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About wesleysouthard

A writer with a few short story sales under my belt and several big plans in my pocket. When not watching The Office for hours on end, I spend my free time reading, writing and editing.

Now Available: Eulogies II

eulogies IIIt feels like it’s been forever, but I finally have a new story out for sale!  My story “By The Throat” is now available in Eulogies II: Tales from the Cellar from Horror World Press.  This brand new anthology–edited by Nanci Kalanta, Christopher Jones and Tony Trembly–features over thirty brand new stories and poems, from both new and established horror voices.

1.The Thing with Nothing to Give and Nothing to Lose – Tom Piccirilli
2. Once What Was Bone – Gary Braunbeck
3. Spare the Rod – Lucy Snyder
4. Born Again – Michael Boatman
5. A Serving of Nomu Sashimi – Eric J. Guignard
6. Latchkey Kid – V.M Zito
7. By the Throat – Wesley Southard
8. Loneliness Makes the Loudest Noise – Monica O’Rourke
9. Footnotes – Magda Knight
10. Chuck – Eric Dimbleby
11. Chiyoung and Dongsun’s Song – T.T Zuma
12. On the Hooks – Keith Minnion
13. Jasmine & Opium – Rebecca Brown
14. The Bore – John McIlveen
15. Poetry by Arthur Crowe
16. Dissolution – Sean Logan
17. Touch – Gerard Houarner
18. Neck Bolt Lynch Pin – Steve Vernon
19. Puttyskin – Malcolm Laughton
20. The Second Carriage – Jonathan Templar
21. Song in Absentia – Janet Joyce Holden
22. Meepy – Brent Jenkins
23. The Black Father of the Night – David Schembri
24. Muralistic – Matthew Warner
25. Awaiting Redemption – Maurice Broaddus
26. The Cat in the Cage – Nicole Cushing
27. A Mean Piece of Water – Mary Madewell
28. Kitty – Gary McMahon
29. Mister Whisper – James A. Moore
30. Writer’s Block – Thad Linson
31. The Miracle Material – Abra Staffin-Wiebe
32. The Lilac Hedge – Rose Blackthorn

I am absolutely honored to be a part of this amazing list of authors, including the great Tom Piccirilli, Gary Braunbeck and James A. Moore.  And I’m thrilled that “By The Throat” has finally found the home it deserves.  It still remains my favorite story that I’ve written, and anyone that knows me personally knows how special it is to me.

And by the way, all proceeds are going to help pay for Tom Piccirilli’s medical bills.  Tom had tumors removed from his brain a few months ago, and as we all know, medical bills for such surgeries and treatments these days can be astronomical.  Over the last several months, the horror community really stood up and came together to help Tom and his family through this terrible ordeal, and this is Nanci and the contributor’s way of helping.  I really do hope everyone decides to pick up a copy–if not for the stories, then for a good cause.

The Next Big Thing!

Yep, I too have been tagged to be a part of this ongoing blog hop, so here’s my entry.

What is the working title of your book?

My novel in progress is titled “The Betrayed.”

Where did the idea come from for the book?

To be completely honest, I don’t fully remember where the idea for the novel came from.  I do remember sitting around with a buddy of mine one night, discussing the nature of good and evil, and why we, as humans, perceive Lucifer as being the ultimate evil.  Why is that? I thought.  Because we’re told that’s the way it is?  Accept it and move on, nothing to see here?  There was obviously something there, and over time the idea settled into my brain and refused to leave.

There was also the idea of young, single parents and how it affects someone’s day to day life accordingly.  I had started writing the novel right after college, and the notion of “What’s next?” was always slapping me in the face.  Though I am not a parent myself, I’ve seen how being a single parent can affect someone’s choices.  My protagonist struggles with this kind of life, along with lost love, parents who were never there, and…maybe a gift that might make sense of it all.  A gift that affects the entire world.

What genre does your book fall under?

It’s religious horror, but it doesn’t beat you over the head with it.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?

The cast is primarily young people in their mid twenties, so I guess I’d like to see:

Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kick-Ass) as Sidney Jameson

Emmy Rossum (Shameless) as Megan Connors

Chris Hemsworth (Thor) as Mitch Happe

and Noel Fisher (Red, Shameless) as Mike Sauer (mainly because Mike is a smartass dickhead, and Fisher seems to always play that type of role, very well).

What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

In a world where everyone is not who they seem, a young, single father must find the strength within to battle as earth’s last hope against a vengeful Arch Angel’s hell-born hoards…

Long-winded enough?

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

I hope to have it in the hands of a few publishers within the next year.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?

