Halloween Lurking: a 1st time editor reflects

Last Tuesday, a little over a week ago, I uploaded a FREE Halloween e-anthology to various websites.  Past The Patch was an idea that sprang up over the summer during one of the many manic e-mail trading session between the guys at Dark Red Press.  Since I was the one promoting the idea (and I had always wanted to try my hand at editing an anthology), it became my project.  It was early August when I sent out the first round of submission queries, with an early October release slated.

I wanted around a dozen authors, mostly because that number seemed managable for my first time stepping into editor shoes.  Pretty much the same reason we decided to make the thing free.  I had an idea of what I wanted with this anthology, and I went outside the normal realms of modern horror and dark urban fantasy.  As I state in the brief introduction of Past The Patch, I've always been most impressed with the anthologies by the likes of John Joseph Adams, Al Sarrantonio and Harlan Ellison.  It seemed they were less concerned about genre and more so about theme.  I liked that.  So along with the usual suspects, I attempted to snag authors who were more accustomed to writing romance, fantasy, mystery or poetry.  I wanted stories about Halloween, a holiday and all that it encompassed in our collective culture, not just a collection of spooky gore-fests.

Authors wandered in, some wandered out.  A few new ones showed up late to the party with more beer, as it were.  Multiple times I found myself screaming at the computer for whatever reason.  The release deadline of October 11th had been set, and I was still agonizing over the cover art.  I think I may have annihilated a few galaxies in my stressed-out rage.

Finally all the tales were in and it was a matter of deciding upon the "track listing" and hammering out the formats.  Looking over my submissions, it was quickly apparent that I was going to end the anthology with "The Witch Of Mistletoe Lane" by Court Ellyn.  Almost a novella in length, it's so well written, so heart-breakingly beautiful and poignant, I knew it was the perfect note on which to end.  J.T. Warren's "Halloween Candy" seemed a great choice for the opener with it's unique take on an old holiday fear.  In between, all the tales were decided by their word count and subject matter.  I didn't, for instance, want to put two shorter tales next to each other, nor did I want to place two stories that had children as the protagonists back-to-back.  Cue more screaming at the computer.

And then suddenly... it was done.  The cover embedded, legal crap page, ISBN# acquired, contents, bios, everything.  It looked good!  I sent it to the guys at Dark Red Press for a look-over, got the thumbs up, and started uploading.  I promoted it for a few hours, then I think I passed out for a day.  Past The Patch was done, and damn, it did look good!

The main download site, with various links, is on the DRP site.  Who knows how many PDF's we've directly downloaded, but it's all here... http://www.darkredpress.com/read-now/past-the-patch-a-free-collection/

We've had 97 downloads off Smashwords as I write this.  That site is here... https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/95432

We've had 74 reads over at Scribd.  That site is here... http://www.scribd.com/doc/68259166/Past-the-Patch

Finally, it's also available as a PDF at Goodreads, along with the e-anthology's page and links to all the contributing authors.  Feel free to snag it or give us feedback here... http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/12845734-past-the-patch

I'm proud of what was accomplished with Past The Patch, and I'm ever more proud of all of the authors who contributed to the anthology.  It's a fun collective of tales, and I'm thrilled these amazing authors gave me a chance to combine their works in this fashion.  Please, as October 31st lurks closer, I invite you to check out this FREE e-anthology and get ready for Halloween!

 

 

 

Filed under  //   anthology   authors   dark red press   download   e-book   editing   editor   fantasy   fiction   free   halloween   horror   indie   short stories   writers  

FREE Halloween E-Anthology

http://www.darkredpress.com/read-now/past-the-patch-a-free-collection/

Dark Red Press presents a FREE anthology of Halloween-themed tales.  Available as an e-book in multiple formats on various sites, Past The Patch contains the work of thirteen rising authors in an assortment of genres.  Writers from the realms of fantasy, romance, adventure, poetry and (of course) horror, give use their unique takes on the infamous holiday.

http://www.darkredpress.com/read-now/past-the-patch-a-free-collection/

Halloween – a holiday that evokes so much. Some say it’s a time when the space between worlds is too thin to bear the weight, and outer things spill over for a bit of Trick Or Treating. The stories found inside this e-anthology echo that idea, reporting back from a corner where the mirror has reflected a distorted image of this season.

Inside we’ll find a young man’s madness has driven him down a bloody path and the brutal folklore of the early 19th century clawed to life. We’ll see domestic bliss marred only by suburban lycanthropy and retail employees devoured by cosmic malevolence. Witches, monsters, and maniacs as written by authors of fantasy, adventure, mystery, poetry, romance and horror. We’ll dig deeper into a celebration now known for masks, candy and pumpkins while immersing ourselves in this anthology. Here, we’ll go past the patch and discover what tales lurk on the other side.

Edited by Brian Fatah Steele

A Dark Red Press Production

Contributors… Sarah E. Adkins, Jonathan Dukestein, Court Ellyn, Matthew Leverton, Jack Lloyd, Jack X. McCallum, H.H. Shullith, John Claude Smith, John J. Smith, C.L. Stegall, J.T. Warren, Robert S. Wilson and Brian Fatah Steele

http://www.darkredpress.com/read-now/past-the-patch-a-free-collection/

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Filed under  //   anthology   authors   dark red press   e-book   ebooks   fiction   free   halloween   past the patch   short stories  

Paintings for EL Jaycee's Haunted House

In my hometown, the Jaycees (an NPO charity order) have run a Haunted House every October for high-near centuries.  For a few years there, they actually didn't have one, due to the lack of a suitable building.  For this Halloween, however, they snagged a great one - an old, abandoned YMCA building.  Four floors of creepatastic fun.  Oh, did I mention the place is two blocks away from my house? 

Yeah.  Needless to say, it was a mutual decision to have the local horror author wander down to help out with the "ambiance." 

These are a great group of people who raise money for good causes.  The idea that I may have a hand in psychologically scaring young people is totally an added bonus.  (swear!)  In any case, one of the first things I did was spot the empty walls in the lobby - which simply wouldn't do.  A lot of stuff was left behind, including canvases and frames.  Four of these got turned into pieces that I hope will add a lil' bit of disturbing color to the lobby. 

Hope ya dig 'em...

(download)

Filed under  //   YMCA   artwork   east liverpool   halloween   haunted house   horror   jaycees   paintings   scary  

Slasher Glory

I feel I need to point out once more how insanely brilliant Rob Zombie's remakes of Halloween I and II are.  For those unaware, he basically crammed 5 movies into 2 films along with giving us background info and insight into Mikey's psyche.  He brought the lil' girl from the original 4 & 5 (Danielle Harris) back as the hot chick who gets cut up... twice... and shot certain scenes to look remarkably similar while omitting others he knew were too iconic.  And is it a bad thing that I found Scout Taylor Compton (Laurie Stroud/Angel Myers) really hot in that last scene where she gives the camera that super evil smile?

Zombies-halloween-triptych

Yeah, and this is why Jared Padalecki (Sam Winchester from Supernatural) couldn't pull it off in the Friday The 13th remake.  Dude, you beat up Satan.

Filed under  //   halloween   horror   michael myers   rob zombie