Samhain Guest Author: Jonathan Janz

Fellow Samhain Horror author Jonathan Janz just published his modern-gothic nightmare ‘The Sorrows‘ in ebook (the trade paperback follows in 2012) and has already announced his next, the sublimely-titled and cover-illustrated ‘House of Skin‘. Mr Janz took time out of his busy schedule to answer a few questions for my blog and I’m very glad he did as the answers are very insightful indeed. So, without further ado, take it away Mr Janz!

The Sorrows - out now

The Sorrows - out now1. Your novel 'The Sorrows' debuts as part of the Samhain Horror line this December. Can you tell us about the novel and the inspiration behind it?

1. Your novel ‘The Sorrows’ debuts as part of the Samhain Horror line this December. Can you tell us about the novel and the inspiration behind it?

Absolutely! The synopsis, of course, can be found at the Samhain Horror website and just about anywhere else books are sold, but I don’t want to give you a canned answer. Therefore, I’ll say that The Sorrows, while completely original and unique, is essentially a fresh take on the themes covered in several famous horror novels. Arthur Machen and Brian Keene, to name just two, have examined the legend of the god Pan and how a Pan-like antagonist might behave in contemporary society–particularly in a milieu where his bestial powers would be the most potent. In my novel the Pan-like creature is given what I think is a unique origin story and then unleashed on several sympathetic and unsympathetic characters.

Stephen King explored the concept of an edifice or a locale existing as a sort of psychic battery in The Shining; I explore that concept in The Sorrows because the entire island is a magnet for vengeful spirits.

And answering your question from a third perspective, I’ve long been fascinated by the art of movie music composition. How did Bernard Herrmann write the scores for Psycho and Vertigo? What about John Williams and his numerous masterpieces? My protagonists are movie music composers, and they’re scoring a big budget horror film by a director so evil he seems to be straight out of a horror movie. And, of course, by the end of the novel, the composers and the director are both pitted against an evil so diabolical that there’s no escaping it.

2. Care to reveal more about your clear fascination with gothic horror?

I love the gothic structure for a number of reasons, but above all I’m enthralled by the idea that evil is a living, breathing entity. Sin never really dies, at least sin for which there has been no atonement or remorse. All of us are fallible and all of us make mistakes. But there are human monsters in our midst all the time even if we don’t recognize them as such. People can perform unspeakable acts and appear perfectly normal to their peers. I explore that idea in The Sorrows, and further, through the gothic structure I can dramatize the sin that left such an indelible stain before I depict the manner in which that individual faces his or her reckoning. Only the gothic sub genre, I believe, allows the storyteller that specific angle of dread and horror.

3. Samhain Publishing is a new player in the horror literature field. What drew you to them as a publisher and how has it been working with them?

Don D’Auria. Simple answer, I know, but it’s the truth. Because of Don, I became familiar with Jack Ketchum and Richard Laymon, who’ve both been incredibly important in my walk as an author. Additionally, Don has discovered or published other authors (like Brian Keene) who continue to influence me. Working with Don and Samhain has been amazing. He’s grounded yet incredibly skilled, patient yet very driven, and he never makes me feel stupid even when the questions I ask could be characterized by that adjective. I’m very thankful for Don, and working with him has been even better than I thought it would be.

4. Winter has descended over Castle Blackwood and you are snowed in. Luckily there is plenty of food to keep The Sorrows at bay. Around the banqueting table are 6 chairs. Who’s dining with you, and why?

This will be incredibly cheesy, but to quote John Mellencamp, that’s the kind of fella I am. I would choose my wife, my four-year-old daughter (gotta put her first to ward off middle-child syndrome), my six-year-old son, and my baby daughter. Assuming I take one of the remaining two chairs, that leaves one place. And though my conscience tells me I should choose another family member or a friend to inhabit that chair, let me instead say at least one interesting thing in this answer and choose Stephen King. I doubt I’ll ever get the chance to meet him, but if I did, I’d likely be a blithering idiot, and dinner would be a disaster. But I’d still get to break bread with him, which would make my embarrassment worth it.

5. Where do you feel the horror genre stands nowadays and what does your crystal ball predict for the genre’s future?

There’s a writer named James Macdonald (I think) who’s referred to as Uncle Jim on the AbsoluteWrite website. He makes an awesome analogy about the attitude of some literary fiction writers versus the attitude of most commercial fiction writers. He imagines the former standing around cupping single grains of sand in their hands, cherishing those grains, and jealously (and perhaps haughtily) guarding them from the rest of the world. Then he imagines himself (as a stand-in, I assume, for all commercial fiction writers) in an ice-cream stand on the beach inviting anyone within shouting distance to come enjoy a cone. That, in my opinion, is how we as a genre need to grow. Horror is a universal emotion, and it should be a universal genre. We should welcome writers who write horror but don’t call it that (Cormac McCarthy, for instance) just as much as we should welcome writers who deal in werewolves and zombies. The more inclusive we are, the larger readership we’ll eventually reach. So blow up the gates, I say, and make it one huge party.

