Tuesday, June 26, 2018

In Praise of Short Fiction

It seems readers are divided into two camps: those who like short reads and those who like long reads. In forum after forum and Facebook group after Facebook group, I notice people writing that they don’t like short reads. Very few complain about long reads.

For myself, I’m firmly in the short read group. I grew up reading short stories and short novels — books that many today are labeling novellas (even though the Science Fiction Writers of America defined novels as 40,000 words and up). So maybe it’s just force of habit. But I can’t help myself asking the question, how did these short novels come about anyway.

Back in the Victorian era, the “triple-decker” was the standard novel format. That is, essentially every novel was a trilogy. A novel of one volume was considered a “short” read.

Why were Victorian novels so long? Mostly because publishers thought the reading public wanted long novels. And perhaps they did. After all, they would read novels aloud as a form of family entertainment. And just as movies used to be an hour and a half, now they are approaching 3 hours in length. People want more bang for their buck.

Yet, after World War I the Triple-Decker went out of fashion. Novels became shorter. More lean and taut, more focused. Which was perhaps due to the discarding of the third person omniscient point of view. Stories and novels became more intimate with the adoption of first person and limited third person points of view.

The proliferation of pulp and slick magazines in the ‘20s and ‘30s were the result of a reading public wanting stories and novels to read. Serialized novels were typically around 30,000 to 40,000 words long. A story of 20,000 words was called a short novel.

These novels established the formats and formulas for genre fiction, and also to a degree for literary fiction.

When the pulp magazines died in the ‘50s and were replaced by the mass market paperbacks costing a quarter, the length of the novel didn’t change. And rarely went over 50,000 words. Search out some of the old paperbacks. They are slender little books. Truly a book that would fit in a pocket. One that could easily be carried with you.

Dean Wesley Smith has an interesting article explaining why the New York publishers fattened up the novel after its lean period during the pulp era. And I’ll give you a hint: it had nothing to do with literary merit and everything to do with money — money for the big corporate publisher, that is.

So why did novels slim down after the era of Victorian excess? I think it was because editors and authors discovered a story could be told in 40,000 words or less. The more intimate points of view allowed the author to dispense with a lot of unnecessary back story and editorial comment. They allowed the author to focus on the characters and their story.

When a novel is bloated beyond 50,000 words, it's frequently due to elements that don’t enrich the story. Descriptions get longer and more detailed. Purple prose is fine, often beautiful, but rarely beneficial to the story. Scenes are introduced that do nothing to further the story, they merely fatten the word count. And when getting paid by the word, I suppose there is some justification for the fat. But I, as a reader, skip over those parts.

Elmore Leonard’s advice to writers is very valid here: don’t write the parts that readers skip over.

I’m reminded of the story concerning Raymond Chandler, I believe. Chandler’s editor returned one of his novels because he wanted it a little longer. 

Chandler went over the book and sent it back. The editor returned the manuscript with a note saying Chandler had misunderstood him. He didn’t want the novel shorter. He wanted it longer, and was returning the manuscript so that Chandler could add a few thousand words to it.

Once again Chandler went over the manuscript and sent it back. This time the editor decided to leave it, because Chandler had cut the text even more. And the editor felt if he kept on he’d have a short story on his hands instead of a novel.

When I consider our contemporary western lifestyles, I think a shorter read makes a lot of sense. A majority of online content is now read on the smart phone. Writers are advised to make sure that everything is shorter: sentences, paragraphs, chapters. And to make sure there is plenty of white space instead of a mass of text.

In addition people are very busy. A short novel can be read in one or two sittings, which seems to me to be just about right. Read half of the book on the morning’s commute and read the other half on the evening’s commute.

I also find that reading a shorter novel requires less mental dedication to keeping everything straight in the story. If I’m reading a long novel with many plot lines and characters, then I have to take time to upload all that data into my head every time I pick up the book, after having set it down.

And then there are all the boring parts in those long novels, which I end up skipping over anyway. Because sad to say, few are the writers who can write a long novel without there being boring parts in it. Often lots of boring parts.

