June 10

Interview with R. Thomas Riley

Michele Lee: How much fun did you have playing with all the monsters out there?

RTR: I had a blast with exploring the issues and situations in my new collection. The experience was bittersweet, however, as there is a definite theme of loss and betrayal running rampant through the collection. The themes were not necessarily deliberate, but I think that is why the collection is so strong on many fronts and will connect with many people because the majority of the stories are based on my own personal experiences. To me, there is nothing better than a little bit of truth in fiction.

ML: Do you have a favorite story among the collection?

RTR: Actually, I have two. The first one is “Twin Thieves”. This story is very special and dear to my heart as it is so intensely personal. It was extremely difficult to write in many ways for me. It was easy to write in the sense that I knew exactly what I wanted to say with this piece, but very difficult in the sense that I was working through some major personal issues and living, examining, and experiencing those feelings during the process. The second story is “Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin”. Once again, there’s a lot of “me” in this story.

ML: How have the readers’ tastes or opinions of your stories differed from your own?

RTR: For a long time I really didn’t like anything once I finished with it. For a number of reasons, either I wished I could’ve expressed things better or once they were published I saw something else I could’ve added. For this collection, there are very few stories that I am not completely satisfied with. I’m very happy with how the majority of the stories turned out. One thing I’ve noticed so far are that the most personal stories are the ones that are getting the most comments and reactions. Then there are other stories that I really like and readers have not and vice versa. That’s normal, though.

ML: What do you feel that you bring to horror?

RTR: I bring realism to horror, I think. The themes and situations in my fiction can actually happen. Man is the most fascinating monster to me. What we, as humans, can do to one another is very disturbing to me. Everyone is capable of the things I write about, I think. There’s just some small line that we don’t cross that separates us from other who have chosen to cross that line.

Sure, I write about supernatural monsters and the like, but they are merely archetypes and stand-ins for issues that everyone has gone through at some point in their lives. I write what I know.

ML: Apex Publications is notoriously “anti-monster”. How did you manage to sell them a collection that features vampires, witches and even a unicorn?

RTR: I’m still trying to figure that out myself! Basically, Mari Adkins and I met on a message board in 2005. We started chatting and when the defunct Nocturne Press published my first collection, Mari picked up a copy, dug the stories and wrote a review of the collection for Apex. She passed the book onto Jason, I think, and based off the strength of those stories he got in touch me and offered me a shot at being a feature author for Apex in 2006. One thing led to another, and Jason offered me a slot in Gratia Placenti and I jumped at the chance. I can still recall the email I got when I sent him the story “Only Spirits Cry” and warned him it had a unicorn in it. He was dubious at first, but wrote back quickly and accepted the story. A few months later he offered to publish “The Monster Within Idea” and then went even further and offered to re-release my first collection in 2010. Like I said earlier, Jason saw past the ‘monsters’ and saw the stories were about life and things everyone has gone through. Jason recognized the world is a really messed up place and I was dealing with it in my own way through the fiction I wrote.

ML: You’ve been published both “traditionally” with ink and paper and been involved with epublishing in the form of the Amazon Shorts program. What have you taken away from these experiences?

RTR: I’m always looking for new ways to reach readers. The Amazon Shorts program allowed me to reach readers that normally would not have come across my books. I see that as a positive. Both methods are viable and have worked for me. I write for myself first, but like any author, I want to be read as well.

ML: Do you think more people in the industry will begin to recognize ebooks and epublishing as a beneficial tool, or do you think we’ll all keep digging our heels in against the change?

RTR: I think there will always be a certain percentage that will dig their heels in against this change. People still want to hold a book in their hands and turn the pages. There is a growing majority of publishers that are realizing that there is a market for e-publishing and are exploring it. For me, I’m eager to explore any new method to reach new readers.

ML: You’ve called yourself a company killer in the past. Any advice to those out there trying to figure out which markets to submit to and support and which to avoid?