6. What is your favorite work of fiction (horror or otherwise) and why?

My favorite horror novel is Peter Straub’s Ghost Story. My favorite novel overall is Ray Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine. I love the Straub book because it showed me that much of what I’d often dreamed about and felt could be expressed in a novel. I love Dandelion Wine because, as cheesy as this sounds, it’s love on paper. I cherish that book and can’t wait to read it with my children. Ghost Story, too, of course, but that one will have to wait until they’re at least seven-years-old. 🙂

house of skin - coming 2012

House of Skin - coming 2012


7. What next from Jonathan Janz? What are your hopes, dreams…and nightmares for the future?

This summer will see my second Samhain Horror release, a gothic novel titled House of Skin. I’m very proud of it and anxious for the world to read it. After that, hopefully, will come the novel I’m just about done editing (Loving Demons) and the novel I’m about eighty-percent finished with (Native). My career dream is to write full-time, but as long as my family and I are healthy and happy and together, I’ll have all I need.

8. As many people will know, Samhain Publishing is named for the ancient tradition that became every horrorhead’s favorite festival of Halloween. What would make for your best ever Samhain celebration?

I won’t give you a boring answer about my kids here, so how about this: Stephen King, Jack Ketchum, Peter Straub, Richard Matheson, and Joe R. Lansdale journey to a haunted castle with the Samhain Horror writers (including you, of course*), and we stage our own Lake Geneva Lord Byron/Mary Shelley all-night ghost story session in front of a fire while the storm and the winds outside rage. That’d make for one fine Samhain!

My thanks to Jonathan Janz for the awesome and insightful Q&A!

Be sure to check out a spine-tingling excerpt & pick up a copy of ‘The Sorrows’ at the Samhain Horror Store.

And to keep up-to-date on all things Jonathan Janz, visit his website: http://jonathanjanz.com

*Cheers! See you there dude…i’ll bring the ‘Transylvanian Red’ 🙂

The Book of the Film

Received my author copy of the ‘Panic Button’ paperback today (thanks to all at All2gethr HQ!). This is, of course, my movie novelization based upon the screenplay for the film (out now on UK DVD/Blu-ray). The Panic Button book is out now (from the film’s producers via their imprint ‘All2gethr Industries’) & available at both Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk. My thanks to John Shackleton, David Shillitoe and Gareth Davies for their help & support.

Panic Button - the book of the film OUT NOW!

Panic Button - the book of the film OUT NOW!

So, I got to thinking about all those ‘books of the film’ I devoured as a kid. Movie novelizations have always been a bit of a guilty pleasure, but in recent years there has been a bit of a resurgence in interest with tentpole genre movie adaptations from cool writers such as Ramsey Campbell and Tim Lebbon, among others. Is that me trying to justify indluging such a guilty pleasure, by saying they’re cool? Truth is, I’ve always enjoyed them!

Showing my age here, but this was back in the day when home video was yet to arrive and change things forever. The closest a kid could get to the cinema experience was the old Universal/Hammer tellybox double bills on the BBC over the weekend, or a special screening of six minutes (WOW, SIX MINUTES!) of silent Super 8 footage from “Star Wars” (as it was then known, none of this “Episode IV” malarkey) at a wealthier friend’s house. Sigh, those were the days when the only spoilers for a movie were contained within the shiny panels of a fold-out collectable poster magazine, of which I had dozens as a child – everything ranging from E.T., through the Star Trek movies, to Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers (“ee-gee-bee-gee-bee-gee, what’s up Buck?”). Which brings me neatly back to ‘the book of the film’.

Red pages, movie stills, BORE WORMS!

Red pages, movie stills, BORE WORMS!

I often read (well, devoured, is probably a truer term) these ahead of the film in question’s release, spending long hours poring over the ‘8 pages of color photographs!’ sandwiched between the already-yellowing pages of high octane movie-based narrative and snappy dialogue. Part of the fun was seeing how the events in the book matched up with the film when I finally got to see it, kind of an act of adaptation in reverse, if you will. Some of my favorites still grace my shelves, Arthur Byron Cover’s ‘Flash Gordon’ being an all-time fave of mine. I loved the lurid, 30s, pulp fiction style of Cover’s adaptation and still do – especially the chapter subtitles, which YELL at the reader, for example: ‘CHAPTER SEVEN: FLASH BITES THE BIG ONE!’ I had no idea, at the tender age of ten years old, what ‘biting the big one’ actually meant. But it made quite an impression on me, especially in the context of the ‘8 pages of color photos!’ which featured the lovely Ornella Muti as Princess Aura about to fall victim to the dubious attentions of the ‘bore worms’. “Underling, I’m bored. What plaything can you offer me today?” says Ming the Merciless. Quite.

