsheet of all of my story ideas and titles, so I never lose any of my “soup starters”, as Author Mya Lairis calls them. I have far more titles than I have completed stories to match, but I jot everything down, along with a loose synopsis, thoughts about the characters and the plot. I may not return to actually begin writing the story until months later, but I often draw on this list when I’m trying to create a short story to submit to submissions calls.  Sometimes, just reading the ideas alone can be inspiring.  My tip is to definitely write down everything! Either tap it into an app on your phone or speak it into a voice recorder, but find a way to save your ideas. You may not be writing chapters but every piece moves you closer to the finish line of your story.

I have a full-time career so I’m always bemoaning the lack of time for writing, but I have a file of story ideas that might be worth some money in certain circles, lol.  When I get overwhelmed with the technical stuff from my day job and the inspiration for my story won’t come, I just scroll through my files and think to myself, “I kinda rock….”  Then I’m okay for a while, lol.

Your work often delves into aspects of horror and dark fantasy. Have you always been a fan of these genres, or did you develop a love for macabre and strange literature over time?

A Good WifeI have always preferred entertainment that leans toward the darker side of life! Even as a child, I was the one checking out the school library books about witches, ghouls and warlocks, while my classmates were looking for stories about princesses and…horses. Okay, I did read a couple of books about horses too, Black Beauty was like a must-read back in the 70s. But I didn’t enjoy that as much as I did the books about haunted houses and mythology. We didn’t have a lot of options back then and everything had to be rather “gentle terror”. I envy the kids of today who have such a wide range of YA themes to choose from!

But yes, I write the type of things I like to read. I remember reading the book, Magic, by William Goldman, late 70s. It was about a ventriloquist being tortured and bullied by his dummy – which was, of course, his own descent into madness – but it was so wild and insane for me to read at that time.  The subsequent movie paled in comparison. Magic is still up there with my earliest memories of allowing a book to scare me silly and loving every minute of it.

What is your favorite part of the writing process, and do you have any rituals as a writer (e.g. listening to music or writing at a certain time every day)?

I’m probably one of the few authors who cannot have any background noise when I’m writing! I can’t listen to music or I’ll be singing and chair dancing; if the television is on, my brain is listening over there when it should be moving my fingertips. I’ve found that I write best when I’m in complete silence. Of course, I can do what they call “sprints” if I’m in a noisy environment but what I write won’t be nearly as usable as what I create if I have silence.

My favorite part is outlining because I get to do a sort of brain dump. I like being able to sketch out where I want the story to go, pick out plot holes and disconnects, then fill them in, deciding how everything should link together. I spend a lot of time planning before I actually start writing, it helps with character and story development and that’s a HUGE thing for me. I’m probably guilty of overwriting characters but I have to have them fully fleshed out in order to make the readers see what I see.

As a horror and dark fantasy writer, what do you hope to see in the future for these genres?

More recognition and respeck – and spell it just like that – RESPECK, lol. I’m really loving all of the cons taking place across the country. With the success of franchises like The Walking Dead, there’s a whole new wave of zombie fans – and that’s a beautiful thing to be a part of. In particular, TWD not only attracted viewers, but people who prefer their horror in print have devoured the comic series, as well, and all of that interest has certainly boosted recognition of our genre.

What upcoming projects are you working on?

I’ve got several works in progress but the most pressing at the moment is my zombie apocalyptic novel set in Detroit of the future. I’m excited about it because it’s about more than just the dead rising. It’s got themes of a government conspiracy, gentrification, and even a love story amidst the biting. My most ambitious project yet! That will be my next release and then I’m pushing for a Halloween release of Daymares 2, because….Halloween.

Huge thanks to Kenya Moss-Dyme for being part of this week’s author interview series! Find her online at her website as well as Facebook and Twitter.

Happy reading!

Nightly Horror: Interview with CM Muller

Welcome back! For this week’s author interview, I’m thrilled to feature CM Muller. CM is an accomplished dark fiction author as well as the editor of the esteemed Nightscript series, an annual anthology which focuses on strange tales.

