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9780765312778

Aftershock and Others : 19 Oddities

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780765312778

  • ISBN10:

    0765312778

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2009-03-31
  • Publisher: Forge Books

Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

Aftershock & Othersis the third collection of short fiction byNew York Timesbestselling author F. Paul Wilson, hailed by theRocky Mountain Newsas "among the finest storytellers of our times." The title novelette won the Bram Stoker Award and its companions touch on the past, present, and futurefrom the inflationary insanity of Weimar Germany ("Aryans and Absinthe") to disco clubera Manhattan ("When He Was Fab"), to the rationing of medical services in a grim near future ("Offshore"). Wilson's stylistic diversity and versatility are on display in stories that pay tribute to Ray Bradbury ("The November Game"), use a sentient killer virus as a point-of-view character ("Lysing toward Bethlehem"), and pay unabashed homage to pure pulp fiction in two yellow peril stories ("Sex Slaves of the Dragon Tong" and "Part of the Game"). And finally, Wilson treats us to his popular antihero Repairman Jack at his most inventive: trapped in a drugstore with four killers ("Interlude at Duane's").

Author Biography

F. Paul Wilson, the New York Times bestselling author of the Repairman Jack novels, lives in Wall, New Jersey.

Table of Contents

Chapter One

1990

Another award- losing year: Soft and Others, my first short fiction collection, lost the Bram Stoker Award to Richard Matheson's Collected Stories. No gripes from me. He's the greatest. A fair number of my stories never would have been written if my teenage mind hadn't been warped by his Shock collections.

I can't complain about 1990. I started off writing the Midnight Mass novella for Robert McCammon's Under the Fang. This was the first of three "theme" anthologies contracted by the Horror Writers of America to put itself on firmer financial footing. Rick McCammon, Ramsey Campbell, and I were chosen as editors. Rick took the fi rst, a collection of vampire stories with the premise that the vampires have taken over—now what?

I knocked out Mass over four weekends while working on Reprisal. As I was finishing it Kristine Kathryn Rusch called, asking if I had anything for the Pulp house novella series she was editing. Since her print run would be less than a thousand, I asked Rick if he had any objection to Pulp house doing a stand- alone edition. He didn't. But when Pocket Books (publisher of Under the Fang) learned that my story would be technically a reprint by the time Fang was published, they demanded I cancel the special edition or they'd cut the story. Well, I'd already given Kris my word, and a deal is a deal. So that's why Midnight Mass didn't appear in Under the Fang. It did go on to become my most reprinted story.

Otherwise Reprisal claimed most of my writing time, though editors clamoring for short stories kept interrupting me. In March came Bob Weinberg. I was scheduled to be Guest of Honor at the 1990 World Fantasy Convention and it's a tradition to include a story by the GoH in the program book. Bob's wife, Phyllis, loved Repairman Jack so I wrote the "Last Rakosh" and dedicated it to her. (Years later this was blended into the Repairman Jack novel All the Rage.)

The Dark Harvest hardcover of Reborn, the fourth volume (though chronologically the second) in what I'd eventually call the Adversary Cycle, was published in March, followed a few months later by the Jove mass- market edition with one of the worst covers ever to sully my work: a lolling- tongued demon leering from atop a doorway. Beyond awful. I'd complained about it but no one was listening. The advance orders to this sequel to The Keep were excellent, so where's the problem?

Right. Where was the problem? Reviews were excellent and the book was optioned for a theatrical film within months of publication. Things looked good. I'd been wrong about retitling The Tomb, so maybe I was wrong about this. (But I wasn't. That cover was going to come back to haunt me.)

In April Richard Chizmar requested a story for an anthology called Cold Blood. I turned to Jack again. The working title was "Domestic Problem" but I ended up calling it "Home Repairs." (This was folded into the RJ novel Conspiracies.)

Then in May Joe Lansdale called looking for a dark suspense story—no supernatural—for Dark at Heart, an anthology he was editing with his wife, Karen. He wanted something like "Slasher." Back to Jack for "The Long Way Home." (It's available for download at amazon .com in their Amazon Shorts section.)

About this time I got to work on my first editing gig: Freak Show, the second of the aforementioned HWA anthologies.

I wanted Freak Show to be more unified than Fang. So . . . to all who asked (and to those I particularly wanted in the anthology) I sent out three pages of guidelines outlining the background of the show and how my connecting story would run, plus the general circular route the show would take around the country.

I asked for regionalism—write about places you lived so the tastes and tangs of the settings would be authentic. I also asked for a description of the freak and a loose outline of the story—necessary to avoid duplication of characters, locations (I didn't want multiple stories in Chicago or L.A.), and plotlines. A bit of work, yes, but you were pretty much guaranteed that I'd buy the piece if I approved your proposal. Some writers found this approach too restrictive; others blasted off and came up with great stories.

After the synopses were set, I began tying them together; I also circulated descriptions of all the freaks to the contributors to encourage cross- fertilization (a passing mention of this or that freak in other stories).

Need I say it turned out to be a lot of work? It took a year of my life and, as time went on, increasingly interfered with my own writing projects.

