Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Anatomy of Fear is Alive!

"It's alive; it's alive!"

Anatomy of Fear went live on Sunday, available as a kindle download for just .99 cents.  In this collection you will find 10 short stories in the horror genre from the supernatural to the unnatural, from madness to madmen, from blood 'n guts to subtlety and dread. Included is an excerpt from my forthcoming novel People of the Ethereal Realm, to be released from Twisted Library Press in 2012.

Get you copy today!  BUY NOW.  If you stop by the amazon page, please like and tag the listing.  Every little bit helps.

Thanks!

Cheers!

Monday, April 16, 2012

"Fountain of Eternity" Has Found a Home!

My short story "Fountain of Eternity" has found a home in Cover of Darkness, a quarterly magazine from the fine folks at Sam's Dot Publishing.  This is a story about an explorer who discovers the fountain of youth in the far reaches of the Amazon, only it's not what he had expected.

The story is tentatively slated for the Dec. 2012 issue.  I will make updates as I gather more info.

Cheers!

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Two New Stories Out Now!

I haven't been posting here much recently.  I'm on the Internet daily, but for a short period of time.  I just don't have time for this machine.  On top of that, my laptop is strictly for writing, thus I have no Internet access unless I use the PC.  I don't have, nor do I anticipate having a smart phone, so surfing the web, hitting the forums, and posting on my blog tend to take the backseat to other elements of my life.  I find the Internet to be distracting, and I'm trying to get more writing done.

Now, as the title of this post says, I have two fresh stories out from two different publishers.  First is my vampire story "Like Father Like Daughter" in the Kayelle Press release Night Terrors.  I calling it a "vampire story", but that's what it is.  I'm not the biggest vamp fan, so maybe that will translate well into something unique.  If anything, I hope I brought something fresh to a loooong tradition of bloodsucker stories.  Night Terrors went on sale Friday the 13th, and you can get it in either ebook or paperback HERE.


I also have a story in the Rymfire eBooks anthology Undead Tales 2.  This is a zombie anthology featuring my story "The Suicide Program", which deals with a man in the dismal days following a massive zombie apocalypse in New York City.  He has learned how to conceal himself from the zombies on the street, however he loses his only connection to humanity, and the zombies are becoming...intelligent.  Like vampires, I'm kind of done with zombies, so I hope I have written a story that takes the genre in a bit of a different direction.  You can get the ebook from amazon HERE.

Cheers!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

What Frightens Me?

Seems like an appropriate topic for a horror author to blog about.  We all have fears.  There's no way around that aspect of life.  A man without fear is a man insane.  Some of us fear more than others, and some of us have irrational fears.  Deep inside we all probably have a few irrational fears, but for the most part I think people as a whole have a lot of the same, or similar fears.  Sure, there's a whole list of phobias to choose from, but that's not what I'm talking about.  Phobias are classified as irrational fears.  What I want to discuss are real fears.  Everyday fears.  My fears.

Horror is a label for immense dread and fear.  We hear the word horror and think of slasher films and Stephen King and a plethora of fantastical images of vampires and monsters and so many other elements of horrific entertainment that we have enjoyed or have become a part of our lexicon.  But what is horror really?  What was it that caused Bram Stoker to pen Dracula?  What was the reason for Lovecraft to write stories about monstrosities and ancient gods that dwell beneath the sullen seas of the East Coast?

I cannot speak for any one else, but I have several reasons for writing horror.  Above all I write horror because I've always been a fan of the genre.  Ever since I watched A Nightmare on Elm Street 2 I was hooked.  I rented all the horror films from the local video stores (yeah, there used to be little mom and pop video stores, three on one street and we had memberships at each and every one of them).  In Junior high I read Shirley Jackson's short story "The Lottery" and I was hooked.  Aside form the fascination with horror that is so strong, there is also the whole idea of fear.  That's the second part of why I write horror.  I like the idea of exploring fears.  So the question remains: what do I fear?

When asked what horror novel or story scared me the most, I always respond that Richard Matheson's story "Lover When You're Near Me" was the scariest story I ever read.  Anyone familiar with that story would likely wrinkle their brow in confusion and ask, "Isn't that a science fiction story?"  Why yes it is.  And it gave me chills when I read it seven or eight years ago.  Why?  How could a story that takes place on some made up planet where a man is sent there to oversee a mineral mining operation conducted by gelatinous, oafish natives be frightening.  I'll tell you how.  Because the female native who is the housekeeper of our weary protagonist has fallen in love with him, haunting and smothering him telepathically.  In my world that's terrifying.

