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Goodreads Giveaway & Parsec Awards Announcement

8/12/2015

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"The horrifying webs we weave..."

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"Baby's Breath" recently received some incredibly positive and encouraging reviews on Amazon and elsewhere, a few of which were from some of my favorite writers in the industry. 

B.E. Scully, author of the critically acclaimed Gothic thriller Verland, the Transformation, as well as The Eye That Blinds from DarkFuse Publishing and The Tower of Together from Eldritch Press said:
         Every now and then a story comes along that catches people’s attention, not only because it’s well written, but because it takes a familiar subject and turns it over and under and sideways, revealing all of the hidden, seething life forms underneath.

Plenty of stories feature spiders, the creeping, crawling symbols of our own skittering human psyches and the webs we weave, but what makes “Baby’s Breath” unique is the way Leigh uses the familiar critter to explore one of humankind’s more profound and life-changing events—childbirth, and, even more terrifying, its consequences. 


 Birth forms the literal narrative framework, but it’s also the metaphorical set-up for the many potentially dangerous, secret things gestating in the darkness of our fears, insecurities, and suspicions. 

 Leigh is particularly effective at conveying how our fragile, carefully woven concepts of both ourselves and the people we love and make a life with can tear apart as quickly and profoundly as any spider’s web…with horrifying results.

This story first appeared in the anthology Bugs: Tales That Slither, Creep, and Crawl, which is also recommended for readers interested in more creepy insect tales across a range of genres. This special edition of Baby’s Breath will make a fine addition to any collector’s shelf.
Kenneth Cain, whose work has appeared in Exigencies, the Neo-Noir anthology from Richard Thomas' Dark House Press,  as well as Jamais Vu, The Lovecraft e-Zine, Firbolg Publishing's Enter at Your Own Risk: the End is the Beginning, and more, said:
         Leigh really puts it all out there, making for a story that is equal parts heartbreaking and horrifying. Great voice, great story. 
Jon Bassof, author of Corrosion, Factory Town, The Disassembled Man, and several forthcoming novels posted on Twitter:
         Just read Baby's Breath by @thespiderbox. About as terrifying a final line as I've read...
For me, getting feedback from other writers about our work is important. Obviously, it's important for us to reach readers, as well. 

"Baby's Breath" is a story I wrote without thinking what effect it would have on readers. It was something I lost myself in and just wrote. But as I've mentioned before, it is a very personal story, and I hope it leaves a mark. 

I've also mentioned that it actually started off as a drabble, which is a hundred word micro-fiction piece--that was called "Transference," and it was first published on Hellnotes here. Later, it was podcast on The Wicked Library as part of an episode which featured three of my stories. You can find Episode 503: Three Tales from Sydney Leigh here. Host Nelson W. Pyles read "Corpus Delectable" and "Lust for Life," but had his wife read "Transference," which later became the first paragraph of "Baby's Breath," to give it a more powerful effect.

It worked. I just got word that "Transference" is a Finalist  in the Best Speculative Fiction Audio Drama Long Form Category of the Parsec Awards. The gala ceremony will be held at DragonCon over Labor Day weekend in Atlanta.

Many thanks to Nelson and Maddie Von Stark for featuring my work on their podcast! And congratulations to them for having their show recognized. 
 
I think that whoever reads--or listens to--our work, we hope for the same result: that our words make a difference. Strike nerves. Touch places that resonate on deep levels. Grab hold and not let go.

One of my favorite reader reviews of "Baby's Breath" was this one: 

          This "gut punch" will continue to remain with me as much as Richard Matheson's Born Of Man And Woman. I can't recommend it enough.
Oh, the irony...and any comparison to Matheson is, well, an insanely incredible compliment.

Anyway, speaking of terrifying...this is my first solo endeavor, and I am grateful for all the positive feedback I have received from readers, other writers, and reviewers I respect in our community. I'm looking forward to the story getting into the hands of more readers and seeing what they have to say, as well. 

I also hope readers will pick up a copy of the anthology in which it first appeared, Bugs: Tales that Slither, Creep, and Crawl. There are so many stories in there worth reading. I owe Phillip Perron of Great Old Ones Publishing a world of gratitude for accepting "Baby's Breath," seeing something special in it, sending it to Simon Rumley, and allowing Villipede Publications to reprint it in this chapbook format when it was nominated for a Stoker award. 

Three signed copies are available to anyone in the US, Canada, Great Britain, and Australia...giveaway ends October 30th. 
Thanks for reading,
Syd

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Baby's Breath by Sydney Leigh

Baby's Breath

by Sydney Leigh

Giveaway ends October 30, 2015.

See the giveaway details at Goodreads.

Enter Giveaway
Baby's Breath on Amazon
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"Baby's Breath" in the Wild...& Going Live on Amazon

7/4/2015

1 Comment

 

"Baby's Breath" Limited Signed & Numbered Edition Chapbooks in the Wild...
and going Live on Amazon

I'm thrilled to announce that the Second Edition of "Baby's Breath" is live on Amazon. The paperback chapbook is just slightly different than the First Edition—unsigned and unnumbered, of course, and will be followed by an e-book edition. It is also available on the CreateSpace eStore.  

Matt Edginton, VP Wizard, made a neat page for it on the Villipede Publications website, which has blurbs, details , and other info. 

This was actually supposed to be released on Monday, the same day I'll be going to Mass General Hospital to get the pathology results on my recent surgery. But I'm hoping the timing is good fortune, and that Amazon was just a little eager to make it available  before I head in for my news. 

There have been so many great things happening lately—it's actually hard to keep track
―and yes, I've been sick and have had a lot problems with my health getting in the way of being as productive, creative, involved, and efficient  as I'd like to be. But I'm trying to keep up. And by that mean keep a positive attitude, as well. 

And although there's much I want to say about all the good news there is to share, I'm going to keep this post short and sweet―(inserted retroactively―no, I'm not) and just post all the great pictures I have of the "Baby's Breath" chapbooks in the wild and some things about the people who bought or sent photos of them. (Okay, so there's a bit more here, but bear with me...)

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Daniel Knauf―#1.
I'm talking to Daniel on the phone as I type this, and he's revealing his plans for global domination to me. While I won't share those with you, I will tell you that I would not have put this chapbook together without him. He's not just a writer, creator, director, producer, or poet―he's also an artist―and so besides helping me with the design and layout of the interior and cover, it was not until the *very* last minute that I rather casually asked, "Do you think I should put blurbs on the back?" 

Seconds later, I got my first one, which I have committed to memory, and will never forget: 


"Sydney Leigh's narrative squirms into the deepest, darkest, most primitive folds of your lizard brain, curls up and oozes dread." 
~Daniel Knauf, Creator, Carnivàle, Writer-Producer, The Blacklist

I am so grateful for all the help and support Daniel has given me along the way, both with this and my other projects. 


He is also one of the best friends that I've ever had. And he doesn't need much more introduction here from me, I'm sure. 
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A man whose opinion matters: Tony Tremblay, aka T.T. Zuma
This was one of our first "Taco Society" meetings at Shorty's, which eventually led to our monthly show on Goffstown TV, "The Taco Society Presents." 

If you don't know Tony, well, your life isn't as rich as it could be. He's a great man, a fantastic writer, an avid reader and reviewer for Horror World, and now he's a TV star on top of it all. I haven't met his beautiful wife Paula yet, but it's no surprise she looks like a model and sounds like a really wonderful person.


Tony does a phenomenal job hosting our show, and I am so proud to be a part of it along with him, Gardner Goldsmith, and Phillip Perron. 

If you happen to get the local channel our show airs on, you can see the schedule for it here. You can also see Episode One and Two on YouTube, and check out our latest episode where we interview members of Tony's writing group The Blank Page here. 


He's got a story in ANTHOLOGY: YEAR THREE, which recently debuted at AnthoCon, and also co-edited EULOGIES III with Nanci Kalanta and Christopher Jones, out now on Amazon with stories from Ray Garton, Brian Hodge, David Morell, and more.
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Spectacular photo courtesy of MJ Preston
Mark "Mj" Preston (aka "Nark")  is a writer, artist, photographer, ice road trucker, military veteran, and all around really cool guy. 
His novels THE EQUINOX and ACADIA EVENT have generated some buzz...check out his site for more information on those here.

I love this picture because it's awesome, but also because of page 89 in Gene's O'Neill's killer novella from Written Backwards, AT THE LAZY K, the fact that I edited B.E. Scully's THE TOWER OF TOGETHER, *and* I reviewed both DREAMSCAPES INTO DARKNESS from Firbolg Publishing (review due out soon on Hellnotes) and Great Old Ones' anthology CANOPIC JARS. 

Guess that means I should read BAD APPLE, stat!

I do love Kristi Peterson Schoonover...so I'm sneaking in a couple pics of us from AnthoCon here just because. 
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Bob "The Miracle" Meracle
Bob and I were both at the Bram Stoker Awards Weekend and 25th Anniversary World Horror Convention 2015 in Atlanta, Georgia, but never crossed paths. We made up for it in Portsmouth, though, and have been talking ever since―and I am really glad he drove all the way from Wisconsin to stay at America's Worst Inn and attend AnthoCon. We had a blast! He's been wonderful to me. Such a good man. Thanks for the friendship, support, and encouragement, Bob.
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Nelson Pyles
What can I say about Nelson? He's very tall, for one. So tall! And he takes great selfies with books...hmm. What else?