Recently, CM and I discussed the genesis of Nightscript as well as what he has planned for his own fiction career.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

CM MullerUp until 11th grade I had zero interest in reading and writing. Sports and television dominated my early years, though I must say that programs such as Tales From the Darkside and Monsters held great appeal. Thinking back on it now, I suppose that’s the reason I decided to withdraw a copy of Cujo from my school library, and in turn rabidly consume that rough beast. Thus began what is certainly one of the grandest addictions of all: reading. King, Barker, McCammon, and a host of other authors became my mainstays until college flip-flopped my sensibilities and found me focusing on more “lit’ry” folks: Carver, O’Connor, Faulkner, to name but a few. Writing followed a similar track, in that I attempted to mimic stories I was reading at the time. It was only about a decade after graduating from college that I renewed my vows, as it were, with horror; or, in this case, “weird fiction.” I credit Mark Samuels and Simon Strantzas as being the prime movers who lured me back to my roots. Their work spoke to my more mature self, and I immediately set about writing stories “in a similar vein”—a dozen or more of which are now aging respectfully in a file folder marked “Never to See the Light of Day.” As far as favorite writers are concerned, I would say that as well as each of the above, I might also include Shirley Jackson, Terry Lamsley, Caitlín R. Kiernan, Thomas Tryon, Livia Llewellyn—but really, such a list could go on and on, and change on a weekly basis. (I’m also a diehard sci-fi fan, though we’ll save that for another day.)

Your short fiction has appeared in a number of fantastic venues, including Shadows & Tall Trees, The Yellow Booke, and Strange Aeons. What is your typical process for writing a short story? How long does it usually take to complete a story, and how many revisions does a story undergo before you submit it to publishers?

For the story which appeared in Shadows & Tall Trees, entitled “Vrangr,” I lost count how many pass-throughs I made. More than thirty and less than sixty, perhaps, but I guess such nitpickiness paid off. It’s still hard for me to believe that I made it into that esteemed publication: another important springboard, to be sure. My process as a whole has morphed considerably over the years. Currently, I compose my first drafts with black pen and yellow legal pad (and, yes, it must be yellow). From there I input those sloppy words into a digital file and spend the next two to however-many months editing, letting the story recuperate, editing some more, perhaps edging “that which is deemed a failure” toward the trash icon before being re-inspired, editing some more, and then finally passing it on to an old college friend who is always my first reader. So, yeah, it’s kind of a ritual, with lots and lots of time spent trying to get a piece as right as I can. The most exhilarating part of the process, for me, is that first handwritten draft and subsequent near-completed story where things start to flow and shine. The in-between? Well, I guess that just depends on the day. A lot of self doubt comes into play, but with continued persistence I almost always break through that wall. I used to compose my first drafts on a manual typewriter (which is a lovely and different process altogether) and lately I’ve considered returning to that antiquated mode. While no means a Luddite, I do believe there is something to be said about immersing oneself in the “old ways.”

The first volume of Nightscript was a huge success in 2015, and the second volume will arrive this fall. What inspired you to start an anthology series that focuses on ‘strange tales’?

The impetus for such an endeavor rests almost entirely on Michael Kelly’s announcement (back in 2014) that Shadows & Tall Trees would be going on indefinite hiatus. That was devastating news to a lot of folks, so I figured why not give it a go. There’s that old Bradbury quote about leaping off a cliff and building your wings on the way down, which is certainly what I had in mind when originally announcing the anthology via social media (and, believe me, I considered scrapping the idea numerous times before clicking the “post” button). I felt confident I could pull the production part of it off, as I’ve had experience with layout and design and book construction in general, but I wasn’t as self-assured as to how the anthology would be received. I needn’t have worried, however. The success of the volume has exceeded my expectations, thanks to a host of gracious individuals whom I can never thank enough. I hate to use that old cliche about the stars aligning and whatnot, but the timing could not have been better for putting out such a volume. It was, of course, a lot of work, but also a labor of love from beginning to end. I might also add, nostalgically, that the anthology shares, in more ways than one, the crooked path of own my writing. To wit: I released a single issue zine back in 1990 bearing the Nightscript moniker, which contained half as many stories and was printed on a Xerox machine. We’ve come a long way, N and I.

NightscriptContinuing with the theme of strange tales, do you remember the first story you read that could be classified as “weird fiction”? Was that the start of your love for all things weird, or did your fascination for unusual fiction grow more slowly over time?

