Interviews
Showing 298 Interviews
Showing 298 Interviews
February 9th, 2022
There's been a viral whispering about a book called The Pussy Detective by DuVay Knox for over a year now. All anyone knew was that the protagonist is a detective who specializes in "lost and missing pussy", which in today's climate could only inspire presumption, confusion, fascination, then finally, elation once CLASH Books revealed the cover last fall. Anyone who was gonna dismiss this book unread as a piece of misogyny was going to be challenged in multiple fashions.
Read Interview →February 1st, 2022
I was neck-deep in a murky depression when Tao Lin sent me a copy of Zac Smith’s new book, Everything Is Totally Fine, last December – I was burnt out, on autopilot, my pleasure-receptors frayed even for reading. But the way it’s formatted, I was able to take resentful little nibbles out of the weird white book, and I eventually found myself cackling out loud alone in my sad house where I had been taking myself way too seriously.
Read Interview →December 21st, 2021
Photo courtesy of the author High White Notes: The Rise and Fall of Gonzo Journalism is the new Hunter S. Thompson biography by David S. Wills, longtime editor of Beatdom literary journal. While another biography of a well-tread icon might seem superfluous, High White Notes is perhaps the most essentially human account of HST, one that dares to actually dissect his writing rather than his outlaw lifestyle.
Read Interview →November 22nd, 2021
Photo courtesy of the author One of the great things this year (a year not great for so many) has been the opportunity to work (and intersect with) a number of interesting authors writing about interesting things—monsters, caregiving, the environment and trauma to name just a few of those things—many of whom I’ve been able to interview on this very site.
Read Interview →November 10th, 2021
Last year I read The Science of Women in Horror and reviewed it for Tor Nightfire. I was incredibly impressed by the amount of research that went into writing that book. This year, The Science of Serial Killers showed up, and as soon as I looked at the Table of Contents I knew I would have to reach out to Meg Hafdahl and Kelly Florence to learn more about the way they go about writing this series. The following is my interview.
Read Interview →November 9th, 2021
Author photo courtesy of Tex Gresham Tex Gresham's new 800+ page epic, Sunflower (Space Boy Books), is an audacious and mold-breaking work. A braided and frayed dive into conspiracy and alternate realities as covertly dictated by the Hollywood dream machine, Sunflower grows where fiction eclipses into the familiarity of false memory syndrome. I knew nothing about it when it came in the mail, only that it instantly demanded my attention, then, my multi-disciplinary participation.
Read Interview →October 26th, 2021
Author photo courtesy of Tia Ja'nae Ghosts On The Block Never Sleep is the debut novel by hardcore Chicago author Tia Ja'nae (out in October on Uncle B. Publications). A singular tale of a female car-jacker who, because of her high-demand, acts as conduit to some of the most dangerous criminal elements in the city. It's a fast-talking, relentless yet introspective meditation on life/death, survival/deceit, and how far a woman's constitution for death can stretch before the reader begins to question her own sanity.
Read Interview →October 7th, 2021
Generative portrait of Autocastratix/ZoeOzone/Rachel Lilim by Rachel Lilim It's safe to say that the future, which is now the present, turned out to be a total bummer. The good news is that literature will continue seeping into new uncharted voids, whether or not we're on board to evolve along with it. Yet, no one can deny: Communication is getting strange, man.
Read Interview →September 21st, 2021
Ellen Datlow's name is synonymous with horror. For more than four decades she has been curating horror for best selling and award winning anthologies. As a lover of short fiction myself, I have read dozens of horror anthologies edited by Ellen. She's the best in the business and knows everything about putting together a solid array of stories from the genre's most talented authors.
Read Interview →September 8th, 2021
Photo via Rob Fromberg By their very nature, memoirs can have the tendency to be self-indulgent, oversharing, name-dropping, sensationalistic and, yes, irresistible invitations into an exceptional person's charmed or cursed life. Yet, if a memoir falls into this kind of no-stone-unturned tell-all, something about the read remains surface-level, superficial, and predictable.
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