Ashley Stokes story, 'Under the Tower That Fell', appears in forthcoming Dark Lane Digest #2. He is the author of Gigantic (Unsung Stories, 2021) and The Syllabus of Errors (Unthank Books, 2013). He lives in the East of England where he’s a ghost and ghostwriter.
Nowadays I write every day from around 7am to 10am. I have an office in my flat and I do nearly all my writing at a desk facing the wall with the window behind me. I am very much a creature of habit and have a process I go through before I start writing creatively: complete a language exercise (I am learning Swedish at the moment); post a picture to Insta; keep a journal and plan what I am going to do later in the day; read my Tarot and photograph the spread; then plan my creative writing or write about the story I am currently writing. Then write 250 – 1000 words. I do sometimes write in cafes or might walk out to somewhere to sit in the quiet, but I’ll be writing notes or plot-frameworks, or just busk and play. I am either very organised or have severe mental health problems.
Tell us about one of your favourite short stories and why you like it (not one of your own).
Of course, whatever I choose, I reserve the right to
unchoose, revise, swap or recant in an hour or so. I suppose if I think about a
story that stands out above others – and I read a lot of short stories – I
think about those shorts that open up imaginative space and possibilities for the
story, esp the weird story, that I had not explored before, where I might like
to go. One such inspiring story that had a great effect on me was Nathan
Ballingrud’s Wild Acre, which you can find in North American
Tell us about one of your favourite short stories (done by you).
I have a bad mental habit of thinking that only the last two things I’ve written are any good and everything before it dogmuck. Sometimes I think writing is like boredom in that you never quite remember doing it, hence the disconnect I can experience with my work once it’s been out of the fridge a while. At the moment, the story I most like is called How Beautiful You Are. It will appear in the latest in Steve Shaw’s Great British Horror anthologies from Black Shuck. It’s about a dilapidated sixties-concrete housing block that’s being overwhelmed by a strange mould. It’s kind of trippy. If I go back, I have stories that marked some sort of milestone or gear-change for me, so Hardrada (Shadow Booth 4), Things Break Down (Phantasmagoria 23) and The Hinwick Effigy (Cloister Fox 2).
They come from all over, in stabs, glimmerings, mental pictures, a hanker, a flash. I get them reading other stories. I have them daydreaming in the shower or out walking with my headphones on, or when I’m working out. I usually have some sort of primary glimpse that I title and add to an Ideas List I have on my desktop. Over time, I’ll add other ideas and developments to the title on the List as they strike me and record the notebook page reference so I can access all the references later. Eventually the story floats to the surface, becomes urgent, or fits with a call for submission, and I’ll spend some time planning it in detail before writing a couple of drafts. I doubt I’ll live long enough to write all the stories left on my list.
Are
you a full-time writer? If you have another job, what is it and would you like
to become a full-time writer if you could?
Sort
of. I am a ghostwriter, so write books for other people. I also run online and
face-to-face workshops as the Unthank School of Writing. I would love to work
full-time on my own stuff but that gig is tough.
What is the most difficult part of your creative process?
Quite
possibly the overstretching of my bandwidth, the balancing act that has me
often writing a novel, shorts, ghosts and collaborations all at the same time. Constantly
waiting patiently is also difficult.
Please look after yourself better. Don’t listen to commissars. Don’t pretend to be a realist or a theorist. Write what no one else could write. Be hip to your jag. Accept wilderness forever.
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