Black Static #60 (September-October 2017)
By TTA Press
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About this ebook
Black Static 60, the tenth anniversary issue, contains new dark novellas and novelettes by writers who published their very first stories here: Carole Johnstone, Tim Lees, Ray Cluley, and Stephen Hargadon, with a guest editorial by the legendary Mick Reeks. The cover art is by Ben Baldwin, who also began his career here, as did Lynda E. Rucker who's now in every issue with her Notes From the Borderland column. Other features include Into the Woods by Ralph Robert Moore; Case Notes by Peter Tennant (book reviews and an in-depth interview with Daniel Mills); Blood Spectrum by Gary Couzens (film reviews). Story illustrations are by Ben Baldwin, Jim Burns, Richard Wagner, and others.
The cover art is 'The King in Yellow' by Ben Baldwin
Guest Editorial by the legendary Mick Reeks
Fiction:
Skyshine (or Death by Scotland) by Carole Johnstone
The Shuttered Child by Tim Lees
illustrated by Jim Burns
The Swans by Ray Cluley
illustrated by Richard Wagner
Langwell Sorrow by Stephen Hargadon
illustrated by Ben Baldwin
Columns:
Notes From the Borderland by Lynda E. Rucker
Into the Woods by Ralph Robert Moore
Reviews:
Case Notes: Book Reviews by Peter Tennant
Written on the Land Itself: Daniel Mills
The Account of David Stonehouse, Exile
Moriah
plus author interview
Four Books by Allison Littlewood
A Cold Silence
Zombie Apocalypse!: Acapulcalypse Now
The Hidden People
Five Feathered Tales
(guest reviews by Stephen Theaker)
Ancient & Modern: Jeffrey Thomas
Ghosts of Punktown
Haunted Worlds
Short Story Collections
The Dream Operator by Mike O’Driscoll
Escape Plans by David Sakmyster
Blood Spectrum: Film Reviews by Gary Couzens
American Gods, The Kettering Incident, Valkyrien, The Sinbad Trilogy, The Orchard End Murder, Blood Diner, Waxwork, C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud, Return of the Living Dead III, Life, The Belko Experiment, Killing Ground, A Dark Song, The Ghoul, Capture Kill Release, Voice from the Stone, The Transfiguration, The Evil Within, Phoenix Forgotten, Temple, Within
TTA Press
TTA Press is the publisher of the magazines Interzone (science fiction/fantasy) and Black Static (horror/dark fantasy), the Crimewave anthology series, TTA Novellas, plus the occasional story collection and novel.
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Black Static #60 (September-October 2017) - TTA Press
BLACK STATIC 60 (TENTH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE)
SEPTEMBER–OCTOBER 2017
© 2017 Black Static and its contributors
PUBLISHER
TTA Press, 5 Martins Lane, Witcham, Ely, Cambs CB6 2LB, UK
ttapress.com
blackstatic@ttapress.com
Books and films for review are always welcome and should be sent to the above address
EDITOR
Andy Cox
andy@ttapress.com
BOOKS
Peter Tennant
whitenoise@ttapress.com
FILMS
Gary Couzens
gary@ttapress.com
SUBMISSIONS
Unsolicited submissions of short stories are always very welcome, but please follow the guidelines: tta.submittable.com/submit
SMASHWORDS REQUESTS THAT WE ADD THE FOLLOWING:
LICENSE NOTE: THIS EMAGAZINE IS LICENSED FOR YOUR PERSONAL USE/ENJOYMENT ONLY. IT MAY NOT BE RE-SOLD OR GIVEN AWAY TO OTHER PEOPLE. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE THIS MAGAZINE WITH OTHERS PLEASE PURCHASE AN ADDITIONAL COPY FOR EACH RECIPIENT. IF YOU POSSESS THIS MAGAZINE AND DID NOT PURCHASE IT, OR IT WAS NOT PURCHASED FOR YOUR USE ONLY, THEN PLEASE GO TO SMASHWORDS.COM AND OBTAIN YOUR OWN COPY. THANK YOU FOR RESPECTING THE HARD WORK OF THE CONTRIBUTORS AND EDITORS.