RTR: Google is an author’s best friend. Before I submit to any market, I do an extensive search on them to see what I can find out. Message boards are a good place to find out both good and bad track records of publishers. If a publisher has a bad record people will definitely talk about it somewhere on the internet. I’m also much more wary these days of the authors that some markets may choose to publish. My reputation and integrity are extremely important to me and I don’t like being associated with “nitwits”. In the past, I have actually withdrawn projects from certain publishers when they chose to publish individuals I didn’t want to be associated with. Put simply ask around before you submit to a publisher. Contact their authors and see how they’ve been treated. Usually, these authors are happy to rave or rant about their publishers.

ML: Can you pin point a book, author or movie that triggered your desire to write horror?

RTR: Yes, I sure can. The first book I ever read was “The Stand” by Stephen King. I was 12 or 13 at the time. The book simply blew me away and started my obsession with all things horror. I was raised in a very sheltered environment and was quite protected, but once I read King, I searched out anything horror-related and my love affair with the genre blossomed very quickly. Currently, some of the best authors in the business, both small and mainstream presses, are Brian Keene, Tom Piccirilli, James A. Moore, Ray Garton, Lincoln Child and Douglas Preston, Nate Kenyon, John Skipp, Jason Brannon, and John Grover.

ML:  What can we fans look forward to seeing from you in the future?

RTR: I’ve got a lot of projects in the works. At present, I am trying to place a co-authored novel with John Grover entitled “If God Doesn’t Show”. John and I are also working on another collaboration “At the Foot of the Mountains”. I also have projects forthcoming from Permuted Press and Library of the Living Dead Press. You can find out more about all of these projects on my myspace blog.

June 8

The Monster Within Idea by R. Thomas Riley

Click to buy
Click to buy

Trade Paperback: 9780982159613 , $15.95

The Monster Within Idea, R. Thomas Riley’s collection from Apex Publications is an exploration of monsters in all their various forms, supernatural and dark, beneficial and very, very malicious.

“Attrition” the first tale in this collection, is the story of an incarcerated man who is preparing for his release day. To be free all he has to do is walk out, where a vicious tunnel will either deem him worthy of being a part of society, or turn his sentence into a self-fulfilling death penalty.

“Touching God” is a surreal story of two boys trying to escape a personal darkness, only to find that something follows them back to the mundane world. A story of family tragedy, it’s heavily character based with an open ending that implies the worst is yet to come. Continuing with a child’s point of view, “Too Little” tells another short, dark story of victimization and revenge in a lilting, almost playful tone.

“Jenny” is the tale of a jealous lover, a woman who will possess or punish the man she loves. It’s a little too obvious, but a darkly amusing addition to the collection.

“Perfect” also uses a very female point of view, as a woman obsessed with body image imagines that as she airbrushes models’ pictures she also cleans them of their other flaws. If only she could fix her own life as easily.

The next two tales are both zombies stories. “Haven” is a wholly depressing story of a boy who is trying to get to his older sister after a zombie uprising. After days of traveling and barely surviving, he reaches the hospital where his sister works in the maternity ward, which has been overrun with zombie infants. As is often found in zombie tales the desolation is overwhelming and there can really only be one end.
“In the Beginning” could be the start of a longer zombie tale. The imagery of a bio weapon going off at a Six Flags amusement park is chilling, but the story is one readers already know.

Taking readers to the Old West, “The Run” is about a man hired to transport a mysterious package from one town to another. He’s warned not to look at or open the package, but a busted wheel leads him to being trapped in the growing dark, in the woods, with its contents. There’s a feeling of filler to this story, though it fits the theme. The setting doesn’t quite come alive, though the monster within certainly does.

Tales of love gone wrong is one of Riley’s strength, as is evident by the next two tales, both tackling the topic. “Twin Thieves” is a surreal tale, tinged with sadness, of a man trying to make things work between himself and his wife, at any cost, when some things are just meant to be broken.

“Tautology” is darker, displaying a different form of co-dependency and depression with a side order of stalker. As short as many of the other tales, this one is also stronger, despite the only action being the emotional ex-boyfriend repeatedly calling his love. It has a killer and an unexpected ending that makes the tale one of the strongest in the collection.

