April 16

Interview with Nancy A. Collins

Originally appeared at Monster Librarian.com

Nancy A. Collins is the author of several novels and numerous short stories. She is a recipient of the Horror Writers Association’s Bram Stoker Award and The British Fantasy Society’s Icarus Award. Her latest work is a young adult vampires series titled Vamps is reviewed here.

ML: You started your novel writing life with Sunglasses After Dark, the first Sonja Blue novel. How have you gone from rather adult horror novels to YA vampire princesses?

NC: It’s been a long road, but not a terribly surprising turn, at least for me. I have always had a good number of young/teen readers with the Sonja Blue series, and with my work in the comics industry. It wasn’t that huge a leap, personally, to start looking at the YA market. The biggest changes I’ve had to face are the differences in length (the average adult novel is 90 thousand words, while the average YA novel is half that) and some of the subject matter. Young Adult themes nowadays are far more ‘mature’ than when I was in junior high & high school. I do have a tendency to be dark, though, and I have to remember that the audience reading my books has yet to enroll in the School of Hard Knocks most adults attend after they graduate from college, so I have to remind myself to dial it back a few notches.

ML: You’ve been a rare, strong female voice in horror for a while. Do you think that being a woman has affected your career, either positively or negatively?

NC: I’ve never run into sexism in the publishing industry per se, whether from the editors or fellow writers. However, I become well aware that it exists whenever I deal with Hollywood, especially in regard to Sonja Blue. If she had been a male character named ‘Jason Blue’, there would be three movies out by now. But I think my being a woman does affect the characters a great deal. They tend to share a sense of responsibility (or a resentment thereof) to their family. But then again, I was raised in the South.

ML: The YA world has a lot of big dog vampire books, such as Twilight and The Vampire Diaries. How does VAMPS compare?

NC: I think VAMPS is for those readers who are looking for a storyline driven by something besides boyfriend/girlfriend drama. There is plenty of who-really-likes/loves-who or who’s-messing-around-behind-who’s-back going on in the VAMPS series, but that’s just a part of what’s going on. If you’re looking for a rehash of TWILIGHT, you’re probably not going to like VAMPS that much. However, if you like the Anne Rice vampires series or Harry Potter, you will probably enjoy VAMPS a great deal.

ML: Sonja Blue and Cally Monture are both half-blooded. What do you think the draw is to characters who aren’t of one world, or another, but are somewhere between?

NC: I feel that most women, on some level, view themselves as being caught between two worlds, whether it’s mother-wife, daughter-girlfriend, student-employee, or however you want to mix-and-match it. It’s also an excellent allegory for coming of age, whether you’re sixteen or fifty-two. In the Sonja Blue series the underlying theme is her constant inner struggle to remain human in the face of monstrosity. In the VAMPS series Cally is being tempted to forsake her human heritage in order to fit in with her new peer group. People are in too big a hurry to throw away their humanity, whether in exchange for ‘cool’ or ‘money’ or ‘fame’, if you ask me.

ML: In VAMPS, I have to admit I abhorred Lilith, the reigning social queen of Bathory Academy. But by the end you’d managed to soften her snottish personality and make her sympathetic. Does muddying the good guy/bad guy trope make for a better stray, in your opinion?

NC: When writing a character like Lilith you have to remember that no one ever thinks they’re a villain. Hitler, Bin Laden, and Jeffrey Dahmer all had a perfectly good reason (to them) for the evil they committed. With Lilith, I just took your basic self-absorbed, insecure, high- maintenance high school rich-biyatch and added the fact she’s a, you know, shape-shifting, blood-drinking MONSTER to the mix. Part of why Lilith is the psycho-sister that she is has to do with how she was raised–or not raised–by her parents, and the society she lives in, which is VERY Darwinian and favors the strong over the “weak”, and where ruthlessness is viewed as a virtue. It doesn’t make her any less evil, at the end of the day, but at least you can understand where she’s coming from.

ML: You’ve written novels, short stories, comics, nonfiction and novelizations, and edited anthologies. Do you have a favorite medium?

NC: They all have their different strong and weak suits. Comics are probably the easiest/most fun to write. I’m always excited to see how an artist interprets what I’ve described. I love writing short stories because you can experiment with style and format far better in short form. Novels allow you a great deal of freedom in regard to character development. Novelizations are definitely the least fun, because you’re working with other people’s characters, and while that can be fun if you’re a fan of a particular series or character, you have and have to abide by a fairly rigid ‘bible’ supplied by the producers, so there isn’t a lot of room to be creative and explore your own vision.

ML: Unlike a lot of authors these days you have very little web presence. Do you think this is a boon to your career or draws away from reaching potential readers?