Well, I’m a bit embarrassed to admit it has taken over five years to complete, but in that timeframe I’ve been publishing short fiction.  Being my first crack at a novel, I’ve had to learn the hard way that, one: 124,000 words is TOO much for a first novel and, two: adjectives and adverbs before every noun and verb are very unnecessary.  Thankfully, over time, I’ve learned right from wrong.  The novel currently sits at 88,000 words.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

Oh, geeze, that’s hard.  The closest I can come to is maybe Blood Crazy by Simon Clark.  Though I am a voracious reader, I’ve tried not to let ideas from other books seep into this novel.

Who or What inspired you to write this book?

Brian Keene inspired me to want to be a writer, but a good book or story from anyone can inspire me to want to be better at my craft–to work harder, to improve.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

You can always check out my other currently available work, which is all located in the BIBLIO section above.  That should give you a taste of what’s to come.

Thanks for stopping by, and remember to check out these other blogs next Wednesday for the continuation of THE NEXT BIG THING:

Brent Abell

Joanna Parypinski

Mike Antonio

and Lesley Connor

And the Coffin Hop 2012 Winner is…

Paul Stansfield!  Congrats, Paul, on guessing all of the titles that go to the movie stillshots, thus winning a copy of Cover of Darkness June 2012 and Grindhouse.  I will contact you shortly via e-mail.

The answers for the quiz were: 1989’s A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child

1987’s Evil Dead 2

198o’s Motel Hell

1985’s ReAnimator

and 1989’s Friday the 13th part 8: Jason Takes Manhattan (yes, where Jason punches a guy’s head clean off his shoulders with one hit.)

Thanks for everyone’s support this week!  See you on the hop next year…

My, How the Times Have Changed: A Nostalgic Look at Horror’s Past Gems

“Where’s your son, Roger?  You’ll never find him.  He’s dead!”

Ah, eighties horror… What a fun time for movies in our favorite genre of splatter, sex, chainsaws, walking corpses, blood drinkers and madmen.  We all have fond memories of our first horror films.  Who introduced you to yours?  Was it Mom or Dad?  Your best friend?  Maybe Joe Bob Briggs with Monster Vision?  Whatever the case, you’re here because you enjoy horror, both on screen and on paper, but for this blog I want to focus on the visual medium of scary movies–particularly my favorite scenes from the eighties.  Why the eighties?  Think about it.  In that particular decade, most of our favorite horror movie icons were spawned.  Jason Voorhees leapt up from his watery grave in 1980.  In 1984, a blackened boiler room gave birth to our worst nightmare, Freddy Krueger.  1988 gave us a not-so-Good Guy to play with in “Child’s Play.”  And new crops of directors were taking something that was already amazing (Ridley Scott’s “Alien”) and creating something even bigger and better (James Cameron’s “Aliens”).

The eighties were also a time of experimental film making.  Puppets and stop-motion animation, though dying in the mainstream, were still holding true in horror.  We as horror fans are able to take a lot when it comes to movies.  Though most would look at a movie like 1986’s “House” (picture above) with a wide-eyed, slack-jaw expression, we can appreciate the humor and the offbeat use of puppets and people in ridiculous, fat lady, demon suits that many movie makers wouldn’t touch now.  It’s unfortunate that movies with practical effects, such as 1982’s “The Thing,” have been replaced with massive amounts of CGI.  Would “Pumpkinhead” or “Puppetmaster” been the same movies?

To me, “The Thing” is more or less my favorite film of the eighties.  It has everything: an amazing cast, the sci-fi element of the unknown alien species, the graphic and practical special effects.  I remember the first time I saw this movie, and I still get those very same chills every time I watch it.  I hope everyone out there reading this gets those same feelings when they pop that disk into the player, turn the lights out and relives those memories time and again.

Because, isn’t that what the movies are all about?  Kurt Russell throwing a stick of dynamite at a form-shifting alien then yelling, “Yeah, well fuck you too!”?

***

Below are some screenshots from some of my favorite eighties horror films.  As a part of this Coffin Hop celebration, if you can correctly guess all of the titles of the films shown, you’ll be entered into a drawing to win two signed books from myself.

  1. A signed copy of Cover of Darkness Magazine June 2012, which features my short story “Between Those Walls.”
  2. A signed copy of Grindhouse, which features my novelette (co-written with author Nikki McKenzie) “Home Invasion.”

Just put your answers in the comment section, and make sure that the email address you use is correct, because it will be the one I will contact the winner through on November 1st .  Participants from USA and Canada only.  And please be sure to check out the rest of the blogs on the Coffin Hop 2012 tour, which features over 100 authors–all throwing their own giveaways!  To find the link to the other blogs, just click on the Coffin Hop poster on the upper right side of this webpage or visit www.coffinhop.wordpress.com.

Good luck, everyone, and have fun!

