Interview with Bruce Boston at Darkeva’s Dark Delights

Posted by admin on 21st April 2013

boston_bruce200Darkeva interviews World Horror Convention’s Poet Guest of Honor, Bruce Boston.

Darkeva: There’s definitely a strong contingent of poets among the sci-fi/fantasy/horror communities, and you’re certainly one of the most accomplished with publications in all the top magazines. Tell us a bit more about how you got your first few sales.

BB: I was publishing poetry in literary magazines, mostly non-paying, some of it speculative, throughout the 1970s, though I didn’t yet have the label “speculative” for it. I’d also sold a few science fiction stories to commercial anthologies. In 1978 I saw a market report for a magazine titled The Anthology of Speculative Poetry. I submitted several poems and Editor Robert Frazier accepted them all. He also recommended I join the Science Fiction Poetry Association, which had just been formed by SF novelist Suzette Haden Elgin. Through the SFPA I discovered numerous small press genre publications that would allow me to combine my love of poetry with my love of sci-fi/fantasy/horror. And unlike most literary magazines, many actually paid to publish it. Usually not much, but at least the idea was in place that writers should be paid for their work.

Yet it wasn’t until the early 1980s, when Shawna McCarthy took over as editor at Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine , that I began selling poetry regularly to professional, commercial markets. Prior to Shawna’s editorship, Asimov’s published mainly rhyming poems that were often humorous. Shawna introduced poems that remained genre in setting and content, yet more accurately reflected the state of modern poetry in form and voice. After my poems began appearing regularly in Asimov’s and received a few awards, I soon began publishing poems regularly in Amazing Stories and genre anthologies, and eventually in Weird Tales.

Read the rest of the interview at Darkeva’s Dark Delights.

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Stoker Spotlight: 13 Questions with Bruce Boston, author of Dark Matters

Posted by admin on 10th October 2011

Bruce Boston is the recipient of the 2010 Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Poetry Collection. He is the author of forty-eight books and chapbooks, including the novels The Guardener’s Tale and Stained Glass Rain. His poetry has received a record seven Rhysling Awards, a record six Asimov’s Readers Awards, a record four Bram Stoker Awards for poetry collection, along with the first Grandmaster Award of the Science Fiction Poetry Association. His fiction has received a Pushcart Prize and the Best of Soft SF Award.

Boston’s work has appeared in hundreds of publications, most visibly in Asimov’s SF Magazine, Amazing Stories, Weird Tales, Strange Horizons, Realms of Fantasy, Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, and The Nebula Awards Showcase. He lives in Ocala, Florida, once known as the City of Trees, with his wife, writer-artist Marge Simon. For more information, visit his website at www.bruceboston.com.

How would you describe Dark Matters?
A trade paperback of 96 pages published by Bad Moon Books containing 49 dark poems and prose poems along with some wonderfully spooky illustrations by Italian artist Daniele Serra.

Tell us about what inspired you to write Dark Matters.
The poems collected in Dark Matters cover a span of more than twenty years. To speak to the individual inspiration involved with each would no doubt stretch my memory irreparably and bore you intolerably. But I can speak to the inspiration for “Dark Rains Here and There,” the sample poem included here.


I’ve always found day after day of unchanging cloudless skies and sunshine more depressing than day after day of constantly changing cloudy and stormy skies accompanied by rain. In fact, I find the latter invigorating rather than depressing. That difference becomes the metaphorical setting for “Dark Rains Here and There,” which suggests that a life filled with challenges, with conflicts and changes, both positive and negative, can prove more satisfying than one that is resolved and constant.

What was your writing process like for the book? Do you have a regular writing routine or schedule?
All the poems, and others I could have included, were already written when I started compiling Dark Matters, so the process became one of finding the right mix, deciding which poems to include in the book and in what order they should appear. A gradual process with no schedule involved. Sometimes I’d let the book sit for several days and then return for a fresh look.

When I’m writing poetry I don’t adhere to any routine or schedule. It’s more the case of when the spirit moves me. If I’m working on fiction of any real length, and hope to finish it, I find that a schedule is necessary. I generally write first thing in the morning for from four to six hours, and sometimes return to it for a hour or so later in the day, often before bedtime. Of course when you are working that intensely on a single piece you inevitably become very involved with it. It can take on a reality that will seem more “real” than the everyday world around you, so that you often find your mind keeps working on it even when you are doing something else. Sometimes it even crops up in your dreams.

