A big thank you to everyone who submitted a story. Table of contents to be announced soon.
Tuesday, 28 July 2020
Thursday, 12 March 2020
An Interview with Sam Hicks
Sam Hicks' story, 'Old Sylvester', will be opening the forthcoming Dark Lane Anthology Volume 9. Her short fiction has previously appeared in the anthologies The Fiends In the Furrows, Nightscript, and The Best Horror of the Year Vol. 11.
Q: What are your working methods? Do you sit down every day to write? Do you have a designated place to work?
A: I write every day when I’ve got a story on the go, but I
rarely have one ready to start when one’s finished, so days if not weeks can go
by without me doing anything much. I tell myself that inactivity is an
important part of the process. When I do have an idea, I ‘ll only do a couple
of hours a day on the first draft, because I find it so hard. But when that’s
done I’ll spend as many hours as I can on the subsequent drafts. I write in our
spare room, where I also do a bit of woodcarving.
Q: Tell us about one of your favourite short stories and why
you like it (not one of your own).
A: I immediately think of Seaton’s Aunt by Walter de la Mare.
That story haunts me. De la Mare was a master at conveying the mystery beneath
the surface. I quote: “We don’t even
know our own histories, and not a tenth, not a tenth of the reasons.”
Q: Tell us about one of your favourite short stories (done by
you).
A: I can’t bear to read them once they’re done, to be honest. I
always want to change them. But I’ll say Old Sylvester because it’s the only
one inspired by my walks in Dartford that anyone has published. Thanks for
that.
Q: Where do your ideas come from? Do you go looking for ideas – for example by
brainstorming, or do you wait for inspiration?
A: I get ideas by wandering around in a
receptive state, taking notes about random things. I go walking around the less
picturesque parts of Kent, because it’s easily accessible by train from south
east London. The degraded marshland and the industrial end of the Thames. The
strange isolated housing estates. But sometimes a phrase will just occur to me and inspire an idea.That’s
almost always when I’m wandering about though.
Q: 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?
A: I retired (early) from my Civil Service job three years ago,
and have certainly devoted myself more to writing since then. I did write bits
and pieces before that, but with no real seriousness.
Q: What
is the most difficult part of your creative process?
A: The
first draft. Just not giving up on it, because it’s always so bad. I have to
force myself to carry on, telling myself I can make it better in the second and
third draft. But I don’t always manage to do that, of course.
Q: If
you could go back in time, what would you say to your younger self about
becoming a writer?
A: Even
the writers I love have written things that leave me cold. But they’ve also written
things that have lodged in my mind forever. So I’d say don’t be dispirited when
you’re producing stuff you know isn’t brilliant, because every now and then
something will work. You don’t have to be consistent. Even the greats couldn’t
manage that. Actually, that’s the advice I’d give to myself now.
Thursday, 2 January 2020
Table of Contents for Dark Lane Anthology Vol.9
Twenty-one wonderful stories have been chosen for Volume 9. Many thanks to everyone who submitted. It was a pleasure to read your work.
