Wednesday, December 26, 2012

NEW RELEASE!


From the lurking shadows of the unknown to the shell of an empty soul, Patrick C. Greene spins seven dark tales to keep you awake at night. 
Dark Destinies contains: Into the Small Hours, Room 422, Bill's Becoming, Fate by Firelight, Shards, High Strangeness in South Haven, and Words That Start with the Letter D.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Alaspa meets Greene


BRYAN W ALASPA interviews Patrick C. Greene:

"You ever get the feeling, when you first meet someone, or talk with them, that maybe they are some sort of long lost relative or something? Well, I came pretty darn close to that feeling when author Patrick Greene agreed to interview me for his blog about my novel VICIOUS. Not only did we share the same passion for writing horror/thrillers, but our most recent works both have similar plot elements.

Patrick’s passion for writing is evident from just chatting with him. His talent is immense. His imagination seems limitless. His desire to help other authors is also strong, and you know that’s important for me, as well. In short, he is a major talent, and if you are not familiar with his name just yet…you will be.



Read the INTERVIEW HERE

Friday, December 21, 2012

SOME GOODBYES


Six-year-old Sandy Hook Elementary student Jack Pinto was laid to rest in a replica of the jersey worn by his hero, New York Jets wide receiver Victor Cruz. Cruz went on to inscribe Jack's name on his cleats before playing his next game. Jack's best friend John wrote him a goodbye letter that said in part "I will talk to you in my prayers. I love you." Nicely said, John. We all love Jack Pinto. And many thanks to Victor Cruz.


Charlotte Bacon, like many little girls, loved the color pink. According to her uncle it was more than just a passing affinity it was "A passion. And by a passion, I mean an addiction." She trained in Tae Kwon Do. Charlotte's favorite movie was "Brave". I hope she got to see it a bunch of times.


Daniel Barden wanted to be a firefighter, like his cousins in New York. Word is, he liked playing drums as well. Daniel was also an accomplished athlete, swimming and soccer being his favorite sports. An avid reader, Daniel was described as an old soul by friends of his family. I hope we all get a chance to meet that soul, in some way.


Olivia Engel actually loved going to school! She even had a good relationship with her three year old brother. She had a dog named Petey. She was into theater, dancing and singing and was preparing for her role as an angel in a local presentation of the Nativity. She was also in Daisy Scouts. All kids should have such active days.


Noah Pozner had high aspirations. He wanted to be a soldier, a doctor, and a taco factory manager. He loved rainbows. (Me too, li'l bro.) His twin sister Arielle drew a picture of her mother smiling and handed it to President Obama during his visit to the site of the tragedy. There's not a lot of comfort to be had here-but that picture's probably about the best any of us could do.


How'd you like to be a painter, living on Martha's Vineyard? That's what Grace Audrey McDonnell had in mind for her future. She enjoyed playing dress-up, especially in pink, just like her classmate Charlotte Bacon. Maybe her wings are pink.


6 year-old boy Jesse wrote "I love you" in the frost of his mother's car door before running inside the school in anticipation of that days' project of building gingerbread houses. Jesse is said to have been attempting to lead his classmates to safety during the attack, when he fell to the gunman's assault. There's something enlightened about that.


Catherine Hubbard was a freckly little redhead who loved animals passionately. Bet she petted and hugged a lot of little furballs in her time. Those pets are ripples of kindness that will spread forever.


Jessica Rekos was a cowgirl. Upon turning ten, she would have had her very own horse to groom and ride and love. In preparation, Jessica was to have received a hat and spiffy cowgirl boots for Christmas. She was a big sis too, with two little brothers who looked up to her. Good memories will be their guide.

Little Josephine Gay just turned 7 on December 11. Her favorite color was purple. She's described as having a "joyful and giving spirit", so Christmas is the perfect time to remember her in prayer and/or thought. She looked like the little girl from "Monsters Inc.", remember the one who thought Sully was a big teddy? This enterprising young lady often set up lemonade stands in her neighborhood during the summer.


James Mattioli was not quite 7 yet. His older sister, in whom he saw the sun rise and set, was helping him to be a better reader. Ham sandwiches from Subway were a favorite meal. "J", as he was called, wasn't afraid to hug his friends. James was pretty good at math too, an attribute which I admire.