BLACK STATIC 60 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2017
TTA PRESS
COPYRIGHT TTA PRESS AND CONTRIBUTORS 2017
PUBLISHED BY TTA PRESS AT SMASHWORDS
CONTENTS
The King in Yellow bw.tifCOVER ART
THE KING IN YELLOW
BEN BALDWIN
charlottesville.tifINTO THE ABYSS
NOTES FROM THE BORDERLAND
LYNDA E. RUCKER
halloween2.tifI’M SOMEONE ELSE
INTO THE WOODS
RALPH ROBERT MOORE
reclaimation yard 1.tifART BY BEN BALDWIN
GUEST EDITORIAL
MICK REEKS
flag.tifNOVELLA
SKYSHINE (OR DEATH BY SCOTLAND)
CAROLE JOHNSTONE
shuttered-child.tifSTORY ILLUSTRATED BY JIM BURNS
THE SHUTTERED CHILD
TIM LEES
the swans (2).tifSTORY ILLUSTRATED BY RICHARD WAGNER
THE SWANS
RAY CLULEY
Langwell Sorrow.tifNOVELETTE ILLUSTRATED BY BEN BALDWIN
LANGWELL SORROW
STEPHEN HARGADON
Mills-contents.tifBOOK REVIEWS + DANIEL MILLS INTERVIEW
CASE NOTES
PETER TENNANT
Capture.Kill.Release.contents.tifFILM REVIEWS
BLOOD SPECTRUM
GARY COUZENS
NOTES FROM THE BORDERLAND
LYNDA E. RUCKER
lyndarucker3supercropped.tifINTO THE ABYSS
This is not the Black Static column you were meant to read this month. The intent of that original article had been to write about place, a topic I’ve tackled before, but I had more to say. In part, I wanted to write about the landscape of the American South where I grew up, and my fierce, visceral love for it.
But right now, I cannot write about the American South in a morally neutral way. There is a real darkness spreading out from its history and infecting my entire country because of our refusal, as Southerners, to confront that darkness.
We lovers of horror know all about confronting darkness. At its best, this is what horror does; it grapples with our worst fears – not just of the monster under the bed, but the monster within, or what the monster can take away from us: love, sanity. We will all confront some of these monsters in our lifetime, and some of us will confront all of them.
But what does it mean, to say that horror confronts darkness?
Once, many years ago, I saw a discussion online between some writers who agreed they didn’t like horror because they already knew that life was random and terrifying and didn’t need to read or watch horror to be informed of that. And sometimes I hear horror fans say things like "Watching the news – now that’s real horror or
The worst monsters are the human ones. No horror story can compete with that".
I feel all of these remarks are missing the point. If we only see horror as a genre that portrays horrific acts or ideas, we are missing the point, too. Unfortunately, this is what a lot of horror does, and I think it fails as a result.
A successful narrative, in any genre, needs to do more than recount a bald series of events. It needs to illuminate. Not explain – but explore, raise possibilities, ask questions, engage with the story it is telling. Horror needs this perhaps even more than most genres because without this illumination, it simply becomes a kind of cruel recounting of atrocities, and of course it cannot compete
with real life in this recounting because there is nothing we can imagine that is within the limits of human endurance that has not been done by one person to another.
This is not to say that horror needs to be cerebral to succeed. Far from it: in fact, horror needs to engage the emotions and the unconscious. The feeling of being frightened or disturbed or unsettled by a horror story is not one that is reached through rational means. But a writer or filmmaker who gets there by describing or portraying events that would upset most people has only done half the job that a storyteller is supposed to do.
Real world horror
has everything and nothing to do with the horror genre. Accounts of real-world atrocities are simply a series of facts. They lack inherent meaning. They need a storyteller to give shape to them. A poor storyteller cannot muster much more meaning than People are sadists
or The world is a frightening place that will destroy you
. The skilful storyteller has more to say to you than this. They have things to tell you about sorrow, about resilience, about loss, about love, about human nature. But whether the story is one intended to instill what M.R. James called a pleasing terror
in the reader or viewer or one meant to disturb on a more profound level, horror makes its metaphors literal, and however much horror we have seen in our own personal existences, we continue to grapple with questions that horror stories can explore:
Is there a force in the universe that is benevolent toward us, or is the universe indifferent? Do we have souls, and if so, what happens to them after we die? And if not, what if anything remains? How do we survive loss? Who are the real monsters? What drives people who do not fit our template for evil to do terrible things to another?