What most attracts you to writing horror?
I most often write in shorter forms–poetry, flash fiction, short stories–and I feel horror is particularly suited to short forms. Also, I grew up reading Poe, Matheson, Charles Beaumont, John Collier, Robert Bloch, Robert Sheckley, authors who could conjure wonderful dark speculative tales in a few thousand words or even less. I think most writers tend to write what they like to read, and I’m no exception.

What are some of the themes you explore in your writing? Are there any topics you consider “out of bounds” even for horror fiction?
My writing is diverse in terms of genre and style, ranging from broad humor to literary surrealism, with many stops along the way for horror, science fiction, fantasy and noir. Consequently, my themes are diverse. They can be philosophical, sociopolitical, spiritual, or about personal relationships.

I don’t feel that any topic is out of bounds if it is handled properly. For example, one topic that many would consider taboo would be a sympathetic portrayal of a child molester, yet Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita does exactly that and is often considered one of the great novels of the last hundred years. Gene O’Neill does the same thing in a very different way in his excellent SF novel, The Indigo Man. Of course, these books don’t celebrate the molestation of children, but give us insights into its nature.

What are you writing now?
Currently, Gary William Crawford and I are working on a shared-world poetry collection set in a hypothetical Shadow City, a brutal totalitarian world. It’s proving to be a challenge since our writing styles are very different. I also have a noir novel underway, and several short stories.

What do you see as horror literature’s role in contemporary culture?
With regard to culture, it’s no different from any literature. Of course, it should entertain. But what could be called a higher role is to speak to the world around us, to offer insights into our lives and our times, to enhance our perceptions and existence.

Tell us about an experience or experiences with the HWA that influenced your writing or helped you as a writer.
Winning the Bram Stoker Award has certainly helped me, both in terms of readers and my reputation as a writer. Beyond that, no single experience comes to mind, but the general experience has been very positive. Through HWA I’ve met many writers whom I now consider friends, who are writing in a similar vein to much of my work. Sharing our writings, ideas, etc., has served as a significant impetus to write more.

What advice would you share with new horror writers? What do you think are the biggest challenges most writers face?
I think one of the biggest challenges is the conflict whether you are going to write for the marketplace or follow your own mind and heart. There are few writers fortunate enough to discover such goals coincide. Some decide to cater to the market and its demands. For most, it remains an ongoing balancing act.

As far as advice, I’d say to read, read, read, particularly in the horror genre. More than courses or how-to books or workshops, I believe one learns how to write by reading.

What are three of your favorite horror stories?

  • “The Telltale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe

  • “The Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe
  • “Quitters, Inc.” by Stephen King

What’s your favorite Halloween memory or tradition?
Nothing scary or extraordinary. I was lucky to grow up in a safe lower-middle-class neighborhood where trick or treat was an accepted tradition. Everyone seemed to know the code: If your porch light was on, that meant you had candy to give away; if it was off, you didn’t. So from the ages of about six to ten, I would think up a costume, usually homemade, and go door to door filling a bag with candy. However, one negative memory also clings to this positive tradition. My parents took a peculiar pride in having the best Halloween treats of anyone in the neighborhood, full-size Hershey Bars and Mr. Goodbars. By the time I returned home, with my bag filled with candy, they would have run out and the porch light would be turned off. So the other kids, my friends in the neighborhood, got the primo treats, while I had to go with cheaper and less desirable booty. Though I guess to some extent it was my own fault. It never occurred to me to trick or treat my own house.

Given a choice, trick? Or treat?
You mean you haven’t read my latest collection, Surrealities?

Have you ever been abducted by aliens?
They’ve tried more times than I care to remember, but I’ve always managed to lose them in the briar patch.

Excerpt from Dark Matters by Bruce Boston

      Dark Rains Here and There

      i

      When she was a girl in Myanmar
      the dark rains fell
      suddenly in great sheets
      of water and sound
      in the heated afternoons.

      Thunder would rattle
      the tin roof and the kitchen
      would often flood.

      When the dark rains fell on Myanmar
      she lived in poverty beneath
      the tyranny of a state
      beyond redemption.

      When the dark rains fell on Myanmar
      the sky gave up its color.
      Shadows would disappear
      for there would be one great shadow
      covering everything.

      ii

      When she was a woman in San Francisco
      the dark rains would fall slowly
      and steadily for days at a time,
      turning the pastel houses gray
      beneath an even grayer sky.

      When the dark rains fell on San Francisco
      the tires of passing cars hissed
      endlessly on the wet pavements.