He also has a killer voice, and hosted the popular podcast The Wicked Library for an infinite number of phenomenal episodes. I was fortunate enough to have him read my short fiction on Episode 503. To make it more effective, he even had his wife read "Transference," which is the opening paragraph of "Baby's Breath" and was originally published on Hellnotes as a Horror in a Hundred. 


Nelson rocks. Check out his author page here. He just sent me his novel DEMONS, DOLLS, AND MILKSHAKES, and has been checking on me since the day he knew I was ill. He is a great guy, and extremely talented. 


Nelson. Nelson Pyles. He's got a cool name, to boot. 
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Aaron Sterns—#16—Australia.
To be honest, it still blows my mind that Aaron Sterns has been such a source of support for me with this story. I'm a huge fan of his, and respect his work―and work ethic―a great deal. What he gleaned from "Baby's Breath" was exactly what I wanted to hear from a reader, and it meant the world to me to hear it from someone like him. 

No doubt you know him for the WOLF CREEK & WOLF CREEK 2 movies, but if you haven't read WOLF CREEK: ORIGIN, his novel co-written with Greg McLean, please, do yourself a favor and check it out. It is one of my very favorite novels...just an incredible look into the shaping of a killer like Mick Taylor, and brilliantly written. 
Aaron has some exciting projects in the works, so I'm anxious to see what's in store for him. He is a wonderful man
―so humble―and such a source of inspiration. 

Check out his website to stay up to date. 
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Gard The Great!
Gard is the best! He has become such a dear friend to me, I simply don't have enough room or time to go on about him. And I know...I said I would keep this short...

He is so wonderful at helping and encouraging people with whatever they do, and is one of the most intelligent people I have ever met. We have a lot of fun on our show, but he also hosts his own show called Liberty Conspiracy and you can listen to his podcasts of those here. 


His writing is amazing. He has done too much for me to mention, but I recently read his novella BITE, which I loved, and he and I are sharing pages with our poetry in the upcoming CHIRAL MAD 3 anthology, edited by the one and only Michael Bailey. 


The Written Backwards panels we recently took part in at WHC Atlanta and AnthoCon were phenomenal. I still need to do a recap on those...


Thanks for the support, Gard. You are going to continue to do great things, and I consider myself fortunate to call you a friend and a peer. 
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Michael Randolph―#31―all the way to New Delhi, India.
He doesn't let me call him my boss, so I will call myself his boss. Well, okay. Maybe not. 

Michael has been great to me, and I am thoroughly enjoying my job at Eldritch Press as the Chief Editor of the Novels Division. My health issues have been a bit of a challenge, but I am trying to rise to the occasion because I respect Michael very much and love what he is doing at Eldritch. I also love editing, and look forward to our future projects together. He is so supportive and helpful...and a great friend. Thank God they let him out of India. 


He has an author page...check it out if you haven't yet. On top of being a small press publisher, he's a really talented poet, short story writer, and more. Check out his website, as well. I don't want to gush, since I was supposed to be taking the day off. 
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Patrick %$^#! Lacey. That little #%$^@* of a &^%$#*.
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I mean, really. Just look at him.
I used mind control on Patrick to buy a copy of "Baby's Breath" AND a copy of INKBLOTS AND BLOOD SPOTS, Michael Bailey's collection of short stories and poetry illustrated by Daniele Serra. Then, I forced him to be a guest on our television show this month, where I will place him under extreme duress and determine how he came to be such a extraordinary writer and cool human being with ridiculously great taste in music (and books―obviously!―), a perfectly sarcastic sense of humor, and bad ass tattoos all by the age of like, what, sixteen? 

*Note to self: We'll need a fake ID for Shorty's.


I also stole this photo from Sandy Shelonchik (whose name I do know how to pronounce) because it just says it so much about how awesome this guy is. 

Read his work in the BUGS anthology in which "Baby's Breath" originally appeared,  CHIRAL MAD 1
,  WIDOWMAKERS, and more. Then watch him on our next Episode of "The Taco Society Presents," taping July 22nd! No doubt he'll steal the show, and possibly some of the set props...we'll have to keep an eye on him. 
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Courtesy of Morgan Griffith, modeled by Little Sweet. Notice The Library of the Dead hiding behind it, too.
Val Tiley, aka Morgan Griffith, has been a friend since I first read her work way back. She is a fantastic writer, and also happens to have pet rats, which we have in common. When she recently got two new babies, she let me name one Silas, who was too lazy to pose with my book. Little Sweet came to the rescue...Silas is below. 
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Look for Morgan's excellent flash fiction in IN CREEPS THE NIGHT, as well as poetry in THE HORROR ZINE and short fiction in various anthologies, including the upcoming A MYTHOS GRIMMLY anthology from Wanderer's Haven Publications.

She's also an extremely talented artist, and has sent me cards with original artwork that I treasure dearly. Check out the Christmas card I got last year. 
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Cool, huh?
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John Foster, who bought a copy at WHC and put it with some good company!
John thought "Baby's Breath" was poetry, but that's okay. Why? Because he has a novel called MISTER WHITE  coming out this fall with only like, my favorite press, ever, Grey Matter Press, run by Anthony Rivera and Sharon Lawson, as well as a novel called DEAD MEN due out this month from Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing.

John F.D. Taff (who needs no introduction) has called MISTER WHITE
 "frenetically paced, spectacularly gory and eerie as hell." 


John Foster also loves dogs and has a cutie called Coraline. Enough said.  
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The wonderful Kenneth Cain—#6.
Kenneth is a wonderful writer and person. He is a champion for other writers and very humble about his own work, and always seems to show up in Facebook chats with cheery emoticons and inspiring messages when you least expect it but need it most. 
He created this awesome list of markets for writers on his website and has appeared in numerous anthologies and magazines. He's a very cool human being, and one of the few people I know who can keep a saltwater aquarium running and the things in it alive. 

Another bit of exciting news about Kenneth is that he will be publishing a poetry collection with Eldritch Press, VOYAGE OF A MANY DARKENED SOUL. 

I appreciate him more than he knows and am looking forward to meeting him in person one day. 
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The post-AnthoCon pile of books & music Dr. Alex and B.E. Scully took back to Oregon.
Where to begin with the Scullys? I know I said I would keep this short. I realize we're way past that now. So, bullets. 

1. Firbolg Publishing is an amazing press. They publish writers of the highest caliber, produce stunning anthologies every year, and give back to the community and greater world around them in endless ways. 


2. Dr. Alex Scully is a brilliant editor, and more well-versed in Gothic literature than anyone I know. She is also intensely dedicated to authors and the writing community.

3. She and B.E. are amazing individuals, and so cool to be around there is just no way I can put all that into words. 

4. B.E. is an exceptional writer―she definitely stands out among others in our industry―but is as humble as she is gifted. So you should check out her website and not miss out on any chance you get to read her work.

5. I was lucky enough to edit B.E.'s first YA Novel, THE TOWER OF TOGETHER, which is a lovely story, and would be a great gift for any younger readers on your wish list. The cover is spectacular, and also done by Mikio Murakami of Silent Q Design, who did "Baby's Breath" for me.

I just can't say enough about the Scullys, so I'll leave it at that. Well and this awesome picture of them from AnthoCon. But that's it. 
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"Mommas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to be Writers..."
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Adam House—Canada—#19.
Adam has always been extremely supportive of both me and the work we do at Villipede Publications. He is a champion for indie presses and authors, and a fine writer as well. 

Check out his story in our first horror and dark speculative fiction anthology, Darkness Ad Infinitum. "The Song that Crawled" even got a mention in a review from Dave Simms over at Horror World
―you can read it here.
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JG Faherty and his post-WHC pile, of which I am proud to be a part!
I met Greg Faherty for the first time at the 2014 World Horror Convention in Portland, and last May we had an absolute blast at Daniel Knauf's Carnivale party at the World Horror Convention in Atlanta. He and I traded books―I got a copy of his novel THE CURE released by Samhain Publishing in May. 

Check out JG's Facebook page and website to stay up to date on his releases. He's a fantastic writer and truly one of the coolest people I have ever had the pleasure of meeting in my entire life.


Plus, he is a master at taking selfies...that's me, him, and my imaginary roommate, Ted, who drove all the way from Kentucky to be in that picture with us. 
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Selfie master.
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Andrew "Freud" Freudenberg...all the way to England. #2.
Freud is difficult to explain in words. He's a very unique individual―by unique I mean awesome and extraordinary―and I get a little choked up thinking about him since he and his beautiful wife Sallyann have been so kind to me. They have three beautiful boys and the coolest accents you've ever heard, if you're not from England too. They are also the proud parents of a Pug named Gomez. 

