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Tuesday, December 20, 2022

My short-story collection Fear itself is out, at last!

Psst! I'm beyond excited to announce that my short-story collection Fear itself is out, at last! You can find it available on amazon and from ordering through indie bookstores and on the Lethe Press website. 

Fear Itself is a special blend of mainly horror, with a soupçon of fantasy and sci-fi. It includes nine stories in all, a ghost novelette, and story notes. Many of the stories are near and dear to me, written over the years, with some, such as the novelette, "A Canadian Ghost in London", first drafted whilst I lived in London, England back in 1998.

I am grateful to the fine work of U.S. publisher Lethe Press, which really is veteran accomplished writer and editor Steve Berman.

I have included some story descriptions on my blog somewhat recently, but this more-than-generous advance review from Publishers Weekly does a great job of describing it.

“The ten unsettling tales of Moran’s debut collection ably live up to the title, featuring monsters that will haunt nightmares. In “Glimpses Through the Trees,” a creature visible only out of the corner of one’s eye chases a couple as they desperately drive away. Terrifying whispers come from a couple’s baby monitor as they adjust to new parenthood in “Monitored.” Technology again serves as a vehicle for fright in “Burned,” in which an entity murders through digital video. Some of the stories are less immediately scary, including “Carl and Monty’s Prairie Wager,” a voicey take on a classic zombie story, and “Living Under the Conditions,” which presents a not quite apocalyptic scenario in which gravity and time fluctuate wildly. The collection ends on a high note, with the moving ghost story “A Canadian Ghost in London,” which explores love, loss, grief, and letting go. Incorporating cosmic horror, Indigenous legend, and B-movie monsters, there’s something here to please any horror fan. Incorporating cosmic horror, Indigenous legend, and B-movie monsters, there’s something here to please any horror fan.”
Publishers Weekly

Can't afford it? Suggest your local library purchase it so you can borrow it.

Want to review it? Let me or my publisher know, depending which side of the Canada/U.S. border you're on.

https://amzn.to/3PGsMEb (amazon.ca)
https://amzn.to/3v1wJtV (amazon.com)
https://www.lethepressbooks.com/store/p635/Fear_Itself.html#/ (Lethe site)

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Happy Hallowe'en

Well ... got so busy, that I didn't post this Hallowe'en post recently. 

Happy Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve) and Samhain, all (pronounced "Sow-wen"). Some believe the veil betweenI didn't post this Halllowe the living and the dead is thinning. I'm anxious and in possession of various desires and energies-some practical, some not. Here are some of Ray Bradbury's autumn-empty trees to contemplate from a recent hike.



Saturday, October 29, 2022

Halloween reading and viewing recommendations

Having a very busy fall, so I am reposting the following.

For me, inspiration runs to a fever pitch even as the leaves turn, fall, and  the, heady wine-like smell seems to pervade the world. I used to always pen a Halloween story, from grade six or so onward, up through university, and afterward. It is no coincidence that my first novel, Town & Train, was literary horror. So, I am always seeking out Halloween viewing and reading. 

Over the years, on this blog, I have made the strong case for Hallowe'en films and comics and books. You can find links to all of these posts below:  

- From 2015: Scary Halloween readingLisa Morton, Halloween aficionado extraordinaire 
                      
Town & Train: A Good, Spooky Halloween Read
                      It Follows is Astonishing and Creepy: A Film Review

Two more days til' Halloween: My October reading and viewing

Two more days 'til Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en ....

It being so close to October 31, I thought I would share my good and interesting October journey.

Let's talk October reads first. 

Just finished Renn Graham and Jeannette Arroyo's Blackwater. Originally a web comic, it is a YA queer romance horror, sort of a mash-up of Stranger Things (though not retro), Heartstopper and Teen Wolf with alternating art styles! Crushing on supporting goth character Marcia, a slightly under-realized young black woman of size. Perhaps another story with more of her, and protags, jock Tony Price and German kid, Eli Hirsch? There's room for all that, and I'd read it.

Also Adam Cesare's Clown In A Cornfield, which marries old-and-new-school slashers, moving at a good clip. As it is YA horror (which I only discovered after reading the novel), Cesare is often borderline satirical in depicting townies, and any grown-ups, who are alternately inept or menacing for the most part. But this view of townies grows more sympathetic as protagonist Quinn widens her view of Small Town, Missouri. She and her dad Dr. Glenn Maybrook have a shared requisite tragic backstory. Their sudden relocation from Philadelphia to Kettle Springs allows for new-school/old-school, big-city/small-town comparisons and juxtapositions, granting Cesare the ability to tell the story like an old-school slasher in a contemporary setting. Jock Cole Hill, her romantic interest, also grapples with grief, but his story of loss is shown instead of told. It is a curious choice, considering that whole Cole character is a means to digging into the town's quandaries and past. Quinn, on the other hand, remains the main character and should have agency or at least a background deserving of equal attention.