Book Signing Reminder

Just a quick reminder that author Brent Abell and myself will be doing our first book signing tonight (10-20-12) from 4:00pm to 7:00pm at Comics Unlimited (654-B Diamond Avenue, Evansville, Indiana 47711).  We should both have plenty of books for sale, and there will be snacks and whatnots to munch on.  Hope to see you there!

Guest Blog: Joanna Parypinski

Today, to promote her first novel, Pandora, author Joanna Parypinski’s blog tour lands in my neck of the woods.  Although I haven’t yet read the novel (but I am ordering it this weekend, as should you!), if it’s anything like the pieces of short fiction I’ve encountered, then I can guarantee it’ll be worth your time.  One story in particular, The Viola D’Amore, was part of the March 2012 edition of Cover of Darkness Magazine and remains one of the best stories from a new author I’ve read in a long time.  Read on to find out about The Origins of Pandora…

***

How did I come up with the idea for PANDORA?

Ideas for my writing usually come to me in pieces. I’m not J.K. Rowling: my character didn’t just stroll up, fully-formed, into my mind. Often I’ll have multiple ideas floating around, seemingly disparate plotlines for different books, and the great moment of epiphany will be when I realize they can all come together to create one fully-developed story.

It started with an image: Pandora’s Box. In my mind, it was an intricately carved, ancient chest made of ivory, and inside of it, all manner of creepy plagues from Greek mythology awaited their release.

But just the idea of the box wasn’t enough for a book. You need plot, characters, themes, and a great climax. So I started creating my characters (a cook, a teacher, a bullied teenager, an alcoholic writer, a paranoid priest), and I started outlining how their lives would be affected by the box.

It was still missing something. I was only 18 though: a novice by many standards. Though I’d been writing short stories and even a few YA novels since I first learned to pick up a pencil, I still wasn’t fully developed as a writer.

Those other books, by the way, were written during my high school years: the first, called The Legend of Blackbeard’s Island, involved three teenagers who stumble across Blackbeard’s cursed treasure, along with his headless remains. The second, called Northern Lights, was a science fiction/murder mystery/ghost story in which the appearance of the Northern Lights allows us to perceive the frequency at which ghosts exist.

But I digress. The point is that, for a brief time, I was at a loss as to how to turn my idea into an actual story.

Then, on the Fourth of July, 2007, it hit me.

I was sitting in a neighbor’s backyard, on the edge of a manmade lake surrounded by large houses. Someone was setting off a firework show over the lake, the glittering explosions shimmering on the black water below. The fireworks were so close; debris rained down on us, still burning embers. Ash littered the grass. There was something enchanting and horrifying about the experience, being so close to something both magnificent and dangerous. What would happen if the grass caught fire? What if one of the fireworks went off just a little too low, a little too close to the houses and lake?

This moment cemented the rest of the book for me. I suspect you’ll understand better once you’ve read it yourselves.

If you’d like to read it for free, then why not try to win an e-book copy right now? Post about the PANDORA Blog Tour on Facebook, Twitter, etc. Then come back here and comment below with a link to each place you’ve mentioned the tour (as well as your e-mail and whether you’d like a PDF or ePub version). The more links, the more chances your name will get pulled out of the hat to win the e-book! This mini-contest ends at 11:59 PM PST, Sunday, September 30.

Don’t forget to enter to win the grand prize at axelhowerton.com!

The Pandora Blog Tour continues tomorrow at Ash-Krafton.blogspot.com.

Werepig Love

Unfortunately, I missed the live taping of The Funky Werepig from a about a month ago (I’m a little behind in my episode listening), but I had a pleasant surprise from my buddy Greg Hall, who gave me a shout out and few very nice words about my work near the beginning of the show.  You can listen to it here, along with an interview with horror writer James A. Moore.  (Click the little play button next to the James A. Moore episode on 8/22/12)

Thanks, Greg!

Book Signing

On October 2oth, both myself and author Brent Abell will be hosting a book signing event at one of Evansville’s premier comic shops, Comics Unlimited.  More info as it comes, but I have heard that both of us may or may not have something new to unveil at the event.  For details, visit the Appearances link at the top of the page.

This will be my first official book signing, so I’m really excited.  Hope to see you there.

Lamplight Magazine: A Quarterly That Won’t Disappoint!

My friend Jacob Haddon recently started his own quarterly e-book magazine, Lamplight Magazine, and after reading the first issue, I can tell you it’s a winner.  Issue 1 features an interview and a new story from author Robert Ford, part 1 of a serial novella from Kevin Lucia, an essay from J.F. Gonzalez, and new fiction from William Meikle, Nathan Yocum, Rahul Kanakia, Ian Creasey and Mandy DeGeit.  Oh, and I did mention the first issue is free?  Download it here and enjoy!