Freud is a great writer, an amazing father, just played Scrabble 19 hours ago, and has killer taste in music. He also dons a sublime beard and LOVES to read...he's got a bit of an addition to books, methinks. 


If you know Freud, this is not news to you. He's just the kind of person you feel lucky know once you do. 

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The Freudster
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The lovely and oh-so-talented Julya Oui...all the way to Malaysia.
Julya has been supporting my work for so long now...I consider her a great friend and and am In awe of both her creative abilities and altruistic gestures. She is, quite simply, an amazing human being. 
In her neat blog post "I Am No. 8" she posted this picture and the one below, which is the note card I included with the chapbook. 


Her collection HERE BE NIGHTMARES has been long listed for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Awards, which makes it even more special to have a story in the collection dedicated to me and a mention in the acknowledgments. 

Thank you, Julya, and good luck! <3 
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Thank heavens I did not spill coffee on this one...
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TG Arsenault! \m/ #43 \m/
I met TG for the first time at AnthoCon, and he was as cool as I expected―even more so. We had so much fun! He's someone else i can share a love of metal with, so we have that in common...and Andrew Wolter, as well. We had to divide our time up with him at the con, but we did pretty well, I think!

Check out TG's Amazon Author page here for all of his publications. He totally rocks!
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Gard and Phil
I look like the cat who ate the canary, but in all actuality, I had just eaten a monster burrito. More on Phil Perron in a bit.
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Jonathan Lees
I nearly died when I ran into my old North Andover High classmate Jonathan Lees at the World Horror Convention in Atlanta! If I remember correctly, we were standing outside with Jack Ketchum when we saw each other. I could NOT believe it. I was like, "I grew up with a Jonathan Lees..." as if there were no possible way it could be him. I mean, what are the odds?

Jonathan and I have a lot of catching up to do, and I can't wait to find out what he's been up to all these years. I'm so glad to be back in touch and know that I have a fellow in horror from my hometown! It was so kind of him to buy a copy of the book, and I am anxious to see some of his work soon as well. 
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Aaron Gudmunson—#4.
Aaron Gudmunson is awesome. 

I just love his work, and soon I'll be editing his novel for Eldritch Press! He was kind enough to provide a blurb for "Baby's Breath," and has always been supportive of me in all of my endeavors. He's just an overall super cool guy. 


Be sure to check out his fantastic story "The Morgue" in Firbolg Publishing's Enter at Your Own Risk: Dreamscapes into Darkness as well as SNOW GLOBE, his impressive debut novel.
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Bob and me at AnthoCon in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
I tried to sell Bob TWO COPIES, but instead he went home and mailed me all of his t-shirts. He even sent Holden treats! We are so lucky to have such great friends.
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The guys.
I already talked about Tony and Gard, so I'm going to focus on the guy on the left here: Phillip Perron. 

Phil is the whole reason I'm typing this post, this epic post that started long ago and was supposed to be short and sweet but has taken on a life of its own...

Phil runs Great Old Ones Publishing, and accepted "Baby's Breath" into the Bugs: Tales That Slither, Creep, and Crawl anthology back in April of 2014. I will never forget how worried I was that he had just had a baby, and my story would be too much for him...as soon as I hit "send" I had a panic attack. 

But, he liked it, and sent it off to great British writer and director Simon Rumley, who was writing the Foreword of the anthology, and who said some amazing things about my story along with some other stories in the anthology, including Phil's―he called Phil's "dreamlike and almost Lynchian...enigmatic and beguiling."

Phil is a character, and incredibly intelligent. I LOVE his writing, and we can talk about movies non-stop...in fact, check out Dark Discussions, his podcast about horror films. Be sure to check out the Great Old Ones website for submission opportunities and releases, as well.They have some great work out already, and more lined up. I started reading the CRYPTIDS anthology and absolutely loved Simon Rumley's story, "The Kind Wolf of Surrey Downs." I'm sure there are more must-reads in that one.


Thom Erb also has a new short story collection out with them called DARK GARDENS with an introduction from Gord Rollo, which looks great. 

We have a great time at our "Taco Society" meetings, and I swear, he is so funny he could do stand-up comedy―but when we go on air for "The Taco Society Presents," he is as serious as a heart attack and hosts that show like nobody's business. 

So...I have Phil to thank for accepting this story into the anthology, for sending it to Simon, for choosing it as the anchor tale, for supporting and encouraging me along the way as it was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award and won the Best Horror Short Story Award in the P&E Reader's Poll, and then for allowing me to reprint it with Villipede Publications as a chapbook to take to the World Horror Convention and AnthoCon for readings and signings...

And finally, for allowing me to release it on Amazon today.

Print Edition available now, e-book version to follow. 



Thanks to all of you, as well. I could not have done this without your help, guidance, encouragement, and support.
As always, 
Thanks for reading,
Syd

Buy the Print Edition 
of 
"Baby's Breath" 
on Amazon
or the 
CreateSpace eStore

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Add 
"Baby's Breath" 
on 
Goodreads

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Baby's Breath Chapbooks, WHC Atlanta, & Other News

4/30/2015

1 Comment

 
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WHC is a week away. I can’t believe I am flying to Atlanta  in six days and still have so much to do. SHIT!

So far I have limited, signed edition chapbooks set aside for the following people:
 
1.     John Boden
2.     Andrew Freudenberg
3.     Stephen Williams
4.     Aaron Gudmunson
5.     Chris & Kim
6.     Kenneth Cain
7.     Michael Randolph
8.     Rose Blackthorn
9.     Kurt Fawver
10.  Beth Murphy
11.  Nelson Pyles
12.  Tony Tremblay
13.  Sandy Gibbons
14.  John Foster
15.  Ken Wood 
16.  Aaron Sterns
17.  Morgan Griffith
18.  David North-Martino
19.  Adam House
20.  MJ Preston

For the record, anyone who provided a blurb will not be paying for it, so don’t even try. (Aaron G...we will discuss this further!)

But I’d like to ask anyone not attending the convention in Atlanta to please allow me to send these out after I return since I’m just so pressed for time. They’re all numbered and signed and set aside for you in clear plastic slipcases, and when I get back I will also inscribe them with a personal note as a thank you for waiting.

Since these first twenty sold so fast, I uploaded and ordered a second edition that do not have the numbered signature page and with a slightly different design that I will sell if the limited edition runs out. They won’t have the special seal the limited edition chapbooks have on the slipcase or receive a personalized inscription.

Anyway, if you guys can sit tight, I’ll be in touch about sending these your way upon my return. Some are going to Australia, Canada, England, and other wild destinations, so I may need some time to hunker down at the post office. Thanks for your support!

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Now onto the con. Check out these badges, with art provided by James Powell.  Cool, huh?
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There will also be a limited supply of bookmarks designed by Greg Chapman, who is not only an artist, but one hell of a writer. Check these out...I hope I get my hands on one.
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I mentioned before that I will have an interview with Jack Ketchum for his Lifetime Achievement Award appearing in the Souvenir Book. 

From HWA President Lisa Morton: “Here's a sneak peek at the gorgeous cover for our souvenir book, featuring art by Artist Guest of Honor Bob Eggleton and edited by Eric J. Guignard and Bailey Hunter.
 This baby is FAT, too—over 100,000 words of horrorific fiction, nonfiction, art, and more.”
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The Programming for WHC must have been a herculean task, and Anya Martin and her team have done an extraordinary job at putting together a fantastic lineup of events. I'll be on some myself, but I'm really looking forward to attending several panels and readings and just can't wait for all of this to happen. 

Check out the full schedule of events here. 

The HWA has been running a series of interviews called "Know a Nominee" in the weeks before the convention. These are edited by Doug Murano and facilitated by the lovely Emma Audsley.


Here are some of the nominees who have been interviewed so far:

Leslie Klinger
John F. D. Taff
Corrinne De Winter
Patrick Freivald
Usman T. Malik
Craig DiLouie
Steve Rasnic Tem
Rena Mason

Stephanie M. Wytovich

Check out the first in the series of interviews
here, and you can read the rest from there. 

And congrats to all the nominees!
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The Library of the Dead is now live on Amazon. 

The anthology contains my story "Night Soliloquy" alongside new fiction by Yvonne Navarro, Mary SanGiovanni, Brian Keene, Roberta Lannes, Kealan Patrick Burke, Chris Marrs, Jesus F. Gonzalez, Weston Ochse, Lucy A. Snyder, Christopher Golden, Tim Lebbon, Rena Mason, Michael McBride, Erinn Kemper, Gene O'Neill, and Gary A. Braunbeck, with illustrations by Glenn Denny Gak, an introduction/novelette by Norman Partridge, and an interlinking story by "The Librarian," aka Michael Bailey, to guide you throughout.

Check out this killer trailer Michael Bailey made for the book, which even my mother thinks is "awesome."
On Friday, May 8th, from 4-5 PM, I’ll be attending a panel called “Readings and Shenanigans for THE LIBRARY OF THE DEAD and QUALIA NOUS in SARNATH.

Description: Official book launch for The Library Of The Dead, and a celebration of Qualia Nous (Bram Stoker Award Nominee for Superior Achievement in an Anthology). Readings, signings, and 10 boo giveaways of each title.