NC: Actually, I have had a My Space page for several years now. It’s at
http://www.myspace.com/golgotham I’ve recently created a profile with Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/profile.php?id=1501539605&ref=profile

and Blogspot
http://arkansylvania.blogspot.com

Also, HarperTeen.com has an author page for me at
http://www.harperteen.com/authors/32665/Nancy_A_Collins/index.aspx

that features some Q&A and other fun stuff.

I used to have a LiveJournal blog for several years, but I closed it out when I changed my ISP. It was too much hassle to change all the jpegs I’d posted from my account over the years to Photobucket.

ML: What’s the draw to vampires?

NC: Since they look like us, and, in fact, used to BE us, they are a perfect allegory for the human condition. Depending on what you want to focus on, they can be a symbol of man’s darker drives (cruelty, ruthlessness, predatory behavior), or they can symbolize passion and romance (the love that lasts forever, the all-consuming passion that never ends). They also make excellent Byronic heroes, flawed heroes that battle with their inner demons in the name of love or beauty. They can also be painfully accurate portrayals of the perils of modern dating (the handsome charmer who seemed perfect at first, only to later reveal himself to be an inhuman monster).

ML: Do you think the vampire story will ever die?

NC: No. No more than the detective story, the love story or the ghost story will die. Indeed, the vampire story combines elements of all three. In the last 30+ I have seen several vampire-based books and movies become huge pop

culture successes: SALEM’S LOT, INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE, FRIGHT NIGHT, BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER, BLADE, FRANCIS FORD COPPOLLA’S DRACULA, UNDERWORLD, and now TWILIGHT. And then there’s the upcoming sequel to TWILIGHT and the DARK SHADOWS movie starring Johnny Depp. So, no, I don’t think vampires are in any danger of disappearing any time soon.

ML: What do you have in store for Cally and Lilith and the true bloods of Bathory Academy? According to your blog on Amazon.com there’s a movie in the works?

NC: Actually, the producers are working on trying to turn it into a TV series. But I would be just as thrilled if they can turn it into a feature film. As for Cally, in AFTER DARK, the 3rd book in the series, her relationship with Peter is going to undergo a huge shake-up, due to circumstances beyond their control. The same goes for Lilith and Jules. Both sisters also suffer deep personal losses that change their lives forever, and are given a chance at living a dream come true. Of course, how they react to these nearly identical parallel situations is completely different from one another. Lucky Maledetto, the twins’ older brother, will be playing a larger role in the third book, as will Exo. We also discover a great deal more about how Old Blood society works, and just how dangerous the Shadow Hand can be. Oh, and there’s an all-vampire fashion show.

April 13

*Guest Blog* Equal Opportunity Haters: The Short List

Reprinted with permission from The Letter

by Rev. James W. Hensley

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“God Hates Fags”gets all the press but Westboro Baptist Church and Fred Phelps are not the only anti-gay hate groups out there. The Southern Poverty Law Center (http://www.splcenter.org/index.jsp) has compiled a list of eleven groups, including Westboro, who excel at slander, fabrication and hysterical homophobia. Here’s the list.

Traditional Values Coalition http://www.traditionalvalues.org/

Abiding Truth Ministries http://www.abidingtruth.com/

Chalcedon Foundation http://www.chalcedon.edu/

Family Research Institute http://www.familyresearchinst.org/

American Vision http://www.americanvision.org/

Illinois Family Institute http://www.illinoisfamily.org/

Heterosexuals Organized for a Moral Environment http://www.home60515.com/

Westboro Baptist Church http://www.godhatesfags.com/

The School of Christian Activism http://ngteam.org/index.htm (in Russian)

Mass Resistance http://www.massresistance.org/

Watchmen on the Walls http://www.watchmenonthewalls.com/

Why should you care? It’s not like venom, spleen and rumblings from bigots is new news. I’ll tell you. You should care because other groups, groups that don’t make the hate groups list, use publications and information from the Hateful 11.

Right here in Kentucky we have C.R.A.V.E. (Christians Reviving America’s Values http://www.christians4america.com/index.htm) and their Pastor Don Swarthout in Lexington. They work with Abiding Truth Ministries. And then there’s my personal favorite, Answers in Genesis (http://www.answersingenesis.org/), the creationism museum in Boone County. Evidently staff trades between Answers in Genesis and American Vision are routine.

You should also care because groups like the American Family Association of Kentucky, that’s the notorious Frank Simon MD’s group (http://www.afaky.com/ ) and the Family Foundation of Kentucky (Kent Ostrander, Martin Cothran, David Edmunds, et al. http://www.kentuckyfamily.org/ ) routinely spout the lies and distortions of the Hateful 11, often without attribution, in order to sell their bill of goods. It’s all snake oil mixed with a little bait and switch.