Top level athletes can be spotted at an early age. Chase Kowalski was one such prodigy. The 7-year-old was already running road races and training for a mini-triathlon! Bicycles and baseball were also favorite pursuits. Something tells me he would've been a record breaker.


Born in San Diego, Avielle Richman carried on a noble tradition-she was a storyteller. She also loved music, archery and of course, kung fu. Would love to have seen her face if she ever saw a Michelle Yeoh flick. I'll watch one for you, Avi.


Also musically inclined was Benjamin Wheeler. He already had perfect pitch. The energetic young pianist once sprinted onstage to complete a recital then sprinted back. He and his family had just moved to Newtown last April. Ben wanted to be either an architect or a paleontologist. Cool professions, cool kid.


Emilie Parker carried her pens and markers and paper wherever she went, for moments of spontaneous creativity. Her artworks are priceless treasures, far as I'm concerned.


Ana Marquez-Greene was the daughter of jazz musicians. Like Benjamin Wheeler, Ana had only recently moved to Newtown, coming from Winnipeg. Ana always gave her artwork to others as gifts. If you're a parent or an uncle or aunt or cousin or grandparent, you probably have a few gifts like that, and you probably have never seen anything more masterfully rendered in your life.


Dylan Hockley was originally from England. When he learned he would be moving to the U.S, he could not wait to get here. A special needs student, Dylan was learning to read. Being a model student, he was making good progress. He shared with his older brother Jake and his father a passion for martial arts. Rei.


Not much is known about 6-year-old Madeleine Hsu, except that she was upbeat and kind and that her family had only lived in the area for a few years. I hope they were joyous years.


Caroline Previdi loved to draw and dance. She was training in jazz and ballet. She was such a hardcore New York Yankees fan, she once refused to go into Fenway Park in Boston. A good fan to have, that one.


Allison Wyatt, another young artist, patiently taught her younger sister Lauren how to ride the school bus. She always wore ribbons and berets in her hair. If Allison had a snack, it wasn't unusual for her to offer some of it to complete strangers.


Teacher Victoria Soto put her students in a closet and stood as a barrier between them and the gunman during the attack. So many mourners attended Victoria's funeral that many had to sit outside and listen to the service on loudspeakers. Her college roommate said this: "“When she hugged you, she put her whole heart and soul into every hug she gave.” Maybe we should all do that.


Rachel D'Avino, 29, was a behavioral therapist -a vocation which requires immense, selfless loving kindness- and teacher's aide. Like Victoria Soto, Rachel heroically shielded a student during the attack. It's amazing how peaceful teachers can take on the role of great warriors in merely doing their jobs.


Principal Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung had been Sandy Hook's principal for almost two years. She was still pursuing her Ph.D, and was a grandmother. Hochsprung was in the process of implementing a security system at the school. With the children she fiercely thought of ashers in mind, she fearlessly stood strong when facing the attacker.


School psychologist Mary Sherlach was the mother of two adult daughters. She was a classic rock fan who loved to sing and dance to Eagles tunes, often persuading friends and family members to join her in impromptu singalong and dance.


Lauren Rousseau was substituting for a teacher who was on maternity leave. She loved cats. She had baked Hobbit cupcakes in anticipation of seeing the film. That's how you live life to the fullest.


Please join me in celebrating their lives and saying goodbye.


Sources:
registercitizen.com
Conneticut Post
NY Daily News
Denver Post
Perez Hilton
ABC News
Daily Mail (UK)
CNN
The Jewish Press
legacy.com
CBS
dailybulletin.com
NY Post
telegraph.co.uk
Stamford Advocate
New Hampshire Register
irishcentral.com
patch.com
New Haven Register

Thursday, December 20, 2012

FREE FREE FREE

NOW AVAILABLE 
FREE
On Smashwords


Author of the Week!



Thank you to The eReader Cafe for granting me Author of the Week Status!

From the interview:


Good Sunday morning, everyone! Allow me to introduce you to Horror author, Patrick C. Greene.Let's begin this Sunday's author interview with The eReader Cafe's signature first question:

Coffee or Tea?


Coffee while writing, tea any other time.

Tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from and when did you start writing?

I'm from just outside of Asheville, North Carolina; a rural town called Fairview. I've been writing since before I knew how, in some form or other.


You’ve written a suspenseful Horror novel, Progeny, and quite a few short stories. Tell us about your writing and what inspires you to write in your chosen genre.