The one which comes most readily to mind is H.P. Lovecraft’s “Cool Air.” Both story and, later, Night Gallery episode, greatly inspired me. Going back to that Xerox machine I mentioned above, I should also add that I was employed at the very print shop where Nightscript came into being, and during the course of working there I became acquainted with a repeat customer who shared a mutual interest in Lovecraft. He had an almost encyclopedic knowledge of the HPL universe, as well as the “weird circle” with whom he associated—most notably, at least to me, Minnesota natives Donald Wandrei and Carl Jacobi. Anyway, to make a long story short, I was invited to attend a meeting of a writing club whose sole focus was “weird fiction,” and from there I became friends with numerous like-minded individuals. So, yes, as much as King and Lovecraft have slipped from the pinnacle they once held in my writerly life, I cannot deny their significant influence. They were the springboards which launched me into the pages of many another author—in other words, that grand domino effect of readerly discover which continues to this day.

You currently reside in St. Paul, Minnesota. When crafting a setting for your fiction, do you find yourself inspired by the place you live, or do you tend to take the bulk of your inspiration elsewhere?

As much as the city inspires me, I find even more inspiration in rural settings, particularly back country roads which invariably lead to abandoned farmhouses and derelict barns, to forgotten cemeteries, fields of corn, deep woods. I need merely hop in my vehicle and head out for a leisurely stroll through these hidden places, and without fail I am inspired anew. “Vrangr” certainly takes its inspiration from such an impulse. The interesting thing about such a dynamic, however, is that I’m not entirely certain I could live in the country. I enjoy the “chaos” of the city, or in my case the city suburbs. There’s the comfort of the local coffeehouse, the library down the way, the used bookstore within biking distance. Creature comforts which I need to keep close. Though, who knows: perhaps in the waning years my comfort level will shift and I’ll find myself in a cabin in the woods.

Other than Nightscript, what projects can we expect from you in the next year?

I have a new story, entitled “Diary of an Illness,” which is due to appear in Weirdbook #33 this autumn. And, yes, as you mentioned: Nightscript II will be released in grand October and will contain 21 “strange and darksome tales.” Why 21? We’ll leave that to the discerning reader. Looking ahead to 2017, I’ve been tinkering with the idea of releasing a collection of stories, but knowing me, this pipe dream might very well extend into 2018 or beyond. I love the idea of trying my hand at a novel, but as the proud parent of two rambunctious boys, I have relegated myself (at least for now) to the production of short stories and, of course, ushering in new volumes of said anthology.

Where can we find you online?

My blog—www.chthonicmatter.wordpress.com—contains, perhaps most importantly, information pertaining to Nightscript. To prospective authors, I should also like to mention that my next open reading period is slated for January 2017, and I’m already itching to read the deluge of new submissions. The visitor to Chthonic Matter will also find links to the various venues which have somehow been moved to publish my weird wares, online or in print. It’s certainly a great time to be crafting strange tales. I can only hope that such a “renaissance” will continue for many years to come, and that more venues such as Nightscript will creep forth from the shadows.

Big thanks to CM Muller for being part of this week’s author interview series. Look for the second volume of Nightscript this fall!

Happy reading!

Nostalgia and Reprints: The Story Behind “All the Hippies Are Dying”

While this blog space is never exactly quiet (Author Interviews! Submission Roundups! Writing Tips!), it has been a little while since I’ve shared anything about my recent publications. So let’s remedy that before July slips away from us! I’m so thrilled that last month saw the release of my magic realism tale, “All the Hippies Are Dying,” at The Wild Hunt. This strange story about a mother obsessed with her youthful foray at Woodstock and the daughter who tries and fails to bring her mother into modern day is a little bit dark, a little bit magical, and perhaps more than a little bit wistful. It’s also among my favorite stories I’ve ever written, so that always makes a story release even more exciting!

First off, it’s worth noting this isn’t the debut of “All the Hippies Are Dying.” The story was originally released last year in the first issue of The Gateway Review. My experience there with editor Joe Baumann was a fabulous one, and he supported “Hippies” so much that he even nominated it for a Write Well Award through the Silver Pen Writers Association. How nifty is that?

Since I do love this story so much, it’s been great to see how it’s found a second life at The Wild Hunt. And it was quite fortuitous circumstances that led to the publication. In the spring, The Wild Hunt editor Ariell Cacciola reached out to me after reading my Shimmer story, “All the Red Apples Have Withered to Gray,” and asked if I would be interested in contributing to her new magazine. One visit to the site, and I loved the aesthetic of The Wild Hunt so much that I knew I had to be involved. I sent Ariell “All the Hippies Are Dying” and I was so incredibly pleased when she and her fellow editor enjoyed it enough to add it to the other beautiful tales in their archives. So far, “Hippies” has received some nice reviews (huge thanks to Morgan Crooks for including it as a top June story pick on Ancient Logic), and it’s beyond thrilling to find the story is resonating with readers.

