I've
got a short story coming out in Cemetery
Dance
magazine called 'Healing Hands Beneath a Swann-Morton Sky'.
2)
How did it come about?
I
was at the gym, which is the only place in the world I might even
consider watching daytime TV. There was a piece about bacterial
antibiotic resistance and the fact that no new antibiotics have been
developed for many years because it's not of sufficient financial
interest to drug companies. That's the sole reason. So people are
dying of infections right now simply because drug companies don't see
sufficient profit in researching new ones. I had been aware of this
before, of course, but for some reason at that moment it focused my
mind perfectly.
3)
Tell us about the process of how you created it.
I
got incredibly angry about the state of the world we live in, came
home from the gym, and wrote the whole thing straight down in a
notebook.
4)
What was your favourite part of the process?
Realising
I'd created something of a nature and style that I'd never done
before, and done it to my satisfaction.
5)
What was the toughest part of it?
People
have often commented in the past about how successfully I blend
humour with horror. The thing is, I don't ever actually try and do
this - that's just how the stories come out. I didn't want this one
to have a trace of 'funny' in it and once it was written I spent a
lot of time going over it to make sure it wasn't the victim of
'inadvertent wit'!
6)
Is there a theme running through it?
We
are all truly doomed if we keep living the way we do now.
7)
If you had to sum this story up in three words, what would they be?
Angry.
Political. Downbeat. Three words I never thought my fiction would be.
And who knows? It may never be again. Because you see I don't
actually enjoy writing this kind of thing, it doesn't make me feel
better and if anything it just makes me feel worse, whereas the whole
point of my fiction is that I want it to be a pick-me-up, both for me
and the reader. But every now and then you just can't help what comes
out, can you?
8)
Where can we get hold of it?
It
got picked up by Richard Chizmar's Cemetery
Dance,
which I was both pleased and bewildered by, as it's the first major
sale I've had to a US print magazine. God help people who like this
and seek out some of my other stuff, because it won't be what they're
expecting at all! Although I will add to that something Joel Lane
(one of my writing heroes) said about Robert Bloch (another one),
that people who thought Bloch was just being funny hadn't realised
that beneath his entertaining approach was actually quite a bleak and
bitter view of humanity. So maybe it's been there all along. I
promise I'll keep it lighter for next time, though.
Probably.
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