I try to write in the style I personally find most appealing--because if I'm not entertained by mywriting who will be? I like suspense and emotional extremes and the idea of a situation that teststhe characters--whether they ultimately survive or not. It's hard to comprehend what made meprefer horror, but I do have an extremely vivid and active imagination and with the horror genre, I have plenty of opportunity to give it a workout. You can just go in so many directions, in fact,you're expected to! What's cooler than that? Only a frozen corpse.

Read MORE from the Interview HERE

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Patrick visits The Book Addict









"I say, get the crazy shit out of the way, then whittle it down. Write stream-of-consciousness if you have to, but get your story down and off of your brain, so you can see it in a different light. You may find that it’s even more vital and powerful than you originally thought!" PCG

Saturday, December 1, 2012

INDIE BOOKSPOT Interview




Why do you write? Is it something you’ve always done, or always wanted to do? Or is it something that you started fairly recently?

Sitting down with a pen or pencil or crayon and expressing myself goes back way farther than I can remember. As a tyke, I got in trouble for drawing on the wall, like most kids–but seems like it took me a longer time than normal to learn my lesson. I made pages after pages of drawings, burning through those cheap paper pads faster than my parents could re-stock. Fortunately, my dad was in the newspaper business and had access to lots of paper. I vividly remember seeing a box turtle crawling around in our yard and thinking those little markings on his shell were the alphabet- and I couldn’t wait to learn my ABC’s so I could read turtle shells!


Read more of the INTERVIEW

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

THE GRALIEN REPORT: Podcast Interview

I want to say THANK YOU  to Micah Hanks over at The Gralien Report for giving me the opportunity to come on his radio show this evening to talk about PROGENY.  Listen to the interview HERE





Micah wrote the Foreword for PROGENY and here you can read from one of his blog posts about Bigfoot.

Bigfoot is an Archetype
From time to time there are reports that fall under the “Bigfoot” category that are, to put it simply, present a lot of disturbing problems for eyewitnesses. While these “high strangeness” reports (an expression that had become innate to the study of odd occurrences tucked within the realms of Forteana) are in the seldom minority, they are often overlooked by the greater cryptozoology community for a number of reasons.  READ MORE HERE


The Gralien Report on facebook

Friday, November 23, 2012

CHOOSING THE PERFECT TITLE PART DEUX: THE RE-REDEMPTION


   I've never seen the movie "Pontiac Moon", but the title has always stuck with me for some reason. Something about an enigmatic, somewhat mystical-sounding title always catches my attention. Let's take a couple of films from the golden age of the action film: "Good Guys Wear Black", a reasonably entertaining early Chuck Norris vehicle, and "Out For Justice", one of Steven Seagal's movies. In the case of "Justice", it takes me a minute to sort out just which of the many similarly-named Seagal potboilers this one is, despite a rather intense -if brief- obsession I once had with the towering Aikido master. "Good Guys" on the other hand, despite being an arguably lesser film, rouses instant visual images. The title refers to a military unit in the film called The Black Tigers, and the fact that I know that will show you just how intrigued I was with this film's great-sounding appellation.

   I get the feeling many writers just slap their work with a vaguely applicable title to distinguish it from their other works. And I have to admit, I've been guilty of choosing perhaps a less meaningful title in favor of a catchier, more marketable one. After all, if a reader's interest is not caught by the work's "package" -its title, artwork, even the name of the author, in the case of my better known brethren- the chance of them ever becoming interested is low at best. In my notebook of ideas and story concepts, I sometimes scribble a potential title that may have occurred to me, often little more than a conglomeration of genre-related words- in hopes of having an idea form around it, or even of forcing the idea to form, sort of like Roger Corman and a handful of other filmmakers have been known to do.
   One of these disembodied titles that I scribbled many years ago still pops into my head from time to time. These days it's more likely to make me LOL, as the kids say, than to inspire any particular story line, but then again...
   That title was "Splatter Quest." Just think what could occur on a splatter quest...a young Peter Jackson or Sam Raimi would make it a journey to remember, certainly.
   Earlier today, while commenting on a facebook post about some fur-loving fashion designer duo, the term "sonnets of suffering" popped into my fevered mind. Very Barker-esque, I must say, and certainly classier than "splatter quest." 
   My current work-in-progress, a sweeping vampire tale, remains untitled, despite months of (sporadic) work. I'm hoping the perfect title will come to me, and that it will not actually contain the word "vampire", and maybe not even "blood." I'd like it to stand out, you see, yet be attractive to bloodsucker fans immediately, given the vast spate of works in the same sub-genre that will surely flood the market for years to come.
   So while I let that ruminate, there's this movie I've been wanting to see for years. Maybe it'll plant some magical title-growing seed. I believe the film is called "Pontiac Moon."
STILL MORE TITLE MADNESS TO COME!