Recent events in my country have caused me to think a great deal about evil lately. It’s not actually a word I particularly like in most contexts because I think it has the effect of othering people who do terrible things. The trouble with this othering is that it means that we become unable to recognize those same acts, or seeds of them, or versions of them, in ourselves and others we are close to. It’s really easy to tell ourselves stories in which we are always the heroes.
I should know.
I come from a place where large swathes of people have built an entire cultural myth around a particularly ahistoric version of an era and a war and a vile practice, the abduction and enslavement of other human beings. They have found a way to make this glorious.
It’s difficult to overstate the degree to which the idea of the Lost Cause has permeated white Southern culture. The thing is, many of the people who still have some sympathy for this myth also abhor the naked racism on display in Charlottesville, Virginia. But that’s because that’s not their version of the myth. Their version is a culture of benevolent slave owners – as if there could be such a thing – with a few bad apples who spoiled the bunch. Why, some of them treated their slaves practically like family. So much so that some of those slaves didn’t leave the families they worked for even after they were freed. (Never mind that they had nowhere else to go.) Never let anyone tell you that storytelling doesn’t matter. A real-life horror unfolded in Virginia in August because people spent generations telling a story that is not true.
The truth of the matter is that there is no particular face of evil. There is just you, and me, and other people, and our thoughts and our deeds.
Here is another question that horror fiction might grapple with: when does the balance of evil deeds overcome the balance of good deeds and make a person one we call evil, and how do we deal with that darkness?
In the South, that darkness became a monster that people – not just Southerners – could rally around. But the South is not unique. William Burroughs once wrote that America was an old and dirty and evil
land. It’s a great quote, it’s a great story, but it’s not something I really believe, in terms of America being particularly worse than any other place. Where humans set foot, it seems, atrocities are not far behind, and there are few places on the globe that are likely to be free of unnecessary suffering inflicted by one human being upon another. What makes the difference, I think, is what we do about that darkness, and how we treat people who dare to uncover it. Those people often treated more poorly than the actual perpetrators.
These are all things that have been on my mind in recent days, and I don’t have a tidy conclusion prepared.
I know there are plenty of people out there who would prefer their horror fiction to be apolitical, and they have no hesitation about saying so. But there is no such thing as apolitical. Whose stories are you choosing to tell, and how are you choosing to tell them? Who, if any, are your heroes, and who are your villains – and why? What are the assumptions upon which your story is based? (This can be a tough one, because by their very nature our assumptions run so deep we are often unaware of them.)
The answers to all of these questions reveal political underpinnings about whose and what stories we think deserve to be told, and how we ought to tell them. Horror reminds us that even the monsters’ stories are worth telling – but we have to be careful that in telling them, we don’t become one with the monsters.
INTO THE WOODS
RALPH ROBERT MOORE
RalphRobertMoore-woods2.tifI’M SOMEONE ELSE
Here we are, near Halloween. Put on the masks.
When I was a kid, there weren’t elaborate Halloween costumes. My parents would dress me up in old clothes, trousers rolled, burn a cork and smear it over my lower face so it looked like a beard, sort of, and tell me I was a hobo.
Back in the late Seventies, Mary and I were living in an apartment over a garage in San Francisco. We decided one dark blue night to order pizza. I called in the pick-up order, and when they asked for my name, I said, on a lark, Brian Eno. We had been listening to Low, Are We Not Men?, and Fear of Music. Eno was everywhere, but no one really knew what he looked like.
When we wandered into the small restaurant to pick up our pizza, long-haired and under some influences, the short-sleeved pizza guy behind the counter, using his big wooden paddle to slide our pizza out of the oven and into a square delivery box, looked me over. Shy. Do you work in the music industry?
I pretended I had no idea what he was talking about, paying him with gay money. (This was back when San Francisco was becoming the gay mecca of the United States. Gays would frequently rubber stamp their paper currency with a purple-inked Gay
, to try to keep it within the gay community. But like all money, like all sexual desire for that matter, it went wherever it wanted, of course, so that you soon saw it all over the San Francisco peninsula. Mary and I both worked as bank tellers at the time, and it was not unusual for a customer to look at the money we had just counted out to them, pushing it back across the counter. I don’t want gay money!