      When the dark rains fell on San Francisco
      she lived with passion and belief
      and drug-fueled flights to worlds unfathomed.

      iii

      When she was a wanderer in space,
      the dark rains fell many ways
      on many different worlds.

      When the dark rains fell
      in the labyrinth of canyons
      that laced the southern hemisphere
      of Epsilon Eridani Nine,
      they danced this way and that
      in constantly shifting whirlpools of wind.

      When the dark rains fell in the light gravity
      of Fomalhaut’s only habitable moon,
      it was in large limpid drops
      clinging to the cilia and limbs
      of overarching trees.

      When the dark rains fell
      on many different worlds,
      here and there,
      she learned to live with love
      bright as a rocket’s flare
      and loss deep as a singularity.

      iv

      When she was a señora
      in the high Mexico desert,
      in the steady days
      of her peace and resolution,
      she would stand at the screen door
      just before dusk.

      She would listen to the insects ticking
      against the dusty metal crosshatch
      and watch the light
      from a low red sun
      encroaching on the deep shade of the porch.

      When the sky remained cloudless
      on the high desert,
      when life seemed dry and spare
      as the land around her,
      she found herself watching
      for one more dark rain
      she could walk in.

(2010 Rhysling Award, Second Place, Long Poem Category, first appeared in Dark Matters, Bad Moon Books, 2010)

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SURREALITIES by HWA Member Bruce Boston

Posted by Dark Whisperer on 22nd August 2011


Author: Bruce Boston

SFPA Grandmaster Poet Bruce Boston brings together 29 poems surreal and about surrealism. Along with seven poems appearing here for the first time, Surrealities includes reprints from leading genre and literary publications such as Chiaroscuro, Dreams and Nightmares, Paper Crow, The Pedestal Magazine, and Strange Horizons. Also includes six original and striking Rorschach illustrations Boston has created specially for this collection.

“Here, the surreal beauty of a muscular mind, poems like evil flowers, cachinnating snow monkeys, blue-eyed chateaus, scarlet snails. Here, all the boats are drunk, all the architecture soft and hairy, all the nights lit by giraffe fire, butterfly blaze. Here, Bruce Boston – investigating an horizon first mapped by Celan and Eluard, Tanguy and Tanning – rummages through each tree’s drawer, behind perception’s door, to find disturbing but strangely familiar shapes for language, longing, and love.” –Bryan D. Dietrich, author of Universal Monsters

“At times furious in its assault on the senses. At times curious in its nonchalance. This vein of poetics suits Boston oh so well. Like when he takes flight from a straight narrative thread and employs his vocabulary to high and exigent purposes, as in ‘The Lateral Eclipse of Bound Sunsets.’ And when he makes the mystery melancholy, as in ‘Stray Acquisitions.’ A master class on the motive/emotive powers of language.” –-Robert Frazier, author of The Daily Chernobyl

“Boston utterly transcends convention, highlighting many aspects of human experience inaccessible through the use of more traditional methods. Reading these poems is like embarking upon a trek through ‘the depths of dreams,’ the ‘infrastructure’ of the soul itself! I celebrate the release of this work, a collection to which I shall, no doubt, frequently return.” –-John Amen, author of At the Threshold of Alchemy

Dark Regions Press
Release Date: August 2011
ISBN_10 1-937128-13-X
ISBN_13 978-1-937128-13-5

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IL POSTO NERO – July Links (HWA Italy)

Posted by Dark Whisperer on 7th August 2011

The first episode of Il Posto Nero‘s link collection is here. In the month of July, Alessandro Manzetti posted an awesome list of articles and interviews for our Italian HWA members and other horror fans in that country.

Some come with an English translation, but even if they don’t, remember that most browsers offer a “translate” feature. While it may not be perfect English, you’ll definitely be able to understand the great information in these articles.