To see what all the fuss was about, I read the first two Jack Reacher novels. I found them fat and flabby. Continual lapses in the suspense build up of the story, left me feeling like a yo-yo. 

Build up suspense, then have it deflate due to overly long descriptions. Then build up the tension again until the next several pages of needless description.

I don’t need to know all the different types of grasses and rocks and how each might impact Reacher taking out his target. Nor do I need a page long description of the flight path of the bullet as it leaves the rifle to when it reaches the target.
All that unnecessary description is padding pure and simple. And it is boring.

By way of contrast, I just finished a Seabury Quinn Jules de Grandin short novel. There was plenty of action, plenty of suspense, and absolutely no flab to the story. It was lean. And a whole lot more fun to read than Jack Reacher. And I think all because the story was a whole heck of a lot shorter.

Child took 20 times as many pages to tell his story then did Quinn. And IMO, Child’s story was the worse for it because it was too damn fat.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. And that applies to books as well as art. There will always be readers who find the short forms to be “ugly”, and those who find the long forms to be “ugly”.

However, we readers live in a wonderful age. We can find all manner of books and stories to satisfy our reading desires. For every reader there is a writer, and for every writer there is his or her reader.

I think we readers can take comfort in the fact that there are many, many writers today who can meet our needs. And often they aren’t the bestsellers. We writers can take comfort in the fact that we do have an audience. There are readers who want to read our books. We simply have to find them.

Short stories and the short novel are alive and well. For those of us who like to read shorter forms, they are out there. Happy hunting to us! And if you run across some good ones, let me know!

Comments are always welcome; and, until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Interview with RH Hale




Today it is my great pleasure to talk with RH Hale, who is the author of Church Mouse: Memoir of a vampire’s servant. Which is one of the best indie authored novels I’ve read, and is right up there with the best of the traditionally published novels I’ve read.

I think it is unusual for a debut novel to have the gripping power that is in Church Mouse. The book is truly a Gothic tour-de-force.

But I’m sure you all want to learn a bit about the author of this fabulous novel. So without further ado, let’s meet RH Hale!


CW: Tell us a little about yourself.

RH: I was born in Scotland, where I currently reside. I lived in England for a while where I got my science degree from Kingston University in lovely Surrey. I’ve been a ghost tour guide and performed in several small-scale theatre productions including the Edinburgh Fringe. I can’t make up a tune to save my life but love music and have written dozens of lyrics, poems and two screenplays, all unpublished. Church Mouse is my first complete novel, published in October 2017.

CW: Aside from writing, how do you spend your free time?

RH: Reading when I can. I live on the coast near the countryside and love a good walk, especially if someone’s friendly dog says hello, which makes my day! But being an indie author, I’d be lying if I denied a lot of my time is taken up with promoting my book on Twitter. It may be a slow climb but very worth it. 

CW: Very much worth it, indeed! What did you read as a child?

RH: I read a lot of Roald Dahl and proudly kept his complete collection on my shelf. I realise he’s a bit controversial now, but I was just a kid. Matilda, Boy and The Witches were my favourites.

CW: Might I just say here that if we were to eliminate all the controversial authors, I doubt there would be much left worth reading. But go on.

RH: Some other childhood favourites were The Queen’s Nose by Dick-King Smith, The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S.Lewis; and I loved Beyond The Firelight, a collection of short tales by Ann Lawrence, which I believe is still on my shelf.

And I was absolutely hooked on a major weekly series called Storyteller: hundreds of illustrated stories and poems, each issue coming with an audio cassette tape (we’re back in the 80s here) narrated by great actors including Derek Jacobi and Miriam Margoyles. Truly terrific stories of infinite variety, old, new, and mythical from all cultures with beautiful illustrations! Some tales very scary for kids. 

The Christmas issue was my first introduction to Dicken’s A Christmas Carol, narrated by the great Joss Ackland …I was TERRIFIED! They may currently be stored in boxes but that’s one childhood collection I’m not parting with.

CW: Very much so. Those books of childhood are some of my most cherished possessions. Please tell us about a book that has influenced you as a person.

RH: Oooh, that’s a tricky one to answer without cheating and naming several.