)
We laughed on the aromatic trip back to our apartment with our pizza. It’s so much fun pretending to be someone else.
I wasn’t happy in high school.
The first day of senior year, all the uniformed boys sitting on blue metal folding chairs at an assembly in the gymnasium, as if we were at an AA meeting, the principal announced long hair would no longer be tolerated. Pointing at me, sitting a few rows back. So we need you to get a haircut, Mr Moore.
Dropped out, got a job in New York City. Going out into the sidewalk crowds each evening once I got off work, the intense smell of car exhaust. The best experience a boy could have. My advice to any child. Disrupt your life.
One year later, I decided to try school again, enlisting at a college an hour’s drive from home.
In the screams of the hallways I’d occasionally pass a short, overweight guy in old-fashioned clothes, carrying a black briefcase in his right hand like its hard black plastic handle was the long neck of an albatross. Feeling sorry for him, I set my lunch down at his table one day.
And he was boring. But lonely.
I knew about loneliness, so I spent some time talking to him, mostly listening to him, because when you’re in a conversation with someone boring, a lot of it is listening.
Fred was trying to fit in, but did not have a clue how to do that.
He had a habit of digging his hands into the glass ashtrays set out on the cafeteria tables, blackening his fingertips. At one point, he told me he was becoming an expert in hypnosis, but needed a volunteer to perfect his talent.
I had of course seen hypnosis sessions growing up, in movies and on TV. The idea did intrigue me. I always wanted to experience what it was like.
So Fred and I went to the campus library, which I figured would be quiet, and sat across from each other at a long wooden table near the back, stacks behind us. After clearing his throat several times, he bugged his eyes at me from behind his black-rimmed eyeglasses, attempting to put me under a hypnotic trance.
You’re falling asleep, deep, deep asleep.
I don’t have to do an entire paragraph of him trying to put me under, do I? You can imagine that yourself. The point is, although I was receptive to the idea, very much so, to see what it would be like to be hypnotized, it didn’t work.
I felt sorry for him. Because I could tell he needed to believe he was an expert in hypnosis. In persuasion. That he had enough teenage confidence in him to convince a girl to go out on a date. Because being a teenager, having no one to date, talking to your mom every Friday night at the kitchen table? That’s not the way it’s supposed to be.
So I pretended to be hypnotized.
Head lolling to one side, lips barely vibrating.
Tell me your deepest memory!
Here’s where I got a little creative. My planet is dying. I must escape. I am one of the few who can. Heading outwards, towards this young planet, the one they call Earth.
Well.
Fred sat up in his library chair. Leaning forward. Where are you from? Can you give me the coordinates of your home planet?
I expected him to realize after a few exchanges I was obviously kidding, it was such a ridiculous idea. But he didn’t.
That’s how much he needed to believe he had some talent, in anything.
We’d have hypnosis sessions twice a week. I’d go into a trance, slurred speech, reveal a little bit more about my home planet.
But I started to feel bad.
So one day, when we got together for yet another hypnosis session, and he asked, What is the most important thing you can tell me about your planet?
, I told him, It doesn’t exist. I’m not from another planet, Fred. I made it all up. It’s a fiction. Sorry.
Back in 2000, I created a website, Jump Down the Hole, which presented different works of fiction as if they were real.
For example, I made a home page for the fictional Arnie Maddox and his daughter Cindy. Mimicking most home pages at that time, it had animated GIFs, a section for the family’s poetry, another for their family recipes, one for Arnie’s weekly musings, a guest book with fake entries, etc. I even dressed up as Arnie for a couple of photographs to put on the site, stuffing a pillow under my shirt to make me look heavier, and getting Mary to photoshop my head to make me look bald. People would write to Arnie, and I’d answer as Arnie. I loved it! I’m someone else. Isn’t that what we do, as writers?
I’m a white man. I’m proud to be a white man. You should always be proud of who you are.
But because I am white, I have absolutely no idea, and will never have any idea, what it’s like to be, for example, an African-American. Because I’m male, I will never have any idea what it’s like to be female.
Just like an African-American will never have any idea what it’s like to be white, or a woman will never have any idea what it’s like to be a man.
As writers, we can pretend to be whoever