Today, we’re dwelling in darkness and embracing the night.
Night/Darkness:
“Beware of Darkness” – Hidden Citizens (with Ranya)
“Daughters of Darkness” – Halestorm
“Black Hole Sun” – Haley Reinhart
“Black” – Sarah MacLachlan
“Light in the Hallway” – Pentatonix
“Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” – Twisted Insane (parody music from the series that shall not be named, but royalties probably not going in her pockets)
“Paint It Black” – Inkubus Sukkubus (also Siobhan Magnus’ American Idol version, and the cellist’s from Wednesday S1)
My dark poem “Keeping Secrets” was included in the Breath and Shadow Fall 2024 issue. It’s free to read here. My inspiration for it was the fact that I’m pretty good at not telling secrets, but I absolutely cannot promise that I won’t tell under the most mild of interrogations. My secret integrity completely depends on the fact that people don’t ask me about them in the first place.
Undertaker Books announced their Table of Contents for Stories to Take to the Grave: High Seas Edition, and my story “Floaters” (referencing corpses) is included in the line-up. It’s quieter horror than I usually do, and with a little hope thrown in there. It’s one of my stories I submitted far and wide to a variety of publishers, but it kept getting rejected, and I really wanted a good home for it.
Works in Progress:
Since it includes some rewriting, the first-round edit of Masque is going more slowly than I would like. I’m sorry, crisis after crisis and anticipation of collapse is not conducive to creativity. Nevertheless, I’ve started, and honestly, it wasn’t as info-dumping as I thought it would be. Or maybe adding a character that needed context helped give the world-building info reason to exist.
But I’m not having trouble concentrating because I don’t enjoy it. When I’m working on it, I love Masque‘s lushness. The difference between the much sparer found-media transcription style of the Dracula reimagining and the Gothic embellishments in Masque is pretty stark. I like both.
By and large, my shorter creature features, Deep Down and Out of Curiosity and Hunger are both spare as well, Deep Down because of the protagonist’s numbed emotional state and in Out of Curiosity and Hunger because of both the protagonist’s detachment and sort of wanting to write found-footage style without actually doing so—very documentarian. Whereas my first book, Nocturne, and novella The Damp definitely leaned into the Gothic style as well. I think doing both allows me to enjoy them better, because I’m never locked into one way of writing and it keeps me interested.
I can also write somewhere in between. I would argue that, though the Thorns series books are long, they’re quite traditional in style, and so is Question Not My Salt. Drift and A Woman Alone are dreamy outliers, but probably fit in here, too, although I would argue they’re actually Gothic in elements rather than writing style.
I’m very much a believer of ‘form follows function.’ Sometimes you need a modular cottage and sometimes you need a big honking castle. One is not more intrinsically correct. I think I’ve once shared on here, though, that a more elaborate Gothic style of writing more closely resembles how my brain actually thinks. The denser, sparer writing, on the other hand, gives my head a bit of a rest.
Christmas to New Year’s is a weird time, even as a freelancer, so I’m not sure how much I’ll actually get done, but I’m still aiming to get Masque and the Dracula reimagining completed by end of January. At the very least, I’d like to get Masque done if the call I’m finishing it for is, in fact, open in January. If they’re open to novellas, I can submit The Damp if I don’t finish, though. The Dracula reimagining doesn’t really need to be finished. I’m just hoping to start subbing it out to agents as soon as possible. I’m also perfectly open to self-publishing it. I have two covers in my already-purchased folder that could fit the story.
Books I’m Reading:
The Fisherman by John Langan Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier Sister, Maiden, Monster by Lucy A. Snyder
Things I’m Listening To:
Christmas playlist
Things I’m Watching:
Die Hard (My verdict? I don’t understand how this isn’t a Christmas movie. Loved it.) Krampus Christmas Inheritance Home Alone 2: Lost in New York Black Christmas (2006) P2 The Nightmare Before Christmas Holiday in the Wild The Case of the Whitechapel Vampire (Sherlock Holmes) The Christmas Cookie Showdown series Holiday Baking Championship series (finished) Holiday Wars series The Great British Baking Show series (finished) Elsbeth series Matlock series Ghosts (US) series NCIS series Longmire series Columbo series S.W.A.T. series
Appropriately, this Halloween I’m facing my terrible dread at putting out total dreck by publishing my first novel, Nocturne, a beautifully gothic YA horror novel thirteen years in the making.
I just got the proofs in from Createspace, and they’re so beautiful I could spit. Covers by Combs did exceptional work on the cover and formatting design – I can’t recommend her enough. The paperback has been approved, and they should be ready to purchase at Amazon within a week (UPDATE: They are now available at Amazon!). In the meantime, the ebook is now available.
Seventeen-year-old Callie dreams nightmares every night. Now the nightmares want to meet her.