As a child of seven or eight, in school we read What Difference Does It Make Danny? by Helen Young. It’s the story of a young boy, Danny, who is the gym teacher’s pet for being a top swimmer. Swimming is his passion. Unknown to this teacher, Danny is also epileptic. Furious when he finds out, this teacher forbids Danny to swim again. It’s essentially a story about overcoming prejudice and discrimination. I knew next to nothing about epilepsy at that age, and I think it taught me a lot.

More recently, I’d say Quiet Girl in a Noisy World: An Introvert’s Story by Debbie Tung, published last year I think. It’s actually a graphic novel, practically a comic but wonderfully done, about what it’s like growing up different and the bravery of self-acceptance in a world of people braying at you to “fit in”. It’s brilliant, funny and there’s so much I familiarised with it was ridiculous.

At the risk of sounding cliché, Lord of the Flies by William Golding, and George Orwell’s Animal Farm (a book everyone needs to read!) and 1984, shocked and really opened my eyes to the ever-present human demon lurking beneath the skin, often too close for comfort.

CW: Yes, 1984 was one of the most terrifying books I’ve ever read. More so than many “horror” novels! Would you tell us how many fiction books you read a year?

RH: It’s a rather boring answer, but I don’t keep count. Into double figures, though not as many as I’d like. One of my dreams is to swing through the double doors of Waterstones bookstore with a small fortune in my pocket. There are also a lot of indie books I want to read on my Kindle, plus a stack of paperbacks on my bedside table. A healthy sight I think.

CW: Yes, indeed. We like those stacks of books waiting to be read! Tell us about a book that’s influenced you as a writer.

RH: Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca whetted my appetite for finally committing to writing properly. Du Maurier’s incredibly atmospheric storytelling is intoxicating, seductive, and just possessed me with an irresistible hunger to do so.

May I cheat again and add another? Or two?

CW: By all means, go ahead.

RH: Well, then, Burning Your Boats: a complete collection of all short stories from one of my all-time favourite authors, Angela Carter. It’s an absolute feast for the eyes.

In terms of writing horror, one of the most terrifying books I ever read was Ghost Story by Peter Straub. I like to consider myself a toughie, but that novel literally had me repeatedly looking over my shoulder whilst reading, alone.

CW: Now I have some books to add to my ever growing list to read! Okay, you are being exiled to a small island in the Pacific. You can take 3 books with you. What books would you take and why?

RH: Only three? Ouch. Well they’d have to be long books to keep me occupied.
  1. Probably something I haven’t read yet, so as I don’t already know what’s coming. Either The Complete Works of Sheridan Le Fanu; or The Necronomicon, a painfully bulky hardback of the complete works of H.P Lovecraft, which I’m still getting through. Short story collections are great because of the variety – Don’t like that story? No problem, here’s another.
  2. The Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub, one of the greatest books I ever read. Probably three times now and never tired of it.
  3. For practical purposes, non-fiction: SAS Survival Handbook by John Lofty Wiseman. Packed with info about how/what to eat and finding shelter in the wild in all climates, land, sea, desert, etc. Handy and potentially lifesaving material if I’m gonna be stuck on this here island a while…
CW: Those sound like great choices. More to add to my list! Please tell us what was the genesis of Church Mouse?

RH: Two stages really. It started as a slow burner, a drawn-out daydream lingering at the back of my mind. In fact, it was initially going to be set in a house.

Precisely why I started thinking about the protagonist Rona hiding in a church gallery, I honestly can’t remember, except that one day I imagined the initial moments where she sees her immortal employers for the first time – and it played out seamlessly as if I were watching a film, spoken to me word for word. That scene, written exactly as I imagined it, was so uncannily concrete and three-dimensional that I thought, ‘This is ridiculous’, and had to get it down on paper. The rest of the book grew from there. Church Mouse was really born out of a bunch of scenes scribbled in notes that gradually came together.

CW: Very interesting. I always like to hear how writers write. So, how much research did you put into your book?