Moderator: Michael Bailey. Panelists: Jason V Brock, James Chambers, Patrick Freivald, Erinn L. Kemper, Sydney Leigh, Usman T. Malik, Chris Marrs, Rena Mason,Yvonne Navarro, William F. Nolan, Weston Ochse, Marge Simon, and Lucy A. Snyder.

So. Much. Fun.
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The Library of the Dead will also be relaunched at AnthoCon  in Portsmouth, New Hampshire from June 5-7, 2015. 

Speaking of AnthoCon, Tim Deal of Shroud just released the Spring Issue, which features "Estuary," my poem about a death which has haunted me for almost eighteen years. You can find it on Amazon in eBook here, and Tim will later compile the work from it into a print omnibus edition.  

Get a load of this cover.
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Okay...lastly. Forthcoming from Written Backwards Press, Chiral Mad 3 will include my poems “Folie à Plusieurs” and “Folie à Deux.” 

This amazing anthology will also feature poetry from:

Elizabeth Massie
Marge Simon
Stephanie M. Wytovich
Bruce Boston
Erik T. Johnson
Gardner Goldsmith

As well as fiction by:

Gene O’Neill
Ramsey Campbell
Jessica May Lin
Paul Michael Anderson
Stephen King
Richard Thomas

...and more announcements to come.

Here's the cover, another spectacular work of art by Michael Bailey.
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Speaking of Michael Bailey, I'm going to be bringing a few copies of Inkblots and Blood Spots with me to WHC, but if you are going and want an autographed copy your best bet is to bring yours or pick one up now. 

The books I will have with me in very limited quantity are below, and I'm not sure what Eagle Eye Books will have in stock. So if you want anything signed please be sure to bring it!
Hope to see you there...


Thanks for reading,
Syd
1 Comment

"Baby's Breath" Chapbook Cover Reveal

3/30/2015

0 Comments

 
Words cannot express how completely blown away I am by the artwork Mikio Murakami of Silent Q Design did for this. I mean, seriously. His covers for Shock Totem are astounding--have you seen them? Each one is more unique and spectacular than the next.

But you guys know....when it's for your own work, it's different. This was just outside the realm of anything I could have imagined for the story artistically. It is beyond perfect. Don't you think?

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Cover art by Mikio Murakami, © Shawna L Bernard
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Cover art by Mikio Murakami, © Shawna L Bernard
I'm not going to lie...the layout process is always grueling, but most of my time was spent laboring over which blurbs to use on the cover. Let me tell you, it is much easier when you are doing it for someone else's work. Damn! I wanted to have ALL THE BLURBS on the cover!

And truly, they all meant the world to me--but it was really special to have Aaron Sterns say what he did about it:

“A heartbreaking story, all the more powerful for how deeply personal it evidently is. One of those important works of horror that captures something archetypal in the human condition, and manages to (fittingly) burrow into the brain and linger long after the page.”

This was a deeply personal story--so to see the artwork reflect that, and to read things about it from people I look up to and admire so greatly was extremely moving--never mind humbling. Aaron's novel WOLF CREEK: ORIGIN, a prequel to the wildly popular WOLF CREEK movies, was one of the best books I read last year...in fact, I read it more than once. And just having someone like Aaron say your work is important really resonates. 

To me, blurbs themselves are kind of a personal thing. The bonus is you get to share them with others. And I'm thrilled to have the kind words I do from the people who shared them with me for this story. 

Eternal gratitude goes to my dear friend Daniel Knauf, aka Hollywood, for putting up with me during this process--my OCD does not make the publishing process an easy time for me or anyone who knows me--and to everyone who provided blurbs and helped along the way: Gard Goldsmith, Aaron Sterns, Kurt Fawver, Robin Spriggs, Aaron Gudmunson, Jeremy Wagner, Julya Oui, John Dixon, Carl R. Moore, Michael Randolph, Gregory Norris, Phil Perron, Matt Edginton, of course Simon Rumley...

And again, a huge THANK YOU to every single one of you who read it, gave me feedback on it, promoted it, believed in it, voted for it, and/or placed me alongside the fine writers in the Short Fiction Category of the Bram Stoker Awards. Every single gesture has been greatly appreciated. 

Hope you guys like the cover as much as I do. If all goes as planned, I'll be selling the signed limited edition version of these at WHC Atlanta and upon request for anyone who would like one. I'm finalizing the interior now and hope to have them in hand by the end of the month. 

Be sure to check out Mikio's page and consider him for future projects. He was absolutely amazing to work with in every way. 
Thanks for reading,
Syd
0 Comments

Baby's Breath—Bram Stoker Nomination & WHC Atlanta

3/17/2015

2 Comments

 

Bram Stoker Awards, WHC Atlanta, and other news...

I could not have been more shocked to learn that "Baby's Breath" made it through to the Final Ballot of the Bram Stoker Awards, released last month by the Horror Writers Association.

You can find the full list of nominees here. Best of luck to all the finalists, and congratulations on your nominations! 
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I wrote a longer post about this on Facebook, but the simple truth is that this nomination is extremely humbling and all very surreal. 

There are a lot of people I feel are a direct result of any successes I achieve in my writing or otherwise, so really, most of my posts end up consisting of a long list of names anyway.

But this story has proven to be pivotal for me in a lot of ways...it was an accomplishment for me just to write to begin with, and Simon Rumley's words of praise about it  in the Foreword of Bugs: Tales that Slither, Creep and Crawl quite literally meant the world to me.

Then to have it go on to win the award for Best Horror Short Story and now this is just mind blowing, really. 

I'm absolutely thrilled to be nominated in the same category as writers I so greatly admire, and the ballot is full of works I enjoyed and hold in extremely high regard. Three years ago, Stephen King won in this category, and in the years since, Lucy Snyder and David Gerrold. Past and current nominees include Gene O'Neill, George Saunders, Kaaron Warren, Bruce Boston, Michael Bailey, Rena Mason, John Palisano, Joe Lansdale, Norman Prentiss, Damien Angelica Walters, Usman Tanveer Malik, and more stellar writers than I can even wrap my head around. This is just truly, truly amazing to me.


You can read "Baby's Breath" here. I'll also be bringing a limited number of chapbooks to the World Horror Convention in Atlanta and possibly AnthoCon to sign, so if you'd like a copy, let me know. I'm working with an outrageously talented artist who I'm keeping under wraps for now. But I'm really excited. 

My eternal gratitude goes to the HWA and each and every member who felt my work was worthy of this prestigious nomination. It's something I will treasure for the rest of my life.

I'm also very grateful to Marge Simon, who asked me to guest her Blood & Spades Column for the April issue of the HWA Newsletter. I've written an essay called "The Slow Bite of Horror's Tiny Teeth" and incorporated a few of my poems into the column, which was a lot of fun. Last month Michael Bailey guested the column and talked a lot about Inkblots and Blood Spots
, the collection Villipede released of his last November. He also included "Open Auras" and "All But the Things That Cannot Be Torn," two of my favorite poems from the collection. 
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Another reason I'm grateful to Marge is because she invited me to be on the Dark Poets Panel at this year's World Horror Convention. It's such an honor...and if you'll be in Atlanta for the con, I do hope you'll stop by.  

Aside from doing the panel, I'll be hanging around with my good friend Daniel Knauf, who I don't know what I would do without, Gard Goldsmith, one of the most fabulous writers--and people--I know, and Jeremy Wagner, who will be on tour in Europe with his kick ass band Broken Hope next month! There are so many great people I'm looking forward to seeing this year...John Boden (and hopefully Ken Wood) of Shock Totem Publications, Villipede author Kurt Fawver, John Dixon (!), Alex and B.E. Scully of Firbolg Publishing, Taylor Grant, Rena Mason, John Palisano, Michael Bailey, Usman Malik, Anthony Rivera of Grey Matter Press, J.G. Faherty, Randy D. Rubin, Stephanie Wytovich, Jason and Sunni Brock, Jim and Janice Leach of The Daily Nightmare, Maddie Holliday Von Stark, and on and on...

In other words, if you're going, I'm looking forward to seeing you...and if you're not registered yet, you should be. 

My imaginary roommate Ted is even making an appearance! Ted is driving all the way from Kentucky to be there...I can hardly believe it myself. 

There are three people who won't be going that I'll miss dearly, though: Rose Blackthorn, Geno Mortensen, and Carl R. Moore. Those three were my WHC crew last year in Portland, and it won't be the same without them. But check out Rose's new release from Eldritch Press--I'm really proud of her--her first poetry collection, Thorns, Hearts and Thistles is almost as beautiful as she is. And Carl has a novella called Torn From the Devil's Chest forthcoming from Charoin Coin Press, and his website has free stories, poems, and updates on the progress. Carl posts great reviews and also has another fantastic collection called Slash of Crimson and Other Stories coming out in the near future, as well.