1. OLD SYLVESTER BY SAM HICKS
2 AMPLIFICATION BY WILLIAM SQUIRREL
3 NIGHT ORDERS BY MATTHEW CHABIN
4 LONESOME ROAD BY ARIEL DODSON
5 LORD TUMBA BY ROBERT POPE
6 THE SKIPPED STONE BY T.J. MILLER
7 THE PRIVATE THINKER BY CHARLES WILKINSON
8 BETWEEN HIGH AND LOW TIDE BY JOSHUA STORRS
9 THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SPECIES BY HELEN POWER
10 UNBECOMING BY KATE CARNE
11 CRATERS OF PERPETUAL DARKNESS BY ROBERT KAYE
12 KENDALL AINSLEY: UNEARTHING THE ATACAMENOS BY DAMON KING
13 TARA'S TRUMPET BY ROBERT POPE
14 DIANE AND THE POLAR BEARS BY TOMAS EKLUND
15 PARASOMNIA BY K.W. TAYLOR
16 DAMAGED GOODS BY BRYN FORTEY
17 LA MADRUGADA BY J. ROSINA HARLOW
18 MEANWHILE ON A DIFFERENT EARTH BY ANYA PENFOLD
19 THE STATION HOUSE EMPEROR BY STEPHEN MCQUIGGAN
20 BLANCHE NEIGE BY EDWARD AHERN
21 GAMMA ORIONIS BLUES BY GEORGE KEARSE
1. OLD SYLVESTER BY SAM HICKS
2 AMPLIFICATION BY WILLIAM SQUIRREL
3 NIGHT ORDERS BY MATTHEW CHABIN
4 LONESOME ROAD BY ARIEL DODSON
5 LORD TUMBA BY ROBERT POPE
6 THE SKIPPED STONE BY T.J. MILLER
7 THE PRIVATE THINKER BY CHARLES WILKINSON
8 BETWEEN HIGH AND LOW TIDE BY JOSHUA STORRS
9 THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SPECIES BY HELEN POWER
10 UNBECOMING BY KATE CARNE
11 CRATERS OF PERPETUAL DARKNESS BY ROBERT KAYE
12 KENDALL AINSLEY: UNEARTHING THE ATACAMENOS BY DAMON KING
13 TARA'S TRUMPET BY ROBERT POPE
14 DIANE AND THE POLAR BEARS BY TOMAS EKLUND
15 PARASOMNIA BY K.W. TAYLOR
16 DAMAGED GOODS BY BRYN FORTEY
17 LA MADRUGADA BY J. ROSINA HARLOW
18 MEANWHILE ON A DIFFERENT EARTH BY ANYA PENFOLD
19 THE STATION HOUSE EMPEROR BY STEPHEN MCQUIGGAN
20 BLANCHE NEIGE BY EDWARD AHERN
21 GAMMA ORIONIS BLUES BY GEORGE KEARSE
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Monday, 29 July 2019
Wednesday, 24 July 2019
An interview with Bill Davidson
Bill Davidson's writing first appeared in Dark Lane Anthology Vol.5. His short story A Brief Moment of Rage will be reprinted in Ellen Datlow's forthcoming 'The Best Horror of the Year Volume Eleven'. Visit his website www.billdavidsonwriting.com.
Q: What are your working methods? Do you sit down every day to write? Do you have a designated place to work?
A: I maintain a high degree inconsistency, most of the time
anyway. I write most days- sometimes only a few hundred words, other times it can
be several thousands. I get an idea and then wander about the place falling
over dogs and mumbling to myself about elves or something until I have enough to
start my story. Once I’m going, I’ve got to get it out there and write for many
hours in a day, although seldom in a single sitting. I have to get up and do
something else, before I can figure out what I’ve just done wrong, or what
should happen next. I’m not much of a plotter.
I write mainly at home, but do enjoy occasionally sitting in
the library or a café.
Q:Tell us about one of your favourite short stories and why
you like it (not one of your own).
A: I recently read 20th Century Ghosts by Joe Hill
and one story has really stayed with me. It’s called Pop Art. This sounds
absurd, but it’s about a boy, Arthur, who is inflatable (and very puncturable)
living in the same dangerous world as the rest of us. I read the whole story fretting
over someone who is, in effect, a balloon, and his friend, who isn’t. It’s a
fantastic tale about friendship and humanity.
Q: Tell us about one of your favourite short stories (done by
you).
A: Bugger, this is difficult. I’m going to go for Childe Abbas,
alternatively titled The Little Town in England that Forgot all of its
Children, published by Hell Bound Books. It’s written from the point of view of
a little girl, Tilly, who is taken to live in the idyllic fictional English town
of Childe Abbas .
Tilly soon realises something is badly wrong with this town, but struggles to tell
her parents, as they are slowly forgetting about her.