RH: No excuse for not getting the terminology right, so I did as much research as possible on the nomenclature of Gothic and church architecture, double and triple-checking it, bookmarking glossaries, etc. The same for antique jewellery, arson, old furniture, and medieval weaponry. All fascinating stuff. 

Seton Collegiate Church, a small tourist attraction in East Lothian, partly influenced the atmosphere for St Patrick’s in the book. It’s owned by Historic Scotland and bare as a bone, but has a cold, comforting loneliness inside. As for the church vaults, I knew what I was talking about because I was a ghost tour guide in Edinburgh’s underground vaults for over three years. I’ve made people scream in there, filmed in there, changed flashlight batteries, felt my way along walls, and locked them up hundreds of times, often in darkness. The mention of mould in the book is taken from first-hand experience, and it’s no picnic to breathe in.

I haven’t read many vampire novels apart from Stoker’s Dracula and Ann Rice’s Interview With The Vampire many years ago. But whenever I saw them in film, the scientist in me always reared its head and questioned how is it technically possible for hard incisor enamel to spontaneously expand and sharpen like that? I know fiction is fiction, but it just…bugged me. That’s why I made them a little different in Church Mouse, but no less savage or animalistic.

CW: Yes, I wondered about the teeth thing in your book. Now I know! Now, aside from Rona’s saga, who else is clamoring to have his or her story told?

RH: There’s a character in Church Mouse called Dudley Flotterstone who only appears briefly in one scene, but whilst writing it I felt a bud forming. I saw him very clearly and decided I wanted him as the protagonist for another horror story in the works, Krellingsgait, a place also mentioned in the book.

CW: Where we can find your books?

RH: They are currently available as an eBook on Amazon Kindle, Goodreads, Kobo, Barnes and Noble, iBooks, GooglePlay and other online bookstores worldwide.

Hopefully available in hard copy within the next few months.

CW: Well, this has been delightful! Thank you for taking the time to share with us today a bit about yourself and your writing.

And I encourage you all to buy a copy of Church Mouse. It is a truly fabulous novel. Anne Rice, move over. The book is available at:




You can get in touch with RH Hale at the following places:



R.H.Hale was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. After gaining a first class honours degree in science at Kingston University in Surrey, she went on to explore the arts and has worked in theatre, ghost tours and writing. She currently lives in East Lothian. Church Mouse is her first novel.

Monday, June 11, 2018

The Man Who Saved Weird Tales



…and saved weird fiction.

Really? Weird Tales and weird fiction owe their existence to one man? The Unique Magazine? The magazine of HP Lovecraft?

Actually, Weird Tales wasn’t the magazine of HP Lovecraft. Sure, he submitted stories to WT and had them published (and a few rejected). But HPL actually disdained the commercial press and those who wrote for money, or “sold their soul to Mammon”, as he once put it. Lovecraft was willing to live in genteel poverty and support the amateur press to keep his art pure.

I wonder sometimes why he submitted to the pulp magazines at all. He in truth disdained them. I guess even a purist has to eat.

No, Weird Tales was not Lovecraft’s magazine. That is revisionist history started by his proteges August Derleth and Donald Wandrei.

Actually the man who was the defining persona of The Unique Magazine was Seabury Quinn. The man usually relegated to the footnotes of WT history telling.

Quinn was a lawyer, magazine editor, and prolific writer of fiction. He wrote over 500 stories. His published works number more than 5 times that of Lovecraft, and that includes HPL’s ghost written stories and collaborations. Granted Quinn lived 32 years longer than Lovecraft, but HPL was even out written by his younger contemporary, Robert E Howard, who had far fewer productive years than Lovecraft. 

In actuality, Lovecraft saw himself first and foremost as a poet. Let’s be honest here. Lovecraft wrote around five dozen stories and maybe half are memorable. It’s also true that HPL would have faded into oblivion were it not for Derleth’s continual paean of praise.

Quinn, on the other hand, had no champion and did fade into obscurity — and only now is being given a fair assessment. And the verdict is that he was a very decent writer. In fact, he was the most popular of Weird Tales’s cadre of authors.

Quinn and Lovecraft made their debut WT appearance in the 7th issue, October 1923. Lovecraft’s contribution was “Dagon” and Quinn’s was “The Phantom Farmhouse”.