In some ways, Clown is a variation on the Scream franchise themes, but with compelling characters, action and small-town spicing, courtesy of Kettle Springs, Missouri. Only recently did I learn it is YA. With its level of gore and dismemberment, though, it is a closer descendant of the Netflix Fear Street trilogy than Stranger Things.

For a good laugh, I am slowly working through Grady Hendrix and Will Erickson's riotously funny Paperbacks From Hell: The Twisted History of '70s and '80s Horror Fiction. It remains a mood up-lifter of the most ridiculous sort.

I realized I never saw all of John Carpenter’s 1981 effort, The Fog, and rented it. It remains immersive 1980's horror, with tough-sensitive guy Tom Atkins, Curtis shimmering as free-wheeling hitchhiker Elizabeth Solley. Loved Janet Leigh, saucy 1978 Halloween alumni Nancy Kyes, cool lighthouse deejay Adrienne Barbeau. All that said, some shots, in fact many, and the music remind me of Halloween. In fact, director Carpenter is really cribbing himself for much of the tense scenes, when he isn’t busy showing the beautiful seaside before the fog rolls in in and the fog machine really starts gunning in-town. The '76 Ford LTD Country Squire is also a close cousin to Michael Myers' ride, the '78 Ford LTD Station Wagon in Halloween. Perhaps Carpenter got a deal on these station wagons, or simply owned one?

Also viddied queer director James Whale’s The Invisible Man (1933); The Old Dark House (1932, also a Whale film). The first is mercilessly dark and twisted, and campy and the second, well, the second is the same, sans a Universal Studios monster. In House, Whale also nods, winks and leers at the queer viewer, passing off strikes as balls, or queer jokes as straight clap-trap, and they’re a joy to detect, each and every one of them.

As well, I quite enjoyed Tom Seeley and Michael Moreci's Revealer, pairing a stripper and religious zealot in Chicago during the rapture. This impressive cosmic-horror endeavour works hard, delivering a great story and performances despite Covid shooting limitations.

Watched Dave Grohl's Studio 666, a predictable but loving tribute to horror cinema. Like seeing Kiss in the classic 1979 rock-cheese feature Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Parkone must appreciate the rock band the Foo Fighters hamming up every scene to a rather kick-ass soundtrack and crop of cameos including ... Lionel Ritchie?

Blade from 1988 still remains kinetic. Wesley Snipes kicks fanged-fiend butt, but with some power-level discrepancies and Stephen Dorff remains a fine Jack Nicholsonesque antagonist. Kris Kristofferson as cranky old Whistler is still as endearingly irascible as ever.

George A. Romero's 1968 Night of the Living Dead still wields power over the viewer, as does John Landis’ 1981 An American Werewolf in London, although I still maintain it suffers from a simplistic and fatalistic third act. While Night’s ending is a kick to the stomach, American Werewolf’s remains abrupt and unsympathetic to the point of sarcasm.

The last two are revisits. Still hankering to revisit It Follows, one of my all-time contemporary favourites. My case for It Follows is here in previous blog post.

Also watching Shudder’s Queer For Fear. The documentary series traces the lineage of queer or LGBTQ1+ influence on horror and gothic literature and cinema from its earliest days, from Mary Shelley penning A Modern Prometheus and kickstarting the gothic and horror genre and onward. While it features an uneven third episode, Queer is at its best when focusing on a particular actor, a film or film series (Anthony Perkins in Psycho, Alfred Hitchcock’s portrayal of gay men) or a particular genre trend (the endless list of exploitative lesbian vampire films in the 1970’s) or juxtaposing overtly campy or sexual sound bites into the thesis breakdown.

In between all that, trying to finish a review of a sci-fi collection for U.S. magazine and trying to revise an autumnal story about a traveling roadshow of horror writers who are down on their luck, and turning to dark means in their desperation. 

Friday, October 7, 2022

Description of Fear Itself short-story collection

Lots of people (okay, a few) ask what Fear Itself, my debut Lethe Press collection, coming Dec. 5, is about.

Here's what my ten stories are about.

"Canadian author James K. Moran's debut collection of dark fiction offers fantasy, sci-fi and horror shot through with hope and friendship. Inside, readers will discover sea serpents among the roiling waters of the St. Lawrence River under a dilapidated international bridge; a misguided bi mage negotiating with a demon he accidentally summoned into his dorm; a baby monitor issuing the voice of an intradimensional dark god; a couple in Picton County fleeing an ancient entity they cannot see directly that demands a blood sacrifice; queer ghosts haunting a British nightclub; two salty old ranch hands outside Lethbridge, Alberta, betting on who is a better shot in what may be the apocalypse; a shape-changing huckster seducing apathetic suburbanites; a gay rare-collectibles hunter hunted by a being moving between the Internet, film and fact; a cat-fished giant marauding the backroads of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry counties; a gay wine shop manager discovering more than a dusty Moscato lurking in the musty basement; and a pterodactyl loose downtown."