“All the Hippies Are Dying” is an oddly personal tale, one that highlights my love of turntables and vinyl and 1960s music. In a way, I’ve been carrying this story with me since I was fifteen years old and started researching Woodstock in books at the public library. That’s when I first fell in love with the bands from that era—The Mamas and the Papas, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and Crosby, Stills, and Nash, among many others. In those well-spent days of youth, I was a little like the matriarch in “Hippies,” just hanging around a spinning turntable and absorbing every note of the music. Thus, it was both cathartic and slightly bittersweet to finally translate some of those feelings into a cohesive story.

“Hippies” also gave me a chance to explore the world of magic realism. I’ve been a huge fan of magic realism fiction for years, and this was one of my first interpretations of the genre. I definitely hope to return soon to this fresh and lovely brand of fantasy in my short fiction. In the meantime, an early sketch of a new novel I’m writing will blend a healthy dose of horror with magic realism, and though it’s too early to tell for sure how this new project will turn out, I’m certainly hopeful that it might become something both strangely beautiful and beautifully strange.

So if you’re so inclined, head on over to The Wild Hunt, and take in the nostalgia of “All the Hippies Are Dying.” The free love of Woodstock awaits you!

Happy reading!

Woodland Magic: Interview with Alina Rios

Welcome to this week’s author interview! Today I’m proud to present the multi-talented Alina Rios. I was fortunate enough to work with Alina on the debut issue of Bracken, the new magic realism magazine for which she serves as founder and editor. Needless to say, it was an amazing experience, so of course, I had to invite her to appear on my blog.

Below, Alina and I discuss Bracken as well as her inspiration and future plans as a writer, editor, and photographer.

A couple icebreakers to start: when did you first decide to become a writer, and who are some of your favorite authors?

Alina RiosI never decided to become a writer. I just wrote. I started early, when I was five, and the process of writing my first poem is still vivid in my mind. Adults were talking, I was bored, I was given a pen and paper to draw, and I wrote a poem about a bunny. I can still recite it. Since that time, I wanted to write more than anything else. The backs of all my school notebooks, except perhaps the ones from my Spanish classes, were filled with poems and story starts.

My father left when I was very young and once I started writing, I used it, as I see clearly now, to escape into my dreams. Fortunately or not, I never grew out of it.

Moving from St. Petersburg, Russia to Cleveland, Ohio slowed me down quite a bit because for a long time I found myself between languages, where Russian was starting to slip away—and sadly I let it—and English had not quite come in and taken over my dreams. It was years later that I decided to take writing seriously and enrolled in an Intro to Writing workshop at the Story Studio in Chicago. That’s where I realized, Hey, I can do this. No more non-native language excuses.

In Russia, I read and fell in love with “Master and Margarita” by Bulgakov. It was and still is my favorite and most formative book. This is going to shock people, but before discovering this book, I found Russian literature boring, and favored European literature always, devouring the translations on my mom’s bookshelves. After coming to America, I discovered Diana Wynne Jones—funny, as she’s British—whose worlds and humor, and the infectious spirit that permeates her books, found a home in me. Neil Gaiman is another favorite, especially his earlier books, and his short stories. I have a very soft spot in my heart for Stardust. In the last few years, I’ve discovered Patricia McKillip, and a worn-out copy of her “Winter Rose” is always on my bedside table.

You are the editor at Bracken, a new literary magazine dedicated to magic realism. What inspired you to start this magazine, and what are your plans over the next year or two?

The idea for Bracken came to me at first because I wanted to create a place where all of my favorite stories and poems could live. But as I began working on it, I realized that this was more about giving back to the arts community. I was in a position to support authors and artists with affirmations of their work, encouragements of “almost-there” submissions, and the gratification of first publications.

My plans are rather simple. I want Bracken to stay alive.

My Creative Director, Piper Robert, and I have talked about doing a print anthology at the end of the year. I hope this happens, because both of us are very partial to print and we think the beautiful aesthetic that we have developed for Bracken would translate very well to print. If there is to be an anthology, there will be a release party, somewhere in Seattle, possibly in this little bookstore I know of in the Pioneer Square neighborhood, which is the oldest part of the city.