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

BLACK FRIDAY

Available on BLACK FRIDAY 11/23/12


Includes the previously published
BILL’S BECOMING
HIGH STRANGENESS IN SOUTH HAVEN
FINDERS KEEPERS
And introducing
FATE BY FIRELIGHT


~An excerpt from FATE BY FIRELIGHT~

In the den, Ray smirked at me, as we continued a longstanding, familiar discourse.  
          "The coaching staff is the problem.  They're bringing the whole franchise into the toilet." I argued as I poked the fire awake.
          "Come on, Eli.  The team sucks because the players suck.  The coaches suck, the stadium sucks, the town sucks.  Just because they're your home team doesn't mean you have to back them, you know."
           I took a seat across from him.  "That'd be easier to buy, if you weren't so hardcore Philadelphia."
          Ray’s laugh was as childish as it was derisive. 
We were interrupted by Melyssa’s theatrical entrance.  Wide-eyed and hunkered low, she carried the Ouija board box on the flat of her hand like a pizza from beyond the grave, making a mock-eerie sound with pursed lips.  The dim lights and flickering fire added to the effect.  Kumi giggled.
"What's all that about?" I asked.
          Anybody for..." Melyssa maintained the dramatic pause as she floated the box in front of us.  "...Ouija?"
          Ray's eyes brightened.  "Hell yeah!  I haven't goofed around with one of those since I was a kid!"
          I looked at that box for a long moment, wondering if I was past buzzed, closer to drunk.   I was almost totally sure I had pitched it months ago.
          Melyssa lay the box on the coffee table beside the half-empty wine bottle.  She filled Kumi’s glass, then raised her own.  "This will be Kumi's first experience with the mystic oracle. Let's toast."
          "I didn't know Ouija was a drinking game." I cracked, raising my beer.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Inspiration for DARK CLOUD

Patrick C. Greene began his relationship with Hobbes End Publishing by contributing two short stories in the first volume of The Endlands. He then went on to write his first novel, Progeny, which was published in October of 2012 by Hobbes End. In this volume, he not only contributed another story, but he also wrote the intro to the book. HERE are his thoughts on “Dark Cloud” and his inspiration for writing it. 

Buy The ENDLANDS VOLUME 2 HERE

Friday, November 16, 2012

Have you met CRAIG WESSEL??




HOBBES END AUTHOR HIGHLIGHT - CRAIG WESSEL


“I’ve always loved stories that have a twist of some sort at the end. That’s probably the result of too much Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Twilight Zone, and Night Gallery during my formative years. I believe that stories like the two I’ve submitted for The Endlands Volume 2 (as well as “Loose Ends” from Volume 1) are rooted in our inherent fear that sometimes things just aren’t what they seem to be. We may not like that in our personal lives, but we do seem to enjoy living vicariously through characters that find out the hard way.” More from Craig at Hobbes End Publishing

Thursday, November 15, 2012

NINE QUESTIONS with PCG

Another INTERVIEW with Patrick!

A sneak peek - 

Tell us about your writing process?

Generally it goes thusly: Drinkin’. Then, an insane idea pops into my head and I rush to write it in my notebook before I forget it. This usually happens when I’m already knee-deep in another project, so as I finish that one and get ready to begin something new, I dig into the notebook and see what strikes my fancy. (My notebook is pretty full-it’ll take a few decades to get to all of those concepts.) Being that I write both screenplays and fiction prose, what happens next depends on which option I choose for that particular idea. In either case, I will first begin creating characters — giving them histories, motives, etc. and decide what general purpose they will serve in the story. Then: drinkin’. ~ Click the LINK above for more!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

THE DICKSON VIXEN

Allison M. Dickson is making her debut appearance in The Endlands anthology with two short stories included in this volume. She has previously published “Under the Scotch Broom” in eBook format, and we are so happy to include it in this collection. Also gracing the pages is “The Shiva Apparatus.”
Here’s what Allison has to say:
“I see short stories as a way to experiment with time-honored themes and tropes, and my stories have ranged from bugs to technology run amok to love at first sight. I came up with “The Shiva Apparatus” out of a desire to apply the “bottle episode” theory to a short story... READ MORE HERE 
BUY THE ENDLANDS VOLUME 2 HERE

NEW RELEASE!!

