Dark Lit Market: BERGDORF & ASSOCIATES by Thomas C. Mavroudis

It’s #TERRORTUESDAY, so we’re releasing yet another DHC member’s published work from our DARK LIT MARKET!

This week, muster your guts for BERGDORF & ASSOCIATES by Thomas C. Mavroudis!

Down and out Abraham Kos has been a contract hand to the 72 Spirits of Solomon (demons to some, djinn to others) ever since his attempted suicide. The jobs Abe performs are generally simple, if questionable, but the most recent task posed by Abe’s handler, Bergdorf, is proving unusually difficult.

To complicate matters further, a powerful young woman named Rayne has been assigned the same task. To win the ensuing game of “keep away,” Abe will have to enlist the aid of his telepathically linked twin nieces, a brujo in training, and his dementia-afflicted father.

The 4th Circle: Interview with Ian Neligh

-Interview by Desi D

  1. What’s your favorite line in a book/movie? And why?

This is a hard one to pick—Frank Herbert’s DUNE has so many—but if pressed I’d say probably, “The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed,” from the first book in Stephen King’s THE DARK TOWER series. As a reader it is almost impossible to read that line and not be instantly hooked into his dark and wonderfully bizarre fairytale. The line is intriguing, simple, and basically the plot of the novel boiled down into twelve words. The first sentence of a novel is important, and few know that as well as Stephen King.

  1. As a writer, how would you describe your fascination with history, specifically the Old West? And how does this inspire your story ideas?

For me, history is an endless source of writing inspiration. I suppose if I was living somewhere other than the American West, I’d find insight from other historic sources, but as it stands, the Old West is a perfect subject!

I love reading and writing about history but I’m also passionate about horror writing and the Old West was essentially a time of survival horror in the truest sense. It was a time where everyone and everything could kill you. And it really wasn’t that long ago; I recently interviewed someone who was the great-grandson of legendary frontiersman Kit Carson.

The Old West, after the Civil War, became this country’s shared mythology to help heal its division. That shared mythology (for better or worse) runs through a lot of our country’s psychology, which from a storytelling perspective is extremely insightful.

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Dark Lit Market: CHOPPING SPREE by Angela Sylvaine

It’s #TERRORTUESDAY, so we’re unleashing yet another DHC member’s published work from our DARK LIT MARKET!

This week, prepare yourself for CHOPPING SPREE by Angela Sylvaine!

Eden Hills, Minnesota is famous for one thing—its ’80s inspired Fashion Mall. When high school junior, Penny, lands a job at one of its trendy stores, she notices her teen coworkers all wear a strange symbol they won’t explain.

Suspicious but wanting to belong, she agrees to stay after closing for a party in the closed store. Her fun turns to terror when Penny discovers a mortally wounded boy and learns there is a killer loose in the mall. Soon the teens are running for their lives.

Will Penny discover the truth behind the mall cabal and survive to slay another day, or will she fall victim to the galleria of gore?

DHC Book Cult + Author Q&A: UBO by Steve Rasnic Tem | March 28 @ 5 PM

Sunday, March 28, 2021 at 5 PM MDT – 7 PM MDT

In the first of our Colorado horror authors ONLY book club on , we’ll be reading and virtually discussing local legend Steve Rasnic Tem’s UBO, followed by a live, virtual Q&A with the author himself!

DHC Book Cult meetings will be held via Zoom every three months, and attendees will vote on which Colorado horror author to read next!

RSVP via Facebook or email submissions [at] denverhorror [dot] com

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Dark Wisdom Webinar: THE HORROR OF THE CRITIQUE (w/Henry Snider) | Feb. 25 @ 7 pm

Love writing? Interested in joining a critique group? Unsure about how to comment on another author’s work?

This interactive virtual lecture will guide you through the process of finding a group that’s right for you, how to offer constructive critiques useful to authors, and in doing so find shortcomings and strengths in your own writing.

* Is a writing group for you? * Picking the right kind of group * Critiquing vs. editing * How to critique * Receiving a critique * Social vs. professional interaction with your group * Helpful books *

Reserve your free ticket via Eventbrite to receive Zoom link via email.

Henry Snider has created and managed award-winning writing groups, provided editing services for authors, offered classes, lectured, provided writing contests for high schools, and served the writing community for over 25 years.