But here in 1990 I was oblivious to what I'd let myself in for. In June I finished revising Reprisal and set off on a research trip to Hawaii to gather sights and sounds and locations for the Maui sections of Nightworld. I wrote some of them on the spot while they were fresh. (Yeah, I know—tough work. But no sacrifice is too great for my craft.)

Careerwise, the high points of 1990 had to be the election of my first novel Healer to the Prometheus Hall of Fame, and being Guest of Honor at the World Fantasy Convention.

Excerpted from AFTERSHOCK & OTHERS by F. PAUL WILSON

Copyright © 2009 by F. Paul Wilson

Published in March 2009 by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

All rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Chapter One

1990

Another award- losing year:Soft and Others, my first short fiction collection, lost the Bram Stoker Award to Richard Matheson'sCollected Stories. No gripes from me. He's the greatest. A fair number of my stories never would have been written if my teenage mind hadn't been warped by hisShockcollections.

I can't complain about 1990. I started off writing theMidnight Massnovella for Robert McCammon'sUnder the Fang. This was the first of three "theme" anthologies contracted by the Horror Writers of America to put itself on firmer financial footing. Rick McCammon, Ramsey Campbell, and I were chosen as editors. Rick took the fi rst, a collection of vampire stories with the premise that the vampires have taken over—now what?

I knocked outMassover four weekends while working onReprisal. As I was finishing it Kristine Kathryn Rusch called, asking if I had anything for the Pulp house novella series she was editing. Since her print run would be less than a thousand, I asked Rick if he had any objection to Pulp house doing a stand- alone edition. He didn't. But when Pocket Books (publisher ofUnder the Fang) learned that my story would be technically a reprint by the timeFangwas published, they demanded I cancel the special edition or they'd cut the story. Well, I'd already given Kris my word, and a deal is a deal. So that's whyMidnight Massdidn't appear inUnder the Fang. It did go on to become my most reprinted story.

OtherwiseReprisalclaimed most of my writing time, though editors clamoring for short stories kept interrupting me. In March came Bob Weinberg. I was scheduled to be Guest of Honor at the 1990 World Fantasy Convention and it's a tradition to include a story by the GoH in the program book. Bob's wife, Phyllis, loved Repairman Jack so I wrote the "Last Rakosh" and dedicated it to her. (Years later this was blended into the Repairman Jack novelAll the Rage.)

The Dark Harvest hardcover ofReborn, the fourth volume (though chronologically the second) in what I'd eventually call the Adversary Cycle, was published in March, followed a few months later by the Jove mass- market edition with one of the worst covers ever to sully my work: a lolling- tongued demon leering from atop a doorway. Beyond awful. I'd complained about it but no one was listening. The advance orders to this sequel toThe Keepwere excellent, so where's the problem?

Right. Where was the problem? Reviews were excellent and the book was optioned for a theatrical film within months of publication. Things looked good. I'd been wrong about retitlingThe Tomb, so maybe I was wrong about this. (But I wasn't. That cover was going to come back to haunt me.)

In April Richard Chizmar requested a story for an anthology calledCold Blood. I turned to Jack again. The working title was "Domestic Problem" but I ended up calling it "Home Repairs." (This was folded into the RJ novelConspiracies.)

Then in May Joe Lansdale called looking for a dark suspense story—no supernatural—forDark at Heart, an anthology he was editing with his wife, Karen. He wanted something like "Slasher." Back to Jack for "The Long Way Home." (It's available for download at amazon .com in their Amazon Shorts section.)

About this time I got to work on my first editing gig:Freak Show, the second of the aforementioned HWA anthologies.

I wantedFreak Showto be more unified thanFang. So . . . to all who asked (and to those I particularly wanted in the anthology) I sent out three pages of guidelines outlining the background of the show and how my connecting story would run, plus the general circular route the show would take around the country.

I asked for regionalism—write about places you lived so the tastes and tangs of the settings would be authentic. I also asked for a description of the freak and a loose outline of the story—necessary to avoid duplication of characters, locations (I didn't want multiple stories in Chicago or L.A.), and plotlines. A bit of work, yes, but you were pretty much guaranteed that I'd buy the piece if I approved your proposal. Some writers found this approach too restrictive; others blasted off and came up with great stories.

After the synopses were set, I began tying them together; I also circulated descriptions of all the freaks to the contributors to encourage cross- fertilization (a passing mention of this or that freak in other stories).

Need I say it turned out to be alotof work? It took a year of my life and, as time went on, increasingly interfered with my own writing projects.

But here in 1990 I was oblivious to what I'd let myself in for. In June I finished revisingReprisaland set off on a research trip to Hawaii to gather sights and sounds and locations for the Maui sections ofNightworld. I wrote some of them on the spot while they were fresh. (Yeah, I know—tough work. But no sacrifice is too great for my craft.)

Careerwise, the high points of 1990 had to be the election of my first novelHealerto the Prometheus Hall of Fame, and being Guest of Honor at the World Fantasy Convention.

Excerpted from AFTERSHOCK & OTHERS by F. PAUL WILSON

Copyright © 2009 by F. Paul Wilson

Published in March 2009 by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

All rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher.



Excerpted from Aftershock and Others: 19 Oddities by F. Paul Wilson
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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