  • Horror Street: Interview with John Everson (in English, in Italian)
     
  • Queen Anne’s Resurrection – Journey II – The Voice of Elsewhere with Lisa Morton, Rain Graves, Danilo Arona, Daniele Bonfanti (in Italian)
     
  • Black Pills: Dark Surrealism of Alan M. Clark (in Italian)
     
  • Autopsies: Review of Apocalypse Z by Manel Loureiro edited by Alessandro Vigliani (in Italian)
     
  • The Raven – News From Hell: #1 Issue of HWA Italian Bulletin (in Italian
     
  • Black Pills: The Art of Shinya Tsukamoto (in Italian)
     
  • Preview: New Issue of H, The Almanac of Horror Magazine – Interview with Brian Keene (in Italian)
     
  • Queen Anne’s Resurrection – Journey I – The Maps of the Wizard with Bruce Boston, Daniele Serra, Daniele Bonfanti (in Italian)
     
  • Black Pills: The Hell of Francis Bacon (in Italian)
     
  • Autopsies: Review of Apocalypse The Conqueror Worms by Brian Keene edited by Barbara Baraldi (in Italian)
     
  • Horror Street: Interview with Jonathan Maberry (in English; in Italian)
     
  • Black Pills: The Skeleton of James Ensor (in Italian)
     

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Bram Stoker Award 2010 Winners Announced

Posted by Dark Whisperer on 25th June 2011

Superior Achievement in a NOVEL
A DARK MATTER by Peter Straub (Doubleday/Orion)

Superior Achievement in a FIRST NOVEL (Tie)
BLACK AND ORANGE by Benjamin Kane Ethridge (Bad Moon Books)
THE CASTLE OF LOS ANGELES by Lisa Morton (Gray Friar Press)

Superior Achievement in LONG FICTION
INVISIBLE FENCES by Norman Prentiss (Cemetery Dance)

Superior Achievement in SHORT FICTION
“The Folding Man” by Joe R. Lansdale (from HAUNTED LEGENDS)

Superior Achievement in an ANTHOLOGY
HAUNTED LEGENDS edited by Ellen Datlow and Nick Mamatas (Tor)

Superior Achievement in a FICTION COLLECTION
FULL DARK, NO STARS by Stephen King (Simon and Schuster)

Superior Achievement in NON-FICTION
TO EACH THEIR DARKNESS by Gary A. Braunbeck (Apex Publications)

Superior Achievement in a POETRY COLLECTION
DARK MATTERS by Bruce Boston (Bad Moon Books)

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Horror Writers Association Celebrates 2008 Stoker Winners!

Posted by admin on 16th June 2009

At long last, the anticipation is over. The Horror Writers Association has announced the winners of the 2008 Bram Stoker Awards at its annual Stoker Banquet held Saturday, June 13th, 2009 as part of its Stoker Weekend in Burbank, California. Nine new bronze haunted-house statuettes were handed over to the writers responsible for creating superior works of horror last year. This year’s winners are:

Superior Achievement in a NOVEL
DUMA KEY by Stephen King (Scribner)

Superior Achievement in a FIRST NOVEL
THE GENTLING BOX by Lisa Mannetti (Dark Hart Press)

Superior Achievement in LONG FICTION
MIRANDA by John R. Little (Bad Moon Books)

Superior Achievement in SHORT FICTION
“The Lost” by Sarah Langan (Cemetery Dance chapbook)

Superior Achievement in an ANTHOLOGY
UNSPEAKABLE HORROR edited by Vince A. Liaguno and Chad Helder
(Dark Scribe Press)

Superior Achievement in a COLLECTION
JUST AFTER SUNSET by Stephen King (Scribner)

Superior Achievement in NONFICTION
A HALLOWE’EN ANTHOLOGY by Lisa Morton (McFarland)

Superior Achievement in POETRY
THE NIGHTMARE COLLECTION by Bruce Boston
(Dark Regions Press)

Works can be recommended by any member of the HWA. Members with Active status then vote works onto a preliminary ballot. From there the field is narrowed to the final ballot and Active members then choose the winners. The award is named for Bram Stoker, best known as the author of Dracula. The trophy, which is a miniature haunted house, was designed by author Harlan Ellison and sculptor Steven Kirk.

HWA also presented its annual Lifetime Achievement Awards and its Specialty Press Award. F. Paul Wilson and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, receiving Lifetime Achievement Awards, were on hand to accept. The Specialty Press Award went to Larry Roberts of Bloodletting Press. The Silver Hammer Award, for outstanding service to HWA, was voted by the organization’s board of trustees to Sephera Giron. The President’s Richard Laymon Service Award was given to John R. Little.

(left to right) Chad Helder, Vince Liaguno, Lisa Morton, F. Paul Wilson, Lisa Mannetti, Larry Roberts, Sephera Giron, and John R. Little

(left to right) Chad Helder, Vince Liaguno, Lisa Morton, F. Paul Wilson, Lisa Mannetti, Larry Roberts, Sephera Giron, and John R. Little

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