Year’s Best Interview #11: Paul Park on “Mysteries of the Old Quarter”

“Mysteries of the Old Quarter” by Paul Park will be appearing in Prime’s forthcoming Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror: 2012 edited by Paula Guran. Jennifer Konieczny interviews Park on the story. 

To borrow Dr. Delorme’s question, do you think “it possible that we are haunted in dreams by our beloved dead, not just in metaphor but in actual fact?”

I do think it’s possible. I think it would be foolish to be sure, one way or the other. I’m of an age now when I’ve lost some people who were precious to me, and when they appear suddenly in memory, or else unbidden in the mind’s eye, as clearly as if they had walked into a room where I was sitting, I must wonder if I am the only one who is responsible. How strange it is that we can see people so clearly, and not just in dreams, and not because there is some reason we have summoned them, or some chain of cause and effect that leads back to them. But in the midst of some other activity we can turn around and see them, and feel their presence, as if they’d put their hand upon our arm.

MORE: Read the whole story here!


Year’s Best Interview #10: Priya Sharma on “The Fox Maiden”

“The Fox Maiden” by Priya Sharma will be appearing in Prime’s forthcoming Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror: 2012 edited by Paula Guran. Gina Guadagnino interviews Sharma on the story.

Fox hunting is a vexed subject for many people, given the history of the sport and the allegations of cruelty that led to its being banned in many countries. What kind of research did you do on fox hunting for this piece?

I once visited a stately home with a hunting room, which horrible and fascinating. It was a window into a world that’s utterly foreign to me. There was a photo of a young girl who’d been bloodied (it was her first hunt and her face had been daubed with fox blood).

I did some reading on fox hunting but I did more reading on foxes. I think they’re gorgeous. I can assure you that no foxes were harmed during the writing of this story.

MORE: Read the whole story here!


Year’s Best Interview #9: Naomi Novik on “Lord Dunsany’s Teapot”

“Lord Dunsany’s Teapot” by Naomi Novik will be appearing in Prime’s forthcoming Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror: 2012 edited by Paula Guran. Erin Stocks interviews Novik on the story.

“He held it between his hands while the heat but not the scent faded, and sipped peace as long as it lasted.” Peace in a teapot is a lovely notion. Will you tell us a little about how you came up with the origins of “Lord Dunsany’s Teapot?”

This story was part of the wonderful anthology The Thackery T. Lambshead Cabinet of Curiosities, where the challenge was to envision a mysterious artifact that might have been auctioned off after having been found in the estate of a very strange collector, and tell its story.

Trying to think of the appropriate dates, when such an artifact might have come into the collector’s hands, I had the vague sense that the death of Lord Dunsany (a wonderful pre-Tolkien author of fantasy) might have worked, and from there the idea quickly took form of a teapot that might have come into his hands, and the First World War the center of the experience.

MORE: Read the whole story here!


Year’s Best Interview #8: Kelly Link on “The Summer People”

“The Summer People” by Kelly Link will be appearing in Prime’s forthcoming Year’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy: 2012 edited by Rich HortonErin Stocks interviews Link on the story. 

Fran’s reaction to the unusual and unworldly elements of her life–taking them all in stride and not even blinking an eye–provides a nice contrast to Ophelia’s (and possibly the reader’s) reactions. How did you go about writing the juxtaposition between the two girls? 

Well, as the writer, you have to imagine how your characters look at the world. You take things in (or don’t) depending on whether or not you’ve grown up in a environment where there are particular kinds of danger or risk or responsibility. Ophelia comes from a rich family, she’s gay, and she’s been bullied. So she would be sensitive to particular kinds of situations and risk and blind to others. She’s susceptible to overtures of friendship, because she’s lonely. She is attracted to the idea of magic and the fantastic, maybe because she’s been protected from the true cost of things. (I think that often magic seems like a kind of currency–you get marvelous  things! Magic can belong to you!) Fran, on the other hand, is self-reliant. She knows what things like magic and family cost. In her eyes, friendship isn’t something affordable.

MORE: Read the whole story here!


Contents Announced: Ghosts: Recent Hauntings edited by Paula Guran

Ghosts: Recent Hauntings will be published in September 2012.

The spirits of the dead have walked among our legends, myths, and stories since before recorded history. Ghostly visitations, hauntings, unquiet souls seeking the living, vengeful wraiths, the possibility of life beyond the grave that can somehow reach out and touch us…these are some of literature’s most enduring icons. Now, in the twenty-first century, we are no less fascinated with phantoms than our cave-dwelling ancestors or our Victorian-age forebears. Thirty modern masters of fright and fantasy fill this anthology with shivers, chills, and spooky explorations of both sides of the veil. Be prepared to keep a light on all night!

Peter Atkins: “Between the Cold Moon and the Earth”
Rick Bowes: “There’s a Hole in the City”
Laird Barron: “The Lagerstatte”
Steve Duffy: “The Rag-and-Bone Men”
Jeffrey Ford: “The Trentino Kid”
Karen Joy Fowler: “Booth’s Ghost”
Neil Gaiman: “October in the Chair”
Stephen Gallagher: “The Box”
Elizabeth Hand: “Wonderwall”
Glen Hirshberg: “The Muldoon”
Alaya Dawn Johnson: “The Score”
Stephen Graham Jones: “Uncle” (original)
Caitlin R. Kiernan: “Apokatastasis”
Marc Laidlaw: “Cell Call”
Margo Lanagan: “The Proving of Smollett Standforth”
John Langan: “The Third Always Beside You”
Joe R. Lansdale: “The Case of the Lighthouse Shambler”
Maureen F. McHugh: “Ancestor Money”
Sarah Monette: “The Watcher in the Corners”
Reggie Oliver: “Mrs Midnight”
Richard Parks: “The Plum Blossom Lantern”
James van Pelt: “Savannah is Six”
Tim Powers: “A Soul in a Bottle”
Barbara Roden: “The Palace”
Ekaterina Sedia: “Tin Cans”
Nisi Shawl: “Cruel Sistah”
John Shirley: “Faces in Walls”
Peter Straub: “Mr Aikman’s Air Rifle”
Melanie Tem: “Dhost”
Steve Rasnic Tem: “The Ex”


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