Now with a new cover!

Cover and interior design by Ryan Vance.

Pre-orderable at https://www.lethepressbooks.com/store/p635/Fear_Itself.html#/


Friday, September 30, 2022

Fear Itself collection dedication to my sister

I am distracted and pensive and sad today. It is my sister Kim's birthday. She would have been fifty-five.

This is the weekend, a year ago, when everything changed and we could see time running out on her five-year, stage-four lung cancer prognosis. Me and my family raced home to take care of her and help out my overwhelmed brother-in-law. It soon become a dark time and darker still, but I will always be grateful  I could be there for her with my other sister,  the health-care pro in her element, my brother-in-law, my nieces, and my parents as well.

Kim always believed in my writing, even a giant-bug-themed story I penned in high school. I set the piece at local Camp Kagama. As my protagonist tries to evacuate the camp because of the insectile invasion, another character makes an offhanded reference to my sister, the staff nurse, making out with a cute camp counselor.

(My writing has improved markedly since.)

I am dedicating my short-story collection, Fear Itself, coming out November 15, to Kim.

Wednesday, August 10, 2022

I'm Back, Baby: Short-story collection, Fear Itself, coming this fall!

I have another book coming out.

It has been a long road, but I am beyond excited to announce my first short-story collection Fear Itself is at last coming from Lethe Press this fall. It's a special blend of mainly horror, with a soupçon of fantasy and sci-fi. Fear Itself includes nine stories in all, a ghost novelette, and story notes. Many pieces have a clear local setting and feature LGBTQ1+ protagonists. While they generally do not meet tragic, pulpy ends, my characters do not make it out unscathed, either. 

I will be talking or, rather more accurately, teasing out fun facts about the stories in future posts, and describing some of the road that led to the book's publication, but for now, here's a quick little teaser about one story in the collection. 

In “Crag Face”, recently divorced Ray Morley is driving the back roads of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry to Cornwall for a funeral. His deceased friend always believed in his writing, despite never publishing his novel these past few decades. But Ray is waylaid by a sexually-frustrated (and cat-fished) creature of fantasy who has stumbled into our world from a portal in the Back Forty. And it is looking for satisfaction, one way or another.

Fear Itself is available for pre-ordering here on the Lethe Press website.

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Benched

So, having recently tested positive for Covid-19 has more than put a dent in my semblance of a summer schedule for over a week. I think I had contact in Niagara-On-The-Lake during our recent Ontario vacation, the first such vacation in about three years. The virus is still out there and even though we were diligent, while many others went unmasked outdoors and in, we caught it. Coming through it even now, but this will take time. More to follow once I have more full recovered.

Friday, July 15, 2022

Thor: Love and Thunder: Big, loud, stupid summer-popcorn fun

I kind of dug Thor: Love and Thunder, particularly for the music. Let's just say that a character even names himself Axl.

Director Taika Waititi was clearly chomping at the bit to get this flick out and have fun with the toys he grew up with. He obviously had a blast, even including some fun queer representation (and polyamory) as part of the story.

Much of Love and Thunder is played simply for laughs and it carries a lively, over-the-top, self-mocking tone (particularly Thor's character) with some serious, heartstring-tugging drama at heart with a surprisingly complex antagonist and a beloved recurring character. The film doesn't jive well with other Marvel Studios film continuity in many ways, and not only because the tone is like Thor: Ragnarok on speed (or cocaine). But I think that's entirely forgivable because it's big, loud, stupid summer-popcorn fun. Imagine if Monty Python did super-powered space opera on a massive budget with a kick-ass late 1980's/early 1990's rock soundtrack.

The person I saw it with kept questioning it; I just strapped in for the ride and kept laughing and enjoying the surprises. Very entertaining summer fare.

P.S.: You get to see a ripped Chris Hemsworth shirtless if that is any enticement.


Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Waxing Gibbous: A Study in Moonlight

Sometimes I take pictures of the moon. It's a thing I do.

Here is a photographic study and experiment from last night's Waxing Gibbous Moon. That is both moonlight and some ambient streetlight thrown off the gate in front of me.





Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Derecho storm knocks out power

So, the short version ... the power's back on. 

And the long version ....

We lost power due to the derecho that rocked (in a bad a way) the nation's capital Saturday, May 21. 

CBC stories are here and here.