Lastly, my interview with Jack Ketchum will appear in the Souvenir Book this year, which is really exciting. I absolutely loved reading his answers to my questions, and can't wait for you to see them, too. I was thrilled when Eric Guignard reached out to me to interview Jack for his Lifetime Achievement Award. Here's a picture of last year's Souvenir Book. 
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Anyway, to tie off, some of you know that my son has been in the hospital for a week now, and between my health issues and his, we've had an extremely challenging year. I'm certainly nervous about the timing of the convention and have been wrapped up in family matters here at home, but am really looking forward to seeing everyone and taking some time away to focus on my second love. I'm sure you all know what that is by now. 

No, not booze. Horror. 
Thanks for reading,
Syd
2 Comments

Baby's Breath—Preliminary Stoker Ballot & Best Horror Short Story Award

1/21/2015

2 Comments

 
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It's been a good year for horror . . . and for me. 

Recently, I was lucky enough to be awarded Best Horror Short Story for "Baby's Breath" in the 2014 P&E Readers' Poll. I'm so grateful for everyone who took the time to read the story and vote for me, and especially appreciative for those of you who took the time to leave feedback. It meant a great deal. This award means a great deal.
Yesterday I found out that "Baby's Breath" also made the 2014 Bram Stoker Preliminary Ballot in the category for Superior Achievement in Short Fiction. What an honor. Just last month I upgraded from Affiliate to Active Status in the HWA, and feel truly blessed to be part of such a talented, gracious community of writers, artists, and professionals in the horror industry. 

I mentioned recently on Facebook that "Baby's Breath" carried a substantial amount of personal significance to me for a few reasons. In a nutshell, it's a tribute to someone I never met, but have learned to love through the eyes of another. I've come to know this woman from someone who has become a stronger person for all of her weaknesses and the tragedies she faced throughout her short, sad, and pained life. And despite her weaknesses, she also had many strengths. 

That said, the Diane in my story is not the same Diane about whom I am speaking. Though based on some fact, I took her story to the extreme--as we often do in horror--and in my own way, sought some vindication for her that she was unable to find on her own.
In addition to basing this story on the real-life story of someone else, an astute friend pointed out that a lot of "Baby's Breath" seems to be an unveiling of some of the emotional, physical, and psychological horrors I faced in the many years following the accident which retired me from teaching at 36 years of age. That friend was right. 

There's quite a bit of symbolism in "Baby's Breath" that dwells beneath the uncomfortable, unpleasant, and often unbearable surface of the narrative. Those years following my accident were long, lonely, and excruciating--and coming to terms with the grief of losing a career I had worked and fought so hard to secure was not easy. I had a lot of support from my family and friends, and can't imagine what it must be like for someone to endure such an ordeal without that--so relatively speaking, I always tried to consider myself extremely lucky.

Writing the story was hard. It was only the second I wrote start to finish after emerging from the black hole into which I had fallen after the accident. Years of pain, post-concussive symptoms, surgeries, fighting the nightmare that is worker's compensation, depression . . . there was a time I never thought I would read again, let alone write. Diane's descent into madness, insecurity, paranoia, and reclusivity was likely an exaggerated depiction of what I experienced during that time, though while writing it I'm not altogether sure I was aware of this. I think it takes a step back--or even someone else pointing it out after the fact--to recognize something like this happening in our writing. 

Do you ever find yourself unintentionally writing about your own experiences in your work? Writing yourself into your characters? 

Like King said, "Fiction is the truth inside the lie."
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My "write nights" with Tracy were instrumental in my recovery--as both a functioning human being and writer. I wrote the first paragraph of "Baby's Breath" and had it published as a hundred word piece called "Transference" on Hellnotes in January of last year, and at the prodding of Ann K. Boyer, another good friend, fleshed it out into a short story for the BUGS anthology.

Simon Rumley's praise for "Baby's Breath" in the Foreword did more for me than I can describe in words. But I will say that reading what he said about my work was one of those once-in-a-lifetime moments I will never forget. I'd be remiss not to thank the great Daniel Knauf for his invaluable support both as a friend and professional, as well. 


And to all of you who have offered help and assistance along the way--be it through friendship or support of this story and/or other work--thank you. You can't possibly know how much it means to me. 

My first "professional" experience assimilating back into the industry was negative and unpleasant to say the least, and if it weren't for the kindness and actual professionalism so many of you showed to outweigh that, it would have been easy to just give up. 

But if an accident like the one I had  can't keep me down, and cancer can't beat me, one bad apple in the barrel sure isn't going to make me toss the whole thing out. It just makes me appreciate the goodness of the others that much more.

There are way too many good apples to mention, but in addition to those I’ve named, special thanks for various reasons go to Morgan Griffith, Rose Blackthorn, Carl R. Moore, Gretch, Sandy and Mark, Julya Oui, Suzy Saylor, John R. Little, John Palisano, Rena Mason, Gard Goldsmith, Taylor Grant, Kurt Fawver, Michael Randolph, Randy D. Rubin, Maddie Von Stark, Kristi DeMeester, Ken Wood, John Boden, Tim Deal, Freud, Sal, Matt Edginton, Mark Matthews, Daniele Serra, Jeremy Wagner, Dr. Alex and Bobbi Scully, Aaron Gudmunson, JDS, Stephen Williams, Jon Moon, David North-Martino, Colum McKnightmare, Josh Black, Kenneth Cain, Amie, Aaron Sterns, John Dixon, Ted, Sean Padlo, Matthew Bartlett, ChickaDee, Tracie Orsi, Adam Domville, Stephanie Wytovich, Marge Simon, Alexander Zelenyj, Eric J. Guignard, Matt Manochio, Michael Bailey, Chris Kelso, Greg Norris, Ken MacGregor, April Hawks, John Urbancik, André Øvredal, Anthony Rivera, Paul Fry, Joe Lansdale, Norman Prentiss, Kami Garcia, Lawrence Connolly, Robin Spriggs, Emma Audsley, Richard Thomas, Killion Slade, Gene O'Neill, John DeMember, Dave Dormer, Douglas E. Winter, and many others who hopefully know who you are. 


If you haven't read "Baby's Breath" yet, 
you can read it here. 

These are some of the kind things readers and peers have said about it:


“The narrator's slow unhinging is perfectly paced 
and the author pushes against the border of the grotesque 
just enough to make the story as viscerally disturbing 
as it is psychologically unsettling . . . 
A supremely skilled tale of the decomposition of a relationship and the horrifying consequences of failed parenthood.”

“I was in pain the entire time I read this story. A fantastic piece of horror that burrows deep into the psyche as well as the skin.”

“exquisitely grotesque” 

“A visceral story that gets right under your skin.”

“The writing is tight and spare . . . 

The non-sequential narrative is handled effectively, 
allowing the story to open with a strong hook before rewinding to fill in the details of the germinating horror.”


“utterly chilling . . . Diane's macabre narrative 
is a powerful shot of multifaceted strangeness.”


“engrossing from the first page until the last, 

and deliciously horrific throughout.”

“short, sharp, emotional and uncomfortable”

“An exquisitely dreadful story.” 

“The most chilling short I read all year.”

Of course I am *beyond* thrilled that both "Dandelion Clocks" and Inkblots and Blood Spots appear on the ballot, as well. 

We at Villipede are very proud of that collection and honored to be representing Michael Bailey's stellar work. I simply can't say enough about the collection, except that I believe with every fiber of my being that it fully deserves to be on the ballot. You've all heard me rave about it for some time now, and I am pleased to see it among such fine company in its category. 


As far as "Dandelion Clocks" goes, well . . . Michael seems surprised it made it through, but I'm not. Again, he's in really good company! But I fell head over heels in love with that novelette and think he deserves a place on the ballot as much as anybody. And the fact that Douglas E. Winter guest-edited that piece makes it even more special to me. 

Michael blogged about the Preliminary Ballot here . . . slightly more eloquently than me, perhaps. Thanks for the kind words, Michael!

Here is the ballot, as announced by the HWA:

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The Horror Writers Association (HWA) is pleased to announce the Preliminary Ballots for the 2014 Bram Stoker Awards®. The HWA is the premiere writers organization in the horror and dark fiction genre, with over 1,300 members. We have presented the Bram Stoker Awards in various categories since 1987.