Going back to the Old West “A Pair of Aces, a Pair of Eights” tells of a gunfighter so loved by the people around him that even Death himself seems to want to take revenge on his killer.

The following tale, “Bubo”, is also primarily set in a bar. But in this bar a yuppie with a last wish finds a creature that shouldn’t be on Earth and learns that most wishes are better off just in your head.

“The Day Luftberry Won It All” is a surprisingly imaginative tale of Luftberry, a pool shark living after the apocalypse when other players are a fast fading commodity. In one of the last “Sin” bars in this semi-science fiction world, he is challenged by a strangely serpentine man. In a game for his soul, literally, Luftberry becomes so preoccupied with winning that he never stops to consider that the prize might not offer much of a victory.

“Just Decoration” is a revenge story that’s simply too short. The revelations are fired at readers like bullets, rather than slowly revealed, making them feel contrived. There’s no time to build up the character, thus their relationships, before suddenly they’re all dead and the reader is left feeling out of the loop.

“The Lesser Evil” pits the young black, ex-thug trying to do good against the stupid white corrupt congressman. A voyage that touches on the splatter scene with a grisly pair of murders with no solid explanation, “The Lesser Evil” is part discourse on racism and politics and part murder mystery.

“The Monster Within Idea” is remarkable for how very little it reveals, which only emphasizes the quest of the mysterious girl trapped in a closet trying to determine what’s real and who she really is. Where it could have delved into stark realism and drama, instead Riley merely hints and leaves the true horror for the reader’s minds to make up.

“Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin” is one of Riley’s best, and it’s a pleasure to say it’s been included in this collection. Here he walks the line between surreal and reality, pitting a man against an ancient evil with the lives of children at stake. Other tales have been told in the same style and fail, but this story maintains a level of dark, paranormal questioning through out, making the point of view changes only add to the robustness of the tale.

One of the longest additions, “The Core of Forgotten” pits a pair of children, bored and a bit criminal on a long summer vacation, against the neighborhood witch, who’s genuinely evil. When the kids’ stop watching the witch and instead break into her house they get more than they bargained for, ending up in a bloody, ruthless showdown with the witch, a demon and stand byers whose interests have turned from merely malicious to wicked.

Finally is “Only Spirits Cry”. An excellent way to end the collection this one is the long, emotional tale of a man who is willing to do almost anything to save his mother from death, because he’s done so before. A delicate weave of old magic, modern setting, childhood magic and unconditional love it’s one hundred percent pure adventure.

Riley’s strength lies in spinning emotional tales, often ones that involve or are told through the point of view of children. While not all the tales in this collection are the best of the best, there are several darkly brilliant gems that readers can be happy to have in one bound volume.

March 25

Twin Thieves by R. Thomas Riley

(Available through the Amazon shorts program here.)

If you want to try a taste of R. Thomas Riley’s fiction for a low price this is the story to buy. The aching tale of a man who just wants to be with his wife, and the wife who wants to leave him without telling him why, this one has heartbreak and just a tiny touch of the supernatural. This tale asks, are things meant to be, and if we could change them would they just end up how there were supposed to be in the first place? With no gore or violence this tale is still compelling and soulfully dark.

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March 25

Touching God by R. Thomas Riley

(Available through the Amazon shorts program here.)

A tale of the supernatural touching the mundane R. Thomas Riley’s “Touching God” is the story of two young boys, haunted by a dark secret who think they’ve found ad escape. Instead they find a hole in space and when they dare to wander through something follows them back. A vague monster story the shiniest part of this story is the characters, two brothers just trying to deal with the hand they’ve been given. Horror fans will find a soul in this story.

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March 25

Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin by R. Thomas Riley

(Available through the Amazon shorts program here.)

R. Thomas Riley’s “Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin” is a creepy tale of the unexpected reaches of life. Told in a musing form by a possibly crazy father it’s the story about a different sort of haunting and the effects it has had on one horrified family. Not the most powerful of horror tales, it will still make readers glance suspiciously out their windows and watch their surroundings more carefully. It’s also low on gore and high on tension, which will appeal to fans of horror who want to be scared and not just grossed out.

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