Electricity returned May 24, only for our block to lose it again the evening of Thursday, May 26. 

Power returned yesterday, May 30, at about 4:30.

We had to say goodbye to a friend, and have been been parenting,  juggling teleworking, running our home offices, planning for imminent surgery and generally just trying to get through. Stressed, but okay.

Did we miss much?

Friday, May 27, 2022

Grief, twisting and turning

You can try to avoid grief, and push it back, but it remains, fixed,  immutable. How you talk to it is about all the control you have, like trying to reason with a drunk.

Friday, April 15, 2022

WROTE Podcast Interview

I was on the WROTE Podcast talking with the ever-congenial Vance Bastian and Baz Collins about my upcoming Lethe Press collection Fear Itself, Burly, the writing and editing life, inspiration, and revising my second horror novel. I owe a great thanks to those two. In the interview, I even trace my earliest writing inspirations to comic books and Sunday matinees watching creature features such as "The Blob and "The Creature from the Black Lagoon" at the Port Theatre in Cornwall.

I also decided to talk publicly about the loss of my sister Kim this fall. Over the years, she had saved a stack of my earlier writings, including annual traditional Halloween stories and even the high school columns I wrote for the daily paper in my hometown. So since Kim always believed in me, and I miss her, I thought all of this worth mentioning.

There are shout-outs aplenty, including to my sisters, Steve Berman and Jerry L. Wheeler.

If you listen to some of it or any of it, please let me know how it goes. While I have the Irish gift for the gab, I cannot, ironically, tolerate hearing my own voice for too long.

Friday, February 4, 2022

Locus Magazine Awards hopefuls

Feeling pleased; as mentioned previously, three major Lethe Press projects I worked on in terrible 2021 are possible Write-in votes for the Locus Magazine Awards. The Locus Awards are an annual set of literary awards voted on by readers of the science fiction and fantasy magazine Locus, a monthly based in Oakland, California and are normally presented at an annual banquet.

I would be very grateful if you took the time to vote for any of these works, which I proofread:

Best Collection: Fit for Consumption, Steve Berman (Lethe). On the left.

Best Novelette: “Unwelcome Boys”, Steve Berman (Fit for Consumption)

Best Anthology: Burly Tales: Fairy Tales for the Hirsute and Hefty Gay Man, Steve Berman, ed. (Lethe). Bottom, centre.

Best Short Story: My hopeful Billy Goats Gruff redux, "Three, to the Swizz'!", a story appearing in Burly.

Very happy to say that my publisher, Steve Berman of Lethe Press, is up for Best Editor. Go, Duke!

I just filed a review of Charles Payseur's The Burning Day and Other Strange Stories (Lethe), up for Best Collection, with a prestigious speculative-fiction publication. On the right.

Michael Bukowski's ribald and wonderfully weird Monstrous Mythologies (Lethe) is also up for Best Art. Centre.

Here's the voting link. You need to register but need not be a Locus reader).



Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Mad, stressful Wednesday, Possible Awards

What a mad, stressful Wednesday after a dry January in which I not only got rolling on my horror-novel-number-two revisions for Monstrous, the short-story revisions for my collection Fear Itself and filed a book review, I also landed a new job. But more on that later, once the letter of offer is all wrapped up.

Today’s been all worrying about ice damming on the roof, leaking into our master bedroom, as in 2021. Ice damming occurs when layers of snow and ice accumulate on the roof. The simplest way to describe it as that the bottom-most layer warms because of the ambient heat in the house, melting any snow or ice there, which then flows under the eavestroughs, frozen over with ice from the subzero temperature, and the water finds any which way it can into the house. So it's like a horny teenager trying to find any which way to get relief. 

Pardon the bawdy comparison, but I feel I'm allowed the dirty reference or two, given all that is happening simultaneously.

So I have been up there, not getting sexual gratification, mind you, but shoveling snow, or wiping the water leaking above the window into our room. That has been most of my day, really. Hence my use of “stressful”.

On the other hand, as is typical in the writing life, there are compensations. At the same time, I am feeling ... somewhat pleased?

Three major Lethe Press projects I worked on in terrible 2021 are possible Write-in votes for the Locus Magazine Awards. The Locus Awards are an annual set of literary awards voted on by readers of the science fiction and fantasy magazine Locus, a monthly based in Oakland, California and are normally presented at an annual banquet.

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

My freelance writing career

Wow; found or rediscovered a fairly serviceable list of my freelance articles on my profile for what is now Xtra. Many articles are lost  (hundreds, in fact-years' worth of freelancing) due to the LGBTQ1+ Pink Triangle Press publication's rebranding and changing domain/website names and lack of archiving, but these ones are findable, at least.

Here you can find my profile.