I just flew in from the World Horror Convention in Salt Lake City, and boy is my shoggoth tired. But
seriously, folks… This was my first WHC, and my first con of any sort in at
least 25 years. It was quite an experience: exhilarating, exhausting, excellent.
I attended both as a fan and as a representative of Montag Press, a publishing
collective based in Davis, CA. Our first book should be out in early summer (Tree Black by Connor de Bruler),
more details on that when the stars are right.
I met so many nice and
wonderful people at WHC. Some I had known
from online financial transactions; Hippocampus Press and
Centipede Press have seen some action from my bank account over the
years, and it was great to finally meet Derrick Hussey and
Jerad Walters. I had a nice talk with Derrick about Clark Ashton Smith and
Wilum Pugmire. I
didn’t get to talk with Jerad too much, as his absolutely beautiful books were
attracting a lot of attention (and customers).
Another vendor acquaintance was Paul Anderson of Arkham Antiques. I bugged Paul repeatedly about all the amazing Lovecraftiana he had for sale, and he was very patient with me. I thank him for that.
Another vendor acquaintance was Paul Anderson of Arkham Antiques. I bugged Paul repeatedly about all the amazing Lovecraftiana he had for sale, and he was very patient with me. I thank him for that.
Since I was there repping
Montag, I took some author pitches – the first time I’ve ever done anything
like that, for sure. I found out a couple of days before that I would be
sitting on a pre-pitch panel session, not the kind of thing I usually do… Still,
Friday morning at 10:00, I found myself sitting at a table with six established
horror publishers and editors, facing a standing room crowd of around 50
authors. I acquitted myself OK, and later took pitches for three hours from a
number of promising writers. Another guy tracked me down the next day and we
had an impromptu session, so in all I talked seriously to seven different
people. For an introvert like me, that was quite an experience. Thanks to
fellow panelists Kim Richardson of Damnation Books, Nicholas Grabowsky of Black Bed Sheet Books (more on him later), Steven Booth and Norman Rubenstein of
Genius Publishing, Don D’Auria of Samhain Publishing, and RJ Cavender of
Cutting Block Press for the advice and camaraderie.
While I truly enjoyed taking
the pitches, the highlight of the con for me was meeting all of the other small
press folks who were there. I was pleasantly surprised – stunned, really – by
just how friendly, open, and supportive they all were. My badge did say Montag
Press, and I figured the other presses would be a little wary or guarded. Boy,
did I misjudge this community. Every single press I talked with was happy to
share information and discuss the field.
Dark Regions Press brought
many of their books that are on my master To Read list, so I picked a few up
from Joe Morey in person. What a haul: Nightingale Songs by Simon Strantzas,
Charnel Wine by Richard Gavin, the brand new Gathered Dust and Others hardback by
W.H. Pugmire, the dark poetry book Shroud of Night by G. O. Clark, and The Engines of Sacrifice by James Chambers. Mr. Clark and Mr. Chambers were both at
the booth, and graciously chatted and signed my books. Joe threw in a copy of Pain
by Harry Shannon for free and we made a nice deal. Thanks Joe!
Post Mortem Press had a nice
selection of their wares. I hung around with publisher Eric Beebe and author
Scott Lange for a while. Later, they let me sit with them at the Bram Stoker
Awards banquet. Thanks guys! We also spent some time together in the Radisson
bar. Genuinely nice fellas. I bought a copy of
Scott’s The Beer Chronicles – with a name like that, how could I not?
Eric Beebe and Scott Lange |
In the bar with S.C. Hayden and Scott Lange |
ChiZine Publications from
Toronto was there, and I got to meet publisher Brett Savory and his wife Sandra
Katsuri. I picked up a copy of Katja From The Punk Band by Simon Logan and
talked with them for a while. ChiZine had a room party Saturday night; I know I
was there and I think I donated a few remnant
beers I picked up when the Stoker party shut down, but then it gets a
little fuzzy. Ahem.
At the Stoker Awards banquet. See all the formal wear? Now guess which doofus wore army pants and a t-shirt. Oops. |
Over the course of the three
days I was there, I also had some good conversations with a number of other fascinating
people. Lori Michelle and Max Booth of Dark Moon Books, Ed Kurtz of RedRum Horror,
Roy Robbins of Bad Moon Books, Hollie Snider at Evil Jester Press, and last but
not least Blake Casselman of Rare Legend Films stand out the most. I even
briefly met Ross Lockhart, managing editor of Night Shade Books, one of my
favorite imprints. That was seriously cool.
Ed Kurtz |
And then there was the Black Bed Sheet Books posse: publisher and author Nicholas Grabowsky, and authors
S.C. Hayden and Alexander Beresford. I met them on the first day, and ended up
spending a good deal of time talking and drinking with them in various locales.
In one of those “it’s a small world” moments, it turns out Nick lives just a
few miles from me, hah. I had read the first half of Sean Hayden’s American Idol in manuscript form, and loved it. When I found out another press was going
to publish it, I stopped reading the manuscript and promised myself I'd buy the book
when it came out. I’m happy to say I finally did that, really looking forward
to reading the final version in its entirety. I have also added Alex’s new book
Charla to that To Read list mentioned above, hearing good things about it. I
sincerely hope I haven’t seen the last of these rogues, we had too much fun.
Nicholas Grabowsky, Alexander Beresford, and S.C. Hayden |
I also want to mention
Zombiance, who played a free show in the convention suite on Thursday night. I
only caught the last few songs of their set, but really enjoyed it. They have a
hard/punk rock style, with songs exclusively about horror topics. Not content
with mere corpse paint, these guys and girl have costumes that include make-up,
latex and prostheses, very well done.
Zombiance and small, well-behaved punker audience |
I had to leave on Sunday and
missed the last day of the con. Almost missed my check-out time too, as I
apparently returned from those Stoker and ChiZine parties pretty damn late.
When I got to the airport, my plane was delayed, everything was crowded, the
food was bad, the whole thing. But it didn’t matter. Those three days that came
before were worth any travel hassles, without a doubt. This was my first
professional convention, and I get the feeling there will be many more. Hoping to make KillerCon in Vegas later this year, fingers crossed.
I took this picture of a deserted SLC at 3:30 Sunday morning. I'm sure I had a good reason. |