After much consideration I realized that the inner workings of the mind is a huge part of many of my longer works.  My novella The Madness deals with various forms of insanity.  Two unpublished novellas, The Executioner's Shroud and Stronger Than Hate, also have heavily cerebral themes that explore reasons for madness and the results.  It's a bit of a theme, though done differently each time.  Over time I have realized that insanity is perhaps my greatest fear.  To not be in control of your own mind is absolutely terrifying.  That's what frightens me.  Are their other things?  Of course there are.  Mobs are scary.  Ghettos are scary (I've had to work in local ghettos before -- fuck that!  Gang lands are no place to be).  Flesh eating bacteria is scary.  The government is scary.  Third world governments are even scarier!  Bodies of water are scary (perhaps that can be classified as a phobia).  The list could go on.

Next to insanity, too much consideration about what happens after death is scary.  That's another theme I delve into quite a bit.  If I think about that too often, I swear I feel the rising tides of madness.  Religious folks don't mess around.  They have that base covered, but I don't buy what they're selling.  No one knows what happens after we die beyond our bodies decomposing, and that brings me to one of the most influential and frightening of fears: the unknown.  Perhaps that fear has bred more horror stories than any other, because horror has so much to do with the unknown.  We as horror authors delve into the unknown and bask in its darkness.  We succumb to its draw and fill our minds with its potent elixir.  And then we tell the stories, one at a time.

Robert Essig

Friday, March 9, 2012

Darker Minds TOC revealed!

The table of contents for Darker Minds has been revealed.  Looks like a fine line-up.  I can't wait to get my copy of this one.  It will be interesting to see how the other authors used the loose theme of horror based on the dark side of the human mind.  I had written my story for a contest two years ago.  It was more of a sci-fi/fantasy contest, but I sent a horror/mystery story anyway.  I was told that it was the best of the horror submissions, though no horror stories were chosen as finalists.  I sat on the story for a while, uncertain where to submit it, and then I saw the Darker Minds guidelines and it seemed to fit what they were looking for quite nicely.


Here's the TOC:


Reflections From a Broken Lamp - John Travis
Tale of the Abnormal Beauty Queen - Robert Essig
Waste Disposal - Ray Cluley
The Man Who Remembered - Stephen Bacon
Cinder Images - Gary McMahon
The Way of the World - Gary Fry
John Bane's Grave - Charles Muir
Rise, Dead Man - Joe Mynhardt
Looking at Me, Seeing You - Mark West
The Listening - Benedict J Jones
Seeing Things - Robert Mammone
Slip Inside This House - Daniel Kaysen
Houses in Motion - Stuart Young
Shutdown - Clayton Stealback
Laws of Aquisition - Simon Bestwick
 
 
Darker Minds should be available in April.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

People of the Ethereal Realm Banner


I made a banner for my forthcoming book People of the Ethereal Realm.  I used bannersnack.com (I've used them before).  Without their stifling watermark the banner looks a bit pixelated.  Kind of bothers me, but I don't know how to generate my own banners.  I have a free program called Gimp that I used to create the cover for my forthcoming eBook Anatomy of Fear, but I'm not familiar enough with the program to create a banner.  If I find the time, I'll have to play around with the Gimp...(I'm suddenly transported to Zed's Pawn Shop in Pulp Fiction).

Anatomy of Fear will hit amazon soon as well.  This is a collection of ten short stories, some of them reprints, and an excerpt from People of the Ethereal Realm.  It will be a .99 cent eBook, primarily for people to sample my work if they are hesitant about purchasing PotER.

Friday, February 17, 2012

New Reviews of Scarecrow and The Madness

After running a Google search I discovered a few reviews of Scarecrow and The Madness that I wasn't aware of. 

The first review is from the Sonar4 Landing Dock.  It's not so new as it was published in late December, but I just discovered it, so it's new to me.  The reviewer notes that they had to put my novella down a few times to recover from where the story took them.  I have to say that I don't write specifically to disturb, but disturbing imagery often appears in what I write.  That's kind of funny because my mother (fan of such authors as Danielle Steele and Mary Higgins Clark) read The Madness and loved it.  She said she couldn't stop reading it (yes, I know, it's my mother and she's biased, but she's read a great deal of my published stories and, like my wife, is very blunt if she doesn't like one of them).

The second review is on author Matthew Tait's blog.  I recognized this review when I read it.  I believe he also posted it on amazon, but I thought I would link it for those who haven't read the amazon reviews.

Both are very positive, and both are linked below.

Sonar4 Landing Dock: HERE
Matthew Tait's Review: HERE

Cheers!