Superior Achievement in a Novel
Tim Burke – The Flesh Sutra (NobleFusion Press)
Adam Christopher – The Burning Dark (Tor Books)
Michaelbrent Collings – This Darkness Light (self-published)
Lawrence C. Connolly – Vortex (Fantasist Enterprises)
Craig DiLouie – Suffer the Children (Gallery Books of Simon & Schuster)
Patrick Freivald – Jade Sky (JournalStone)
Chuck Palahniuk – Beautiful You (Jonathan Cape, Vintage/Penguin Random House UK)
Christopher Rice – The Vines (47North)
Brett J. Talley – The Reborn (JournalStone)
Steve Rasnic Tem – Blood Kin (Solaris Books)


Superior Achievement in a First Novel
Maria Alexander – Mr. Wicker (Raw Dog Screaming Press)
J.D. Barker – Forsaken (Hampton Creek Press)
Janice Gable Bashman – Predator (Month9Books)
David Cronenberg – Consumed (Scribner)
Michael Knost – Return of the Mothman (Woodland Press)
Daniel Levine – Hyde (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Josh Malerman – Bird Box (Harper Collins)
Whitney Miller – The Violet Hour (Flux)
Chantal Noordeloos – Angel Manor (Horrific Tales Publishing)
C.J. Waller – Predator X (Severed Press)


Superior Achievement in a Young Adult Novel
Ari Berk – Lych Way (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers)
Jake Bible – Intentional Haunting (Permuted Press)
Ilsa J. Bick – White Space (Egmont)
John Dixon – Phoenix Island (Simon & Schuster/Gallery Books)
Kami Garcia – Unmarked (The Legion Series Book 2) (Little Brown Books for Young Readers)
S.E. Green – Killer Instinct (Simon & Schuster/Simon Pulse)
Tonya Hurley – Passionaries (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Micol Ostow – Amity (Egmont)
Peter Adam Salomon – All Those Broken Angels (Flux)
Stan Swanson and Araminta Star Matthews – Horror High School: Return of the Loving Dead (Curiosity Quills Press)
Johnny Worthen – Eleanor: Book 1 (The Unseen) (Jolly Fish Press)


Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel
Charles Burns – Sugar Skull
Emily Carroll – Through the Woods
Victor Gischler – Kiss Me Satan
Joe Hill – Locke and Key, Vol. 6
Joe R. Lansdale and Daniele Serra – I Tell You It’s Love (Short, Scary Tales Publications)
Jonathan Maberry – Bad Blood (Dark Horse Books)
Paul Tobin – The Witcher


Superior Achievement in Long Fiction
Michael Bailey – Dandelion Clocks (Inkblots and Blood Spots) (Villipede Publications)
Taylor Grant – The Infected (Cemetery Dance #71) (Cemetery Dance)
Eric J. Guignard – Dreams of a Little Suicide (Hell Comes To Hollywood II: Twenty-Two More Tales Of Tinseltown Terror (Volume 2) (Big Time Books)
Kate Jonez – Ceremony of Flies (DarkFuse)
Joe R. Lansdale – Fishing for Dinosaurs (Limbus, Inc., Book II) (JournalStone)
Jonathan Maberry – Three Guys Walk Into a Bar (Limbus, Inc., Book II) (JournalStone)
Joe McKinney – Lost and Found (Limbus, Inc., Book II) (JournalStone)
Gene O’Neill – Ridin the Dawg (Mia Moja) (Thunderstorm Books)
John F.D. Taff – The Long Long Breakdown (The End in all Beginnings) (Grey Matter Press)
Gregor Xane – The Riggle Twins (Bad Apples) (Corpus Press)


Superior Achievement in Short Fiction
Dale Bailey – Sleep Paralysis (Nightmare Magazine, April 2014) (Nightmare)
Hal Bodner – Hot Tub (Hell Comes to Hollywood II) (Big Time Books)
Patrick Freivald – Trigger Warning (Demonic Visions Book 4) (Chris Robertson)
Sydney Leigh – Baby’s Breath (Bugs: Tales That Slither, Creep, and Crawl) (Great Old Ones Publishing)
Usman T. Malik – The Vaporization Enthalpy of a Peculiar Pakistani Family (Qualia Nous) (Written Backwards)
Alessandro Manzetti – Nature’s Oddities (The Shaman: And Other Shadows) (self-published)
Rena Mason – Ruminations (Qualia Nous) (Written Backwards)
John Palisano – Splinterette (Widowmakers: A Benefit Anthology of Dark Fiction)
Sayuri Ueda – The Street of Fruiting Bodies (Phantasm Japan) (Haikasoru, an imprint of VIZ Media, LLC)
Genevieve Valentine – A Dweller in Amenty (Nightmare Magazine, March 2014) (Nightmare)
Damien Angelica Walters – The Floating Girls: A Documentary (Jamais Vu, Issue Three) (Post Mortem Press)


Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection
Michael Bailey – Inkblots and Blood Spots (Villipede Publications)
Stephen Graham Jones – After the People Lights Have Gone Off (Dark House Press)
John R. Little – Little by Little (Bad Moon Books)
Helen Marshall – Gifts for the One Who Comes After (ChiZine Publications)
David Sakmyster – Escape Plans (Wordfire Press)
Terrence Scott – The Madeleine Wheel: Playing with Spiders (Amazon)
Lucy Snyder – Soft Apocalypses (Raw Dog Screaming Press)
Robin Spriggs – The Untold Tales of Ozman Droom (Anomalous Books)
John F.D. Taff – The End In All Beginnings (Grey Matter Press)
Alexander Zelenyj – Songs for the Lost (Eibonvale Press)


Superior Achievement in an Anthology
John Joseph Adams and Hugh Howey – The End Is Nigh (Broad Reach Publishing)
Michael Bailey – Qualia Nous (Written Backwards)
Jason Brock – A Darke Phantastique (Cycatrix Press)
Ellen Datlow – Fearful Symmetries (ChiZine Publications)
Kate Jonez – Halloween Tales (Omnium Gatherum)
Eric Miller – Hell Comes to Hollywood II (Big Time Books)
Chuck Palahniuk, Richard Thomas, and Dennis Widmyer – Burnt Tongues (Medallion Press)
Brian M. Sammons – The Dark Rites of Cthulhu (April Moon Books)
Brett J. Talley – Limbus, Inc., Book II (JournalStone)
Terry M. West – Journals of Horror: Found Fiction (Pleasant Storm Entertainment)


Superior Achievement in a Screenplay
Scott M. Gimple – The Walking Dead: The Grove, episode 4:14 (AMC)
Jennifer Kent – The Babadook (Causeway Films)
Alex Kurtzman and Mark Goffman – Sleepy Hollow: “Bad Blood” (Sketch Films/K/O Paper Products/20th Century Fox Television)
John Logan – Penny Dreadful: Séance (Desert Wolf Productions/Neal Street Productions)


Greg Mclean and Aaron Sterns – Wolf Creek 2 (Emu Creek Pictures)
Steven Moffat – Doctor Who: Listen (British Broadcasting Corporation)
Cameron Porsendah – Helix: Pilot (Tall Ship Productions/Kaji Productions/Muse Entertainment/Lynda Obst Productions/in association with Sony Pictures Television)
Jack Thomas Smith –Infliction (Fox Trail Productions)
James Wong – American Horror Story: Coven: “The Magical Delights of Stevie Nicks” (FX Network)

Superior Achievement in Non-Fiction
Massimo Berruti, S.T. Joshi, and Sam Gafford – William Hope Hodgson: Voices from the Borderland (Hippocampus Press)
Jason V. Brock – Disorders of Magnitude (Rowman & Littlefield)
Hayley Campbell – The Art of Neil Gaiman (HarperCollins Publishers)
S.T. Joshi – Lovecraft and A World in Transition (Hippocampus Press)
Leslie S. Klinger – The New Annotated H.P. Lovecraft (Liveright Publishing Corp., a division of W.W. Norton & Co.)
Joe Mynhardt and Emma Audsley – Horror 101: The Way Forward (Crystal Lake Publishing)
Robert Damon Schneck – Mrs. Wakeman vs. the Antichrist (Tarcher/Penguin)
Lucy Snyder – Shooting Yourself in the Head For Fun and Profit: A Writer’s Survival Guide (Post Mortem Press)
Tom Weaver, David Schecter, and Steve Kronenberg – The Creature Chronicles: Exploring the Black Lagoon Trilogy (McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers)

Superior Achievement in a Poetry Collection
Robert Payne Cabeen – Fearworms: Selected Poems (Fanboy Comics)
G.O. Clark – Gravedigger’s Dance (Dark Renaissance Books)
David E. Cowen – The Madness of Empty Spaces (Weasel Press)
Corrinne De Winter and Alessandro Manzetti – Venus Intervention (Kipple Officina Libraria)
Wade German – Dreams from the Black Nebula (Hippocampus Press)
Tom Piccirilli – Forgiving Judas (Crossroad Press)
Michelle Scalise – The Manufacturer of Sorrow (Eldritch Press)
Marge Simon and Mary Turzillo – Sweet Poison (Dark Renaissance Books)
Tiffany Tang – Creepy Little Death Poems (Dreality Press)
Stephanie Wytovich – Mourning Jewelry (Raw Dog Screaming Press)

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Huge congratulations to everyone on this list. 
I am so incredibly honored to be included in such company!
Voting for works on the Preliminary Ballot will take place between February 1st and 15th, and the Final Ballot will be announced on February 23rd. Anyone who appears on the Final Ballot will be a Bram Stoker Nominated Author or Artist.

Voting HWA Members: For copies of "Baby's Breath," "Dandelion Clocks," or Inkblots and Blood Spots, feel free to shoot me an email or PM via my contact page. They are also available to download on the HWA Forum. 

The lucky winners of the Bram Stoker Awards will be announced on May 9th at the awards ceremony during the 2015 World Horror Convention in Atlanta. 