Me, circa 1983. Santa brings The Last Starfighter. Happiness ensues.

Me, circa 1983. Santa brings The Last Starfighter. Happiness ensues.

Other cherished movie reads of mine included ‘Star Wars’ and its pre-‘Empire Strikes Back’ “sequel”; ‘Splinter of the Mind’s Eye’ (both from movie novel legend Alan Dean Foster), ‘TRON’, ‘The Last Starfighter’, ‘The Black Hole’, ‘Krull’, ‘Outland’ and, of course, the grandaddy of them all, William Kotzwinkle’s (LOVE that name) ‘E.T. The Extra Terrestrial’. And it wasn’t all science fiction, oh no, take for instance the beautiful ‘Nosferatu’ novelization (pictured above) with its red-tinted page edges and gorgeous black and white photo gallery (I particularly enjoy how the impossibly beautiful Isabelle Adjani is credited as ‘Isabelle ADJANI’ in each of her photos – quite RIGHT, too).

As you can probably tell, during the process of developing the Panic Button novelization, I got a bit misty eyed about the cinematic cookbooks of yesteryear and did some research around the subject. There are movie novels based on movies based on already existing novels (phew!), pseudo-sequels and spin-offs based on film franchises desperate to keep the ball rolling (and the cash registers ringing) while the property is still ‘hot’, and books that feature fonts so large you could read them from the moon – all for a sturdier page count and thicker, more consumer-friendly spine.

If, having read this far, you’re feeling a bit nostalgic too for these oh-so-guilty pleasures then I urge you to check out these links, which are filled with wonders:

  • Revenge of the Novelizations (amusing reviews of classics and some “not-so-classic-classics” of the form): Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.
  • Cult Film Freak interview with the mighty novelizer Alan Dean Foster.
  • Joe Queenan ponders terrors including Hannah Montana adaptations at The Guardian.

Now, I’m gonna pop my author copy of ‘Panic Button’ on the shelf in pride-of-place next to Arthur Byron Cover’s ‘Flash Gordon’ and, if just for a few moments, feel like that 10 year-old kid again.

Panic Button: Update Top Ranking

source: IMDb.com

Sorry to bang on about it (yeah, i’ll get back to the washing up just as soon as i’ve posted this, i promise!) but it has come to my attention that Panic Button is not only #31 on the whole of the IMDb listings, but is also today the 2nd most popular Horror title and the 8th most popular Thriller – and that’s globally folks.

Once again, congrats to the entire team: Producers, director, cast, crew – this is quite unprecedented for a low-budget, truly independent film that was created on a budget of only £300k and a whole lot of blood, sweat and toil.

Well done guys!

Here are those (November 16th 2011) IMDb top 10s in full (always interesting to see the occasional crossover between the horror/thriller genres):

HORROR
1. 11-11-11 (2011)
2.Panic Button (2011)
3.Paranormal Activity 3 (2011)
4.Apollo 18 (2011)
5.Shark Night 3D (2011)
6.Red State (2011)
7.The Human Centipede II (Full Sequence) (2011)
8.Insidious (2010)
9.The Thing (2011)
10.Underworld Awakening (2012)

THRILLER
1.11-11-11 (2011)
2.In Time (2011)
3.Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)
4.The Rum Diary (2011)
5.The Dark Knight Rises (2012)
6.Drive (2011)
7.Killer Elite (2011)
8.Panic Button (2011)
9.The Hunger Games (2012)
10.Apollo 18 (2011)

Panic Button is out now on DVD and Bluray in the UK from Cine-Britannia.

Okay, fanfare over, time to get back to that washing up – now where’d i leave my marigolds?

The Lamplighters: out today

out now from Samhain Horror

The Lamplighters is out today!

Here’s where you can buy the ebook:
Samhain Horror (30% off for a limited time direct from publisher)
Amazon.com (kindle)
Amazon.co.uk (kindle)
Barnes & Noble (nook)

Don’t “do” ebooks? Treebook lovers can pre-order the paperback (out 7 Feb 2012) at these outlets:
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
Barnes & Noble

Remember you can win a $5 Samhain Gift Certificate (to spend on The Lamplighters or any other Samhain title) at the Facebook Page today.

I’ll be chatting about The Lamplighters today at the Samhain Cafe, hope to see you there!

