LOOKING BACK AND LOOKING AHEAD

What a wild, unexpected, and absolutely tragic last year. Who knew a pandemic was going to sweep the planet? In the middle of the damned thing, my collection Dark Black was published. What made things challenging and, frankly, disappointing, was that I had the most extensive book tour I have ever scheduled totally upended and unplugged.

Paris. London. New York. Los Angeles. And many points in between.

C'est la vie. I am just grateful that my family and I are all healthy. So many people have lost loved ones through this thing, it is just beyond sad. Furthermore, I have had the chance to spend such incredible, quality time with my wife and kids. It has been glorious. When my kids are all grown and have flown, I will never regret these days spent together, riding bikes, binging Avatar: The Last Airbender, and taking long family walks. We even added a second dog into the familial chaos.

Another unexpected silver lining to this whole pandemic was when Dark Black was released on September 22, it forced my erstwhile publishers and me to be nimble on our feet, to think out of the proverbial box, and to adjust accordingly. This is how life works. It’s all good. I revel in DIY marketing. It speaks to my inner punk rock aesthetic.

I’m thrilled and ever grateful that Dark Black received a lot of great reviews and a lot of media coverage.

The creative marketing geniuses at Hat & Beard Press and I adjusted and found new ways to promote Dark Black when all events were cancelled because of Covid-19. The great news is that sales have exceeded pre-pandemic expectations, and we are on the precipice of selling out of the first edition with a second print run now looking eminent. As a cool promo, we partnered with Hop Butcher beer to release Dark Black stout and it sold out in three days! Publishers Weekly even picked up the story.

So, thank you to all who bought the book and supported us. And thank you to everyone, specifically, who ordered Dark Black directly through Hat & Beard, effectively cutting out the further enriching of Jeff Bezos, and eliminating the traditional and outdated distribution structure of old guard publishing. Illustrator Dan Grzeca and I literally signed hundreds and hundreds of copies of Dark Black, doodling in most of them, and these were only available through the publisher. Again, thank you all for your support! If you are able to, please review the book on Amazon, even if you didn’t buy it there!

Now, on to what I wrapped this past year, and to what’s next…

People have been asking on Twitter what I am working on. Covid has provided more time at home and at my studio space to write. The motivation has ebbed and flowed (hey, pandemic fatigue is real), but I’m excited to have finished a few things, and to be working on a number of new projects.

Last March, as we went into lockdown, I published a ridiculously absurd piece in The Satirist, spring- boarding from my lifelong affection for the rock band KISS. Gene Simmons retweeted it, which was hilarious.

In May, Neil Gaiman and I sat down for a virtual discussion for the Bath Festival in Bath, England. Neil and I talked about our mutual love for Ray Bradbury on the occasion of his centennial year. The conversation was rousing and inspiring and Neil was absolutely on fire with brilliance. As ever, Neil burned bright!

In late December 2020, former National Endowment for the Arts Chair, Dana Gioia and I convened for a discussion of Ray Bradbury at 100, as well. We talked about Bradbury’s sweeping influence on popular culture, and why his legacy continues to expand like the universe itself. Dana waxed eloquent, as usual. This convo was a pure delight.

I just finished an essay on Ray Bradbury and the Pandemic of 1918. I uncovered quite a bit of revelatory new details about the Bradbury family and the great influenza of 1918. I will post information on where this will be published very soon.

I am at work on two books, a novel about monsters, and a narrative nonfiction book rooted in the dark and arcane underworld of the occult. My hope is to be done with a draft of the novel by the end of this summer, and then I will finish a proposal on the nonfiction book.

It’s good to be busy. Ray Bradbury used to tell me often that “work is the only answer.” He believed that in accomplishing and creating even a little something, we feel better about ourselves, and he was right, of course.

Again, I cannot thank you all enough for your support of Dark Black this last year. It has meant so much. I look forward to getting back to live events soon, and to thanking you all in-person.

In the meantime, be well. Stay safe. Stay in touch. And STAY CREATIVE! It is the answer.

DARK BLACK

My new book of short stories is now available for pre-order directly from the publisher. To be totally candid, publishers and artists, sadly, don’t see much return, if anything, from books sold on Amazon. Buying direct from the publisher is the best way to support the future of quality book publishing. The team at Los Angeles-based Hat and Beard Press, along with illustrator Dan Grzeca, and myself, have poured our absolute hearts out into this project.  There are 20 beautiful illustrations to go with each story. Click here to pre-order Dark Black.

The release date is June 30. And, as an added bonus—ALL copies pre-ordered through the Hat & Beard web site will be personally signed and dated by me and artist extraordinaire, Dan Grzeca. You’ll likely get an individual, one-of-a-kind doodle by me as well.

Finally, I thought I would share with you the front and back cover.

Much more news on Dark Black, and the book tour, coming very soon. Thank you for all of your support!

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MY NEXT BOOK

My debut short story collection, Dark Black, will be released April 21, 2020 by Los Angeles-based Hat & Beard Press. I’m honored that it will be the first book in H & B’s new literary fiction imprint.

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As of now, the book has 20 stories in it, including a few you may be familiar with like, “The Girl in the Funeral Parlor,” “Conjuring Danny Squires,” “Live Forever!” and several others that have been published in lit journals and anthologies. But there are also many new stories that I am so excited to share with you all. This book is Gothic pop-cultural horror. That’s the best way I can sum it up.

Finally, it was essential to me to include illustrations in the book. My mentor, Ray Bradbury, bucked publishing trends throughout his career by including beautiful illustrations by his brilliant, longtime collaborator Joseph Mugnaini. Publishers often don’t see the need for this extra step, but Ray did. And I do too. The world is increasingly populated with visual learners. Art adds that next level of quality and evocation to a book. I am honored to be working with illustrator and printmaker, Dan Grzeca, well-known for his rock music prints for artists such as the Black Keys, Sharon van Etten, U2 and others. Here, I share the cover image for my next book, Dark Black.

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