No matter what, I'll be there to cheer everyone on. 
Thanks for reading,
Syd
xox
2 Comments

Inkblots and Blood Spots

11/23/2014

1 Comment

 
We recently revealed the stunning cover for Inkblots and Blood Spots, Michael Bailey's short story and poetry collection coming on November 30th from Villipede Publications. 


(*update: the book is now available here)

The cover and interior illustrations were designed by British Fantasy Award-winning artist Daniele Serra, an absolute genius who also happens to be one of the loveliest human beings in the universe. His work is dark, beautiful, and a perfect match for Michael's writing.
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One of the biggest thrills for me during the creation and development of this project was reaching out to various people in the industry and sharing the collection for early blurbs. We were lucky enough to receive kind words of praise from John R. Little, Tom Monteleone, F. Paul Wilson, Norman Prentiss, Gene O'Neill, Tim Deal, Richard Thomas, and B.E. Scully. 

To boot, Douglas E. Winter provided the introduction while on business travel in Reykjavik, Iceland. As an editor, Doug has been a hero of mine since I picked up Prime Evil as a fifteen year old kid and fell in love with my first horror anthology. I still have it today...
I keep it within reach, and look at it often. 

The proof of the book looks absolutely beautiful. Here's a gallery of thumbnail images . . . see for yourself.
Fans of Michael's may already be familiar with some of the pieces; favorites among readers are "I Wanted Black," which is very King-esque and shows off Bailey's skills in the art of crafting extremely 
short fiction; "Fireman / Primal Tongue," the Fahrenheit 451-inspired piece which includes a passage from the novel and earned Michael both a Stoker nomination and an honorable mention on Ellen Datlow's Year's Best Horror list; "Underwater Ferris Wheel," a surreal and emotive piece which switches points of view and flawlessly borders on the verge of being terrifying at every turn; "Not the Child," a tale of faeries unlike any you've ever read; and "Bootstrap / The Binds of Lasolastica," which originally appeared in the hugely popular Zippered Flesh anthology from Smart Rhino Publications.

Almost all of the poetry is new—as is "Dandelion Clocks," a novelette inspired by the tragedy of 9/11. It's a lyrical, mind-bending, heart-wrenching piece which Daniele illustrated with an absolutely gorgeous double page spread, and is also on the reading list for consideration in this year's Bram Stoker Long Fiction Award category.

The work in Inkblots and Blood Spots has been carefully arranged so that it's woven together with characters, settings, themes, rhythms, and voices that all connect and flow into the telling of one longer tale throughout.
The full TABLE OF CONTENTS is as follows:

POETRY

Beneath Clouds 
Alive
The Two of You 
Bogey 
Sticks and Bones 
Void 
Simon the Parasite 
Ink 
Listen To Me
All but the Things that Cannot be Torn 
Twisted
Secret Smile 
Open Auras
Though it Rains 
Countdown to Null 
Not Responding
Whisper Dance

STORIES

Hiatus
Bootstrap / The Binds of Lasolastica
A Light in the Closet
Skinny
Not the Child
Scrub
Eavesdropping
It Tears Away
The Dying Gaul
The Mascot
Coulrophobic
Underwater Ferris Wheel
I Wanted Black
Fireman / Primal Tongue
Dandelion Clocks
BLURBS

"Michael Bailey continues to amaze. He is on track to becoming his generation's Ray Bradbury."  

—F. Paul Wilson

~

“Inkblots and Blood Spots is a smart collection of stories that evoke real fear, because they're grounded in emotional truth. Michael Bailey has that rare ability to terrify readers and break their hearts—often in the same paragraph."

—Norman Prentiss, Bram Stoker Award winner, author of Invisible Fences

~

"Artfully executed. A unique and powerful contribution to speculative literature." 

—Tim Deal, Shroud Quarterly

~


"With Inkblots and Blood Spots, Michael Bailey delivers the kind of startlingly original, beautifully imagined, and deeply affecting stories that linger long in the mind, and even longer in the psyche."


—B.E. Scully, author of the critically acclaimed novel Verland: The Transformation and the upcoming novella The Eye That Blinds

~

“The stories and poems in Inkblots and Blood Spots bleed into our souls like knives and leave us breathless. Michael Bailey is a fabulous writer, unique and fresh—and these stories are his best. Inkblots and Blood Spots has my highest recommendation. You don’t want to miss this one . . . go buy this book. Now.” 

—John R. Little, Bram Stoker Award winning author of DarkNet, Miranda, and The Memory Tree

~

 “Most writers are either stylists or story-tellers. The stylists tend to be more common in literary fiction, the storytellers more common in genre work. Michael Bailey’s prose is highly accessible, but very precise  . . . he's a stylist, his prose very clean. Michael is indeed a very literate storyteller.
His stories are always darkly sharp-edged in tone, texture, and delivery, easily appropriate for genre fiction. But perhaps most important, his stories are about something . . . each one is built on a meaningful, engaging, intellectual premise.
I highly recommend this short story collection, which includes some compelling and delightful poetry.”

—Gene O'Neill, The Cal Wild Chronicles

~

“I first encountered Michael Bailey’s work at the Borderlands Press Writers Boot Camp. His writing stood out immediately—vibrant, bold, and bursting with original concepts. He showed me he was a writer willing to bypass all the familiar territories and stake out a new narrative landscape all his own. With this collection of dynamic stories and poems, he will show you as well.”


—Thomas F. Monteleone

~

“This collection of captivating stories and poems is both haunting and poignant. Filled with love and loss, the weight of these resolutions echoes out into the darkness with a heartbreaking permanence.”

—Richard Thomas, author of
Disintegration
So be sure to follow us over on our Facebook page, visit our Inkblots and Blood Spots website page, and check out Michael's blog in the coming days for updates. 

And, naturally, be ready to buy the book on November 30th! 

It will make the perfect gift this time of year for those hard to buy for people on your list . . . 
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"Mum" by Daniele Serra, © Villipede Publications

Thanks for reading,
Syd


1 Comment

Halloween 2014 Releases

10/31/2014

0 Comments

 

Shock Totem

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Need I say more? Shock Totem is by far one of my favorite magazines—ever—and being invited to write for this special issue was a dream come true. 

Issue #9.5 features "Allhallowtide (To the Faithless Departed)", my experimental poem that bears a resemblance to "The Undertaker's Melancholy", which appears in Darkness Ad Infinitum. The full Table of Contents is as follows:


* Halloween On by John Boden and Bracken MacLeod
* Night in the Forest of Loneliness by David G. Blake
* Kore by John Langan (Holiday Recollection)
* Out of Field Theory by Kevin Lucia
* Tricks and Treats by Rose Blackthorn
* Witches and the March of Dimes, and Mike Warnke by Babs Boden (Holiday Recollection)
* Howdy Doody Time by Kriscinda Lee Everitt
* When I Scared Myself Out of Halloween by Jeremy Wagner (Holiday Recollection)
* Untitled by Barry Lee Dejasu
* The Mansion by Lee Thomas (Holiday Recollection)
* Allhallowtide (To the Faithless Departed) by Sydney Leigh (Poetry)
* Flay Bells Ring, or How the Horror Filmmaker Stole Christmas by Mike Lombardo (Holiday Recollection)
* The Candle Eaters by K. Allen Wood
* Howling Through the Keyhole (Author Notes)


So I'm feeling honored, to say the least. The Kindle edition is available here and the print mag will be ready soon...if you buy the print edition, you also get the Kindle version for free.

Thanks to Ken Wood and John Boden for putting out such a phenomenal mag, and for being such great people. Shock Totem truly rules.

The Wicked Library

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Nelson and Maddie were kind enough to invite me to send along a piece for this Halloween Special, and I thought "Magnum Opus" was the perfect story. 

This twisted little tale appeared in Demonic Visions 50 Horror Tales Book 2 last December. Check it out, along with the other pieces from Paul Michael Anderson, Jessica McHugh, Lindsay Beth Goddard, and Joseph Matulich.

Listen to the podcast here: HALLOWEEN SPECIAL III and let us know what you think!
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BUGS: 
TALES THAT SLITHER, CREEP, AND CRAWL

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I'm really thrilled about the release of this one for a few reasons. My good friend Tracy L. Carbone and I decided to write for this anthology before she moved, back when we used to have our "write nights", which I miss terribly. 

My story is a tribute to someone who led a very tragic life and died young...someone I never met, but got to know through the eyes and memories of someone who loved her dearly. 

This story was tough to write. It's very dark and disturbing, and I was afraid it would turn people off. In fact, I had a panic attack after I sent it because Phil Perron of Great Old Ones Publishing had just had a baby, and I worried it would hit too close to home. 

Instead, he chose it as the anchor tale. And then sent word that Simon Rumley, the incredible director of Red White & Blue, Little Deaths, P is for Pressure, Club le Monde, The Living and the Dead, and more, said some very kind words about it in the Foreword:



"My personal favorite undoubtedly reflects my taste for the crazed, the realistic and the extreme, and manages to invent a new type of madness with its own demented and, actually, disgusting logical conclusion. What makes Sydney Leigh's 'Baby Breath' all the more horrible is that it comes from a lost love and an inability by the main character,  a pregnant woman named Diane, to face the truth. Warning: read at your own peril. Not for the faint of heart. Or pregnant women!"