Quinn’s story was so popular among WT readers they consistently asked for it to be reprinted. Not the case with “Dagon”. I’ve read both stories. Both are good. Different, but equally satisfying reads -- for differing reasons.

Quinn’s occult detective, Jules de Grandin, first appeared in the October 1925 issue of Weird Tales and immediately became a hit with the readers. They couldn’t get enough of the little Frenchman and it was Quinn’s de Grandin who saved Weird Tales from dying in 1931.

The Unique Magazine had financial troubles throughout its entire history. This was partly due to its small readership. Competition for readers was fierce amongst the plethora of pulps and slicks. Not unlike the competition amongst indie authors today for readership.

The first issue of Weird Tales was March 1923. Edwin Baird was the editor. In just 13 issues, Baird had saddled WT with a debt of over $40,000. In contemporary dollars, that’s close to $600,000. Most of this money was owed to WT’s printer.

The publisher, J. C. Henneberger, decided to solve the problem by selling majority interest in the magazine to B. Cornelius, the printer, with the understanding that when the magazine became profitable, Cornelius would get his money back and the stock returned to Henneberger.

In the re-organization, Baird left and Farnsworth Wright took over as editor in 1924 when Lovecraft failed to accept Henneberger’s offer. And even though Wright’s tenure as editor is considered the magazine’s Golden Age, Weird Tales remained an unprofitable enterprise.

By late 1931, Cornelius’s patience had run out (we are talking 7 years here) and he ordered Henneberger to shut the magazine down.

Let’s think about this for a moment. If Cornelius had gotten his way, the history of weird fiction would have been very, very different. The best of Robert E Howard’s horror and fantasy, gone. No CL Moore or Robert Bloch. Much of Mary Elizabeth Counselman’s weird fiction, gone . Most of Carl Jacobi’s weird fiction, gone. We wouldn’t have Lovecraft’s “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”, “The Dreams in the Witch House”, “The Thing on the Doorstep”, or “The Haunter of the Dark”.

The best years of the magazine would not exist.

However, Wright managed to convince Cornelius he had two serials that would turn the magazine around. They were Otis Adelbert Kline’s Tarzan pastiche, Tam, Son of Tiger, and Seabury Quinn’s The Devil’s Bride, the longest de Grandin story Quinn wrote.

The Devil’s Bride ran for six issues and effectively saved the magazine.

Darrell Schweitzer wrote, in his introductory essay, “Jules de Grandin: ‘The Pillar of Weird Tales’”:

When you consider that Robert E Howard still had his best Weird Tales material in front of him and that all of CL Moore, Robert Bloch, and many others was yet to come, it is worth pausing to reflect on how much fantastic literature owes to Seabury Quinn’s excitable Frenchman.

(The Dark Angel: The Complete Tales of Jules de Grandin, Vol. 3. Night Shade Books, 2018)

So why is Seabury Quinn so little known today? I think the answer is August Derleth and his indefatigable championing of Lovecraft. Derleth placed all Weird Tales writers either in Lovecraft’s circle or outside it. And because HPL did not like Quinn’s writing, Quinn was damned. Because those outside the circle were promptly forgotten.

That Weird Tales was a Lovecraftian world is a myth. A myth created by HPL’s protege, August Derleth. Who also happened to be the second most published Weird Tales author. Much of that due to his “fake” collaborations with Lovecraft.

Stefan Dziemianowicz noted in his essay “‘Loved by Thousands of Readers’: The Popularity of Jules de Grandin”:

In retrospect, Seabury Quinn’s tales of Jules de Grandin played a vital role in the development of weird fiction, if largely through their relationship with Weird Tales and its readers.

(The Devil’s Rosary: The Complete Tales of Jules de Grandin, Vol. 2. Night Shade Press, 2017)

Now that’s not something we weird fiction fans hear every day. Nor something we should ignore.


Comments are always welcome! And, until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Some Very Good Reads

Last week I talked about being a reader. I love reading and can’t talk enough about the joy of books. They truly are fab friends.