Countdown to The Lamplighters: 3 days

Today’s Lamplighters Countdown post is my interview by Horrorbid’s Matt Molgaard in which I talk up my new movie Panic Button, out on DVD/Bluray 7 November in the UK.

Panic Button is screening lots over Hallowe’en and the producers are heading to the AFM in November to sell the movie to more territories. Check the Panic Button website  for updates.

‘Til next slime, take scare.

Countdown to The Lamplighters: 7 days

My horror novel ‘The Lamplighters‘ is out a week today on 1st November.

Thanks to all who have been pre-ordering the book it is currently #4 in Samhain Publishing’s Top 10 Horror Bestsellers.

To celebrate I’ve given the old website a bit of an overhaul – hope you like the new look?

Have a browse around and be sure to check out the special Lamplighters page, where you can read an excerpt from the book and find links to pre-order the book in all major ebook formats for your Kindle, Nook or other newfangled e-reader device.

Paperback (or as some are calling them now, ‘Treebooks’ – I love that name) aficionados please note The Lamplighters trade paperback is out on 7th February 2012.

I will be running a Halloween competition to win a freebie so make sure you drop by and ‘Like’ the official Facebook page to be in with a chance of winning!

The Lamplighters is published by Samhain Horror, which launched this month under the supervision of Editor (and genre legend) Don D’Auria with exciting releases from authors both established and new.

A few of the Samhainers (Kristopher Rufty, Jonathan Janz, Ron Malfi, Brian Moreland and Hunter Shea) got together and recorded a radio chat in which they discuss the process of writing, getting published, and what to expect next from them. It’s a fun and informative listen and you can check it out here.

‘Til next slime, take scare.

Scares That Care on Friday the 13th!

we scare ‘cos we care!

Happy Friday the 13th! Have you donated $5 to Scares That Care yet? All proceeds go to sick children and their families. Cool prizes will be given to donors at random (but it’s not about the prizes, it’s about helping needy kids, right? Right!) 


So what are you waiting for!?


PAYPAL $5 to: scares_that_care@yahoo.com

PLEASE DONATE 
& SHARE/TWEET/BLOG THIS.


Happy Friday the 13th!

PANIC BUTTON (2011) – First Trailer!

Movie Mogul Films today unleashed the first trailer for social networking horror/thriller ‘PANIC BUTTON.‘ Kudos and congrats to cast and crew! So, welcome aboard, put your seat-back tray in the closed position and prepare for some turbulence… Please reTweet/Facebook share/Blog the trailer link – and as always, love to see your comments.

http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/video/xgzlt7_panic-button-2011-trailer-1_shortfilms?additionalInfos=0
PANIC BUTTON (2011) Trailer 1
Uploaded by JohnShack. – Check out other Film & TV videos.

Enter the Man-Cave!

Good morning dear readers, and a Happy New Year 2011 to you all. So, what’s happening? The UK Government wants to sell off all of Britain’s ancient forests, my horror fiction anthology is available on Kindle (reviews and ratings are always welcome dear friends, HINT HINT), and Shockerfest award-winning short chiller SIMONE is getting the love again in the form of this ace review from the nice chaps at Enter the Man-Cave. You can also get a director’s perspective on Simone in an interview with helmer Joops Fragale here, and read actor Jennifer Ward’s insights (on making a film crew vomit!) in her interview here. Now it’s back to my own man-cave for the time being…

Happy New Fear!

if (WIDGETBOX) WIDGETBOX.renderWidget(‘16586646-ce33-4b47-8ff8-d9b3813fbfff’);
Get the Halloween Countdown widget and many other great free widgets at Widgetbox! Not seeing a widget? (More info)2010 was mostly awesome ~ among the highlights… Short shocker ‘Simone‘ was unleashed by the good folks at 386 Films to a slew of favourable reviews and awards, not least the Audience Choice: Best Short Award at Shockerfest (well done cast & crew!). Horror/thriller feature ‘Panic Button‘ went into production in Cardiff with the dynamic Movie Mogul Films crew, and is now in post-production. Supernatural horror feature ‘The Reformatory‘ was optioned by the wonderful producers at Freeze Frame Entertainment (keep an eye on www.thereformatorymovie.com for updates on this exciting project). My fiction got some (in)decent exposure thanks to ebook editions of my short stories, and I made a couple of sales to paying markets too. Dark Mills and Abertoir both thoroughly rocked my world (cheers to Marcus and Gaz and their brilliant teams). And a really cool way to round off 2010 came in the form of an interview by Keri O’Shea for the brilliant Brutal As Hell (my thanks to Keri and Marc). Now it’s time to look forward to 2011, when I hope to have such frights to show you… Dear readers, I wish you all the bloody best ~ see you on the other side!