It meant the world to me that someone like Simon "got" this story. There's more to it than mere shock value. I'll never forget watching Simon's  "P is for Pressure" segment in the ABCs of Death and feeling traumatized, but knowing full well what he was saying with the crunch of that kitten's skull.  I didn't kill any kittens in my story, but I hope you guys "get it", too. 


This anthology also features the late, great Lawrence Santoro, Tracy Carbone, B.E. Scully, Gregory Norris, the lovely Esther M. Leiper-Estabrooks, Patrick Lacey, MJ Preston (who also provided the cover design), Roxanne and Karen Dent, and more. 

For now, BUGS is available in paperback on CreateSpace here and in Kindle format on Amazon here. 


Please check it out. I don't think you'll be disappointed. 
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So . . . yeah. Best Halloween ever? Probably. 


Thanks for reading, guys.
—Syd xox

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p.s.

Don't forget about this awesome new release! Featuring Richard Thomas, Marge Simon, myself, and more, these flash pieces are all inspired by nightmares and laid out in a book with absolutely breathtaking typographical designs. 


Pick it up in paperback or PDF . . . or contact me for a signed copy, as with any of my books. Thanks to Jim and Janice Leach from TheDailyNightmare for all their hard work.
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AULD DADDY  DARKNESS
by James Ferguson

 
Auld Daddy Darkness creeps frae his hole,

Black as a blackamoor,  blin' as a mole:

Stir the fire till it lowes, let the bairnie sit,

Auld Daddy Darkness is no wantit  yit.

 

See him in the corners hidin' frae the Iicht,

See him at the window gloomin' at the nicht;

Turn up the gas Iicht, close the shutters a',

An' Auld Daddy Darkness will flee far awa'.

 

Awa' to hide the birdie within its cosy nest,

Awa' to lap the wee  flooers on their mither's breast,

Awa' to loosen Gaffer Toil frae his daily ca',

For Auld Daddy Darkness is kindly to a'.

 

He comes when we're weary to wean's frae oor waes,

He comes when the bairnies are getting aff their claes;

To cover them sae cosy, an' bring bonnie dreams,

So Auld Daddy Darkness is better than he seems.

 

Steek yer een, my wee tot, ye'll see Daddy then;

He's in below the bed claes, to cuddle ye he's fain;

Noo nestle to his bosie, sleep and dream yer fill,

Till Wee Davie Daylicht comes  keekin' owre the hill.

0 Comments

Quick Update, New Releases, Clickable List of Anthologies & Magazines

10/29/2014

0 Comments

 
I'm slowly chipping away at building this website, but for now I've updated my bibliography, forthcoming publications, and created a clickable list of some of the most recent anthologies and magazines I've been in. 

I still have a few more exciting announcements to make, but I'll save those for Friday.

I know I haven't posted much by way of health updates, but work has had me going non-stop...next month we'll be releasing 
Michael Bailey's INKBLOTS AND BLOOD SPOTS, a dark and beautiful collection of poetry and short stories fully illustrated by the one and only Daniele Serra. If you haven't seen them yet, check out our teasers over on the Villipede Publications Facebook page. 

We're also choosing a random winner to receive a copy of the book signed by Michael and Daniele once we get to a certain number of page likes. If you've read Michael's work before, you know he often incorporates numbers into it...so we've picked a  number he uses in one of his stories as a target for page likes. We're a very small press trying to do big things, so every little bit of help makes a difference.

After that, we're moving onto idEntities, our unique collaboration with Carrion House, and some projects lined up with authors we recently signed on, including Chris Kelso.  

Hopefully I'll be coming up for air sometime in December. Thanks to all of you who have continued to support me both personally and professionally. Your kindness is much appreciated. 
Thanks for reading,
and Happy Halloween.
Syd . . . 
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 . . . and Holden.

All books are available on Amazon:

Sydney Leigh
Shawna L. Bernard
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PDF VERSION

flash fiction
"fear takes root"

inspired by

"house of a thousand copses"
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poetry
"the spider box"
"Woodland Serenade" 
"Flesh, Blood, and Bones"


READ THESE IN
THE HORROR ZINE ONLINE 
HERE
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short fiction
"Late Lunch at The Eddie Bear" 
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interview
"Where the Horror Happens"
with a guest appearance by Sir Holden the Magnificent
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dark verse
"Transitional Matter"
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review
"And the Gunman's Hand Held a Pen: 
A Review of Bracken MacLeod's Mountain Home" 
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experimental poetry
"The Undertaker's Melancholy"
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short fiction
"Rabenschwarz"
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short fiction
"Lust For Life"
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short fiction
"Canis Familiaris"
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short fiction
"Magnum Opus"
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short fiction
"Corpus Delectable"
0 Comments

The Wicked Library Episode 503: Triple Shot of Terror

9/19/2014

1 Comment

 
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It's Friday, my migraine is slowly calming down, and the kind and talented folks over at The Wicked Library have opted to read three of my pieces on this week's episode: "Corpus Delectable", "Lust for Life", and "Transference". It's a nice blend of varied length fiction: drabble (100 words), flash (500 words), and short (2,100 words).

It's always cool to hear someone talk about your work--especially when they are as kind as Nelson was here--but it's also slightly surreal when it comes with "a wee bit of a warning", the host says he "expects lots of nasty email" over it, and that yeah, "it's really, really that disturbing".

Wow, really? I guess I've arrived. 

No, I'm just kidding. I don't make it a point to disturb people. Well, not in my writing, anyway.

But seriously, I don't write a great deal of "squirm" horror. "Corpus Delectable" and "Lust for Life" were actually two of the very first horror stories I ever wrote, and they are among the few zombie tales in my portfolio. Check them out if you can--Nelson Pyles has a great reading voice. He's also super cool human being--as is Maddie Holliday Von Stark, who created some equally disturbing artwork for the episode. You can also have some fun skiing down my resume, apparently. 

Here's some phenomenal artwork done for "Lust for Life" by artist Jeff Swenson. You can find him at the following link--he is extraordinarily talented: http://swensonfunnies.com.

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© Jeff Swenson
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© Jeff Swenson
Cool, huh? 

(Spoiler alert: that's not actually where the kid comes out.)

As far as "Transference" goes, I have some news I've been dying to share with you guys related to that, but we're not quite there yet. It's exciting, though . . . like, really exciting. Besides being in Michael Bailey's THE LIBRARY OF THE DEAD anthology, which is being published later this year by Written Backwards, this was one of my prouder moments. It's what I was referring to when I posted this back in May: 
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I've had a lot of those moments, to be honest. Let's face it--I've been lucky. No matter what, it's been a good year. I've had a lot of lousy moments, too, obviously. The pendulum is still swinging. But it always will. 

Well, until it stops. 

But anyway, back to "Transference". I will tell you that it was originally published on Hellnotes  and was later fleshed out into a 3,700 word short story (thanks to my long lost friend Ann K. Boyer) which will soon appear in BUGS: TALES THAT SLITHER, CREEP AND CRAWL, an anthology coming soon from Great Old Ones Publishing. The foreword is written by director Simon Rumley, known for his traumatic segment "P is for Pressure" in THE ABCs OF DEATH as well as CLUB LE MONDE, LITTLE DEATHS, THE LIVING AND THE DEAD, and RED WHITE & BLUE, among others. 

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And yeah, okay. It's that disturbing.  I've had people stop talking to me over the full version of that story. I had a bit of a panic attack after submitting it to a publisher who just had a baby. But this is horror, right? 

In PRIME EVIL, Douglas E. Winter said that "Great horror fiction is not about shock, but emotion; it digs beneath our skin and stays with us. It is proof that an image is only as powerful as its context."

I found Charles' desperation to be the most horrifying element to "Lust for Life". His inability to have more children, the tragedy and hopelessness of it all. The situation was just so awful all the way around. And his poor wife . . . she really just had no choice but to be the sacrifice here.

If you read the longer tale "Transference" belongs to, I hope you'll agree that "Baby's Breath" goes past the point of no return and ventures into territory where yeah, it's unpleasant, it's ugly, and it's certainly shocking--but to me, it's actually the emotion which drives the character to do what she does that's more horrifying than the deed itself. 

More news soon. You can decide for yourself if you pick it up. Check out the cover by MJ Preston. 
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So if you're up for a good squirm session, click the following link to The Wicked Library Episode 503. Then throw on some ear buds and get comfortable. 

Just don't expect to stay that way.
Thanks for reading,
Syd
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    Author
     & 
    Editor

    Sydney Leigh is the evil literary double of a mostly sane writer, editor, photographer, artist, English teacher, and native of the North Shore. Her poetry, short fiction, and reviews have appeared in numerous  publications.

    Her best friend is a Border Collie, and despite holding degrees in English, Psychology, and Graphic Design, she spends most of her free time doing her teenage son’s laundry and playing rock-paper-scissors with her imaginary roommate, Ted.

     She currently works for Villipede Publications
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