What can you do?

First, when you hear these groups cited point out that they’re extremist hate groups. No one considers the KKK “just another opinion” when issues of race, ethnicity or religion are being discussed. Yet lobbyists for anti-gay legislation such as the amendment to the Kentucky consitution defining marriage and the recently defeated No Gay Foster Parents bill will use Scott Lively (Watchmen on the Walls and the Center for Christian Activism) and his truly excrebable tome Seven Steps to Recruit-Proof Your Child: A Parent’s Guide to Protecting Children from Homosexuality and the “Gay” Movement as well as Paul Cameron’s (Family Research Institute) discredited and mostly fabricated “research” to give lobbyists and legislators cover when they spout hair-raising bigotry.

Second, don’t get trapped into trying to rebutt arguments rooted in hate. You can’t discuss creationism rationally with the Answers in Genesis or the Flat Earth Society (http://www.theflatearthsociety.org/). NARTH (National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality, http://www.narth.com/index.html) doesn’t care that “gender disorientation pathology” is a fiction that has never appeared in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) of the American Psychiatric Association. It’s useful when there’s gay bashing to be done.

Third, if NAMBLA is mentioned it’s already to late. There is nothing that can be done or said that will derail a bigot once they land in pedophilia territory. The fact that the vast majority of abusers are heterosexual makes no difference. Smile stiffly and walk away.


Rev. James W. Hensley
Progressive Pathways Fellowship
http://www.progressivepathways.org/
http://clamourunderbridge.typepad.com/

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April 13

The Black Act by Louise Bohmer

Click to Buy
Click to Buy

The Black Act is a lush, sensory tale of a pair of twins, Anna and Claire, who are the last of a cursed bloodline of wise women. Anna, hard at work as a scribe for their clan, begins having visions of the origins of the curse. Combining these with the knowledge of her elder, Rosalind, Anna must untangle the mystery of the curse in an attempt to prevent her twin, Claire, from falling into its embrace…

Full review at DarkScribe.

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April 12

Is Amazon censoring GLBT books?

It came through the pileline today that Amazon.com is removing the rankings for erotic GLBT books.

Case and point? Zane’s lesbian anthology Purple Panties has no genre ranking. Neither does the Best Lesbian Erotica 2009. But Laurell K Hamilton’s Mistral’s Kiss, with it’s infamous 100 page sex scene, is still listed in not one but three different rankings.

Mark Probst sent an email to Amazon asking for an explanation and received in reply:

In consideration of our entire customer base, we exclude “adult” material from appearing in some searches and best seller lists. Since these lists are generated using sales ranks, adult materials must also be excluded from that feature.

Hence, if you have further questions, kindly write back to us.

Best regards,

Ashlyn D

Member Services

Amazon.com Advantage


Oh Amazon, do you mean books containing adult materials like:

Witch Fire by Anya Bast

Grimspace by Ann Aguirre

Personal Demons by Stacia Kane

Kink by Kathe Koja (which proves that Amazon actually has a category for Erotic works, yet is excluding GLBT erotica from it)

Or even Any Given Doomsday by Lori Handeland, a book that cumulates with a (in book) two week long violent rape scene.

So multiple rape scenes and heterosexual sex scenes aren’t “adult material”, and neither is Fighting Dogs or fighting cocks(no puns)?

Perhaps they will use Poppy Z. Brite’s Drawing Blood to prove they aren’t keeping GLBT books from being discovered (You know, just like they weren’t making the sales of books self published through businesses other than CreateSpace difficult. Or cutting off Hachett UK’s buy buttons in an attempt to strong arm the publisher into giving Amazon deeper discounts.)

GLBT books that don’t include erotica (such as Brian Keene’s Dead Sea, and the Unspeakable Horror and QueerWolf anthologies) don’t seem to have been striken from Amazon’s good list.

Honestly, I don’t have a problem with an “Explicit content warning” on Amazon’s pages, but it should be consistent practice, not used as a tool to appease a minority anti-GLBT customer base.

Yes, Amazon, the anti-GLBT can be a very vocal, very volitile minority. But so can those of us who are in the GLBT community.

I encourage others who are outraged by this to let Amazon know how you feel. And of course you’ll notice that Amazon doesn’t make it easy to contact them. Of course not! They want to sell you things, not have to actually deal with you.

So here:

Amazon. com Customer Service
PO Box 81226
Seattle, WA 98108-1226
206-266-1000
Toll free: 1-800-201-7575
Fax: 206-266-2335

*ETA: Here’s where a list is being kept of all the books whose sales ranks are being removed and their erotic content.

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