Q: Where do your ideas come from? Do you go looking for ideas – for example by
brainstorming, or do you wait for inspiration?
A: I’m lucky in that things constantly occur to me without having
to purposefully do something to form an idea. I’m a naturally dreamy person and
I’m always seeing things, or hearing things, and thinking, what if? I write
down the initial idea and sometimes it turns into something worth pursuing - other
times I have to admit it’s crap. Or
already written.
Q: 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?
A: I
didn’t start writing in earnest until I took early retirement from local
government just under three years ago, managing everything from waste to
housing. Before that, I kind of dabbled, but what I produced wasn’t too good,
and I went into decade-long sulks when my work wasn’t published instantly. I simply
didn’t have the head space to do a demanding job and produce good writing, so I
take my hat off to the many people who can manage that.
For the
past year, I’ve been home schooling my daughter and, maybe it’s because I’d
already built up some momentum as a writer, that didn’t slow me up.
Q: What
is the most difficult part of your creative process?
A: My
stories can lose their way for a while because I get distracted by another
possible plotline or because my characters get ideas above their station. For
instance, I’m writing a story at the moment that started as a fantasy but the
domestic drama that is emerging could lead me to drop the fantastical element altogether
and write it as a straight ahead drama.
A writer
friend tells me that’s because I’m ill-disciplined and don’t plot it out well
enough before I start, but to hell with that shit. When things you don’t expect
start appearing on the page, that’s where the good stuff is.
Q: If
you could go back in time, what would you say to your younger self about
becoming a writer?
A: I’m
that annoyed with my younger self I’d probably just sneak up behind him and give
him a good kick up the arse, with no explanation.
If
he demanded a reason for this well-deserved kick up the arse, I might say, for
God’s sake write, you daft bastard! And don’t go into decade-long sulks
when the publishing world doesn’t fall over itself for you, either.
Saturday, 2 March 2019
Table of contents for Dark Lane Anthology: Volume Eight
Decisions have been made. Thanks to everyone who submitted a story. 22 stories have been selected for Volume Eight.
Duplex by C.M. Muller
The Ringers by Rebecca Lloyd
The Wet Knot by Marvin Brown
Junior by John Ord
The Awful Rowing Towards the End by Mike O'Driscoll
Water Vein by Carolyn Stockdale
Shadow Work by Nici West
Los Ninos by Bill Davidson
Madness is the Nexus of All Reality by Arthur Davis
The Festival of Conformity by Charles Wilkinson
Mr Webster by Michael Button
Costello's Cell by Gregory Wolos
Secondhand by Timothy Delizza
Serve and Protect by Ed Ahern
Charlotte by Robert Pope
The Calling by Ariel Dodson
The Poacher by Michael Packman
The Exhibit by Mark Keane
The Orgy at the Edge of the Galaxy by Robert Guthrie
Sing Ho! Stout Cortez by Michael W. Thomas
Letter to a Budding Entomologist by Tim W. Boiteau
No One Driving by Mark Andresen
Duplex by C.M. Muller
The Ringers by Rebecca Lloyd
The Wet Knot by Marvin Brown
Junior by John Ord
The Awful Rowing Towards the End by Mike O'Driscoll
Water Vein by Carolyn Stockdale
Shadow Work by Nici West
Los Ninos by Bill Davidson
Madness is the Nexus of All Reality by Arthur Davis
The Festival of Conformity by Charles Wilkinson
Mr Webster by Michael Button
Costello's Cell by Gregory Wolos
Secondhand by Timothy Delizza
Serve and Protect by Ed Ahern
Charlotte by Robert Pope
The Calling by Ariel Dodson
The Poacher by Michael Packman
The Exhibit by Mark Keane
The Orgy at the Edge of the Galaxy by Robert Guthrie
Sing Ho! Stout Cortez by Michael W. Thomas
Letter to a Budding Entomologist by Tim W. Boiteau
No One Driving by Mark Andresen
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