We’ve also talked about adding music to the magazine. We haven’t explored the idea fully, but I keep finding pieces that would fit very well with our theme.

What can readers expect from the forthcoming second issue of Bracken? Also, do you have any tips for those writers who are submitting to Bracken’s slush pile?

BrackenThere will be more magic, more sadness, and many ways to disappear. We already have the cover art lined up and it is amazing—very different than our first cover but it just fits. I feel like poetry is shaping up quite a bit differently for this issue and I like that. It still does everything you’d expect from our poetry but there is a lot more water in this issue. I have a strange feeling that fiction might follow suit. Piper noticed that there was a lot of silver in our first issue. It is intriguing to discover that we have a themed issue after the content is set!

As far as submissions go, I would say a simple hello with a name attached to it is a great beginning. I also like hearing about the person who’s submitting. Not a bio, just a few words on where the author is coming from. If I know that, I feel I can help the submitter better in my response. It also puts me in a better mood for reading the work.

As far as the actual work goes, we’re looking for lyrical prose and poetry. That means that it must sing. Yes, even your prose. Read any piece from Issue I and you’ll know what I mean. In fiction, we are looking for character-driven stories, which means we want you to go deep, usually inside yourself, to write the kind of story we want to publish. We will always choose an internal transformation over an external adventure. Also, we love the woods, as the name suggests. We also love gardens, fields, backyards. We love rivers and lakes because they often at some point end up near the woods. Once we get into seas and oceans, it becomes a tougher sell. However, that might change, as we’re finding we have to let go of some very good fiction and poetry because it doesn’t quite fit our theme. It is this dynamic tension between keeping the content on land and simply getting amazing magic realism that is going to evolve this magazine.

Also, please oh please follow the submission guidelines. It could make the difference as to whether we read your work.

In addition to your editing, you are an accomplished fiction writer and poet. Have you found it challenging to balance your Bracken duties with your writing schedule? Do you have any tips on time management for other writer-editors out there?

I have found the balance of creating my own work and running a magazine quite challenging. Let’s add on top of this being a single mom of a seven-year-old. However, I have found the magazine to be so soul-feeding that it keeps me going.

As far as tips go, I would say, ask for help. I was so lucky to find Piper. I am lucky to have a nanny who drops off my son at school three days a week. That’s three days that I get to write at a café in the mornings before work. And those hours are precious. Also, I have enlisted the support of some secret readers. They can cut down on my obsessing over submitted work that is hard to part with for such a sympathetic soul as myself.

I have stopped submitting my own work for the moment, because there is just too much to do. But I know I will get back to it, having learned so much already from being on the other side. Another approach that works for me is to have designated writing and editing times in my day. Mornings are for writing. Evenings are for editing Bracken. This works for me because I’m most creative in the mornings, and more keenly focused in the evenings.

You are also an amazing photographer! Has your imaging work ever inspired your writing, or vice versa?

Thank you! I am just starting to move into that area. I have always used photography as a tool to help me get inside myself, to slow down, to really see. In that way, I usually take photos when I cannot write, either because of external circumstances (like being out with my son) or when I’m stuck in a story and need to step away.

Where would you like to see your career as an editor and writer in five years?

Love this question. It is something I haven’t thought of too much because I’m trying to live in the present for a change. But, now that you’ve asked, as a writer, I’m really hoping to start writing plays. Theater has always been such a key part of my life, as has writing, and it is only natural to want to bring them together. I am nursing an idea of a play and I’m very curious how it will come out. Also, there is a chapbook of fiction and poetry I’ve had in mind that I would love to finalize and start sending out. I also hope to get Bracken to a stable enough place that I can start writing and submitting more.

As an editor, I want to keep publishing the true, real voices that are laced with the sadness of the world. I hope to inspire those who are struggling to write, and those who are writing to write better—to go into the darkness of their hearts, and find the beauty. I also hope to be trusted with an anthology some day.

Any links you’d like to share to others’ work?

Here are [some sites] where the creativity is resonant with the spirit of Bracken:

Tim Walker Photography

Kristy Mitchell Photography

Caroline Shaw, Composer

Big thanks to Alina for being part of this week’s author interview series. Find her online at her author site as well as on Bracken Magazine!

Happy reading!