This week, I thought I’d talk a bit about some of the great books and stories I’ve been reading of late. I’m an advocate for the underdog. For those writers who are good and just can’t seem to get any traction for their books. I like to promote those writers whenever possible.

Two of my recent reads I mentioned last week: Mark Carnelley’s The Omega Chronicles and RH Hale’s Church Mouse: Memoir of a vampire’s servant. So let’s take a look at what else I’ve been reading over the past couple months.

Entangled by J. Evan Stuart

This one I’ve started re-reading: Entangled by J. Evan Stuart. The book is part police procedural mystery, part coming of age novel, and partly a YA/NA read. 

The novel is Stuart’s debut work and it is a real winner. Exceptionally well-written, with characters you’ll fall in love with (well, there are one or two you won’t; but then you aren’t supposed to), and mucho suspense. I’m very much surprised this one isn’t jumping off the charts. But it isn’t. It’s in Amazon’s sub-basement. Which is too bad.

And Stuart has seemingly disappeared as well, which is also too bad. I hope he returns to bring us more Detective Sonya Reisler adventures. And who knows? Maybe a few sales and reviews would do the trick. I hope so.

Don’t pass this one up. It’s a keeper and exclusive to Amazon, so KU folks read for free.

The Stone Seekers by Jack Tyler

I just finished Tyler’s foray into epic fantasy. And it is amazing. Tyler is normally a steampunk writer, which makes this work a surprise — and a very pleasant one.

There is no hint of Tolkien in The Stone Seekers. And I like that. This work is plowing fresh territory. The Tolkien pastiches put me off of epic fantasy. Tyler, if he writes more, could bring me back.

This one is only 99¢ at Amazon. Snarf it up today!

Off Grid by Simon Osborne

A fabulous post-apocalyptic novel that made me sit up and take notice was Off Grid by Simon Osborne. It’s a great survival story. And aside from the aliens, is very realistic. Harry Lennard survives the initial invasion and now he has to survive day to day. A well-written adventure. Part Earth Abides and part Day of the Triffids.

Given the rising prices of indie authored books, this one is a steal at $2.99 on Amazon. Get it today!

The Anuvi Incident by James Vincett

James Vincett is another writer who’s seemingly disappeared — and that’s too bad for us. Nevertheless, his The Anuvi Incident is excellent. If you like military sci-fi, you don’t want to miss this. And if you don’t, that’s okay because The Anuvi Incident is also about what it means to be human. A fast-paced sci-fi war story that is also a little philosophy. A dynamite combo.

Give The Anuvi Incident a try. Vincett has created a fabulous universe.

Tales of Horror: Macabre Monsters of Michigan by Bryan C Laesch

I like horror. Not the blood and guts, hack and slash, splatter punk kind, but the slow burn psychological kind.

Bryan C Laesch’s Tales of Horror: Macabre Monsters of Michigan is a collection of three stories that are a bit slow burn and a bit on the violent side. But there is no gratuitous violence for the sake of violence. Which for me is good storytelling.

Laesch has succeeded in giving us monster stories (and who doesn’t like monster stories?) that are a touch out of the ordinary, perhaps even a touch unique. There is no reason his book should be gracing Amazon’s sub-basement. It is too good for that.

So do yourself and the author a favor and pick up a copy.

The Argolicus Mystery Series by Zara Altair

Argolicus, that Roman public servant living in Ostrogoth Italy, was a delightful find. Sometime ago I asked in a Facebook group for books to read that were not in the top 300,000 on Amazon. Zara Altair stepped forward and volunteered her mysteries — and I’m glad she did.

If you like mysteries, good ol’ Whodunits and not these repetitively boring thrillers, and you like history — than Argolicus is for you.

The stories are set in Ostrogoth Italy 20 years after the fall of Rome, which is a period of time rather neglected by historians. Argolicus has retired and finds himself involved in solving murder after murder — in a time when murder wasn’t a crime!

These are well-written and interesting books. Take a look at Zara’s Amazon page. All are good. Pick one. Any one! You won’t be disappointed.

Next week I’m going to take a look at the man who saved Weird Tales magazine and what that means for us readers today.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!