Are you ready??! All you ENDLANDS Fans 
come and get it HERE!!

Friday, November 9, 2012

NEW COVER ART

So excited to present the new cover for my short story BILL'S BECOMING available on Amazon.  A heartfelt THANK YOU goes out to the amazing SEVEN of TheQuartierMacabre!! Stop by and give them a LIKE!

Thursday, November 8, 2012

THE ENDLANDS: VOLUME 2

With the Upcoming Release of VINCENT HOBBES Presents, The Endlands Volume 2,  I thought I would reminisce with an interview I did for the release of The Endlands Volume 1 with Jairus Reddy of Hobbes End Publishing.  Do not miss out on what is sure to be a fantastic second volume! 

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

REVIEWS for Progeny



a few partial reviews...

"What impressed me most about this novel is the ease in which the reader is immersed into the story. It's presented in a very inviting format, guiding the reader along with a cozy prose style and a compelling plot. Tension literally seeps from the pages as you move from chapter-to-chapter, each twist in the plot heightening the suspense. The whole time you know things are going to get hairy when the story kicks into overdrive. I would recommend this story not only to fans of Sasquatch-lore and horror, but readers who enjoy a gripping tale featuring a cast of colorful characters."


"Patrick C Greene weaves this tale together in a style so reminiscent of Stephen King but with a touch of Ray Garton for good measure. I highly recommend this book to any creature feature fan and even if you're not a fan of that subgenre you'll love this book for the psychological thrills it delivers."


"Both a coming of age story and a coming to light story - Progeny kept me turning the pages as rapidly as I could. It is very obvious that a lot of research went into the development of the creatures that haunt these pages and yet that study is so well blended that you don't even grasp that you are learning something about Bigfoot as you go along."



Friday, November 2, 2012

PARALLEL TERRORS!




When I got wind of the new novel by Bryan Alaspa called VICIOUS, I was immediately intrigued. The synopsis reads thusly:

IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE A QUIET, RELAXING, WEEKEND GETAWAY...
The cabin is not deserted. It is the summer retreat of Jeremy Liden, an author who has just started to taste the fruits of success and the good life, which includes the summer cottage in Wisconsin. The same weekend Jeremy and his friends decide to get away from it all two dogs seek shelter beneath the summer house porch. Two dogs who have been trained to fight. Trained to Attack. Trained to kill.

What Jeremy and his friends find at the house is sheer, snarling terror, and as things get desperate, they begin to wonder if they will ever get out alive.

Nature made these dogs, but man made them VICIOUS.


As one can see, the book shares some common ground with my own PROGENY, so the idea of being able to view those elements as an outside observer was appealing. In Bryan's novel, a writer decides to celebrate new found success by having some buds over to his brand new summer cottage in the wilds of Wisconsin for a two week celebration. Wouldn't you know it, a pair of ferocious fighting dogs has taken up residence under the house, leaving no way out, while, PROGENY, for those not in the know, deals with a band of hunters on the run from a very angry Bigfoot during a violent storm. Desperate, they force their way into the remote home of a reclusive writer, who is enjoying a casual evening by the fire with his young son and a local woman.

I got in touch with Bryan to talk shop a bit and found him to be an amiable and passionate chap with whom, not surprisingly, I shared much in common. Bigfoot was a natural choice for my external threat, but I found it interesting that Bryan would take on the challenge of making dogs his antagonists. It brought to mind several experiences of my own where dogs had been frightening, even terrifying. Living in the rural south, I've seen more than my fair share of mean dogs. When I was a boy, there was a pack of dogs -all local pets who had for whatever reason gone wild- running around the mountain community where I lived. I awoke one Saturday morning to the sound of gunfire. I looked out the window to see my father standing about twenty-five feet from this enormous mongrel, pumping bullets into it. Stunning experience. It had attacked our family dog and when Dad tried to scare it off, it turned on him as well. But I didn't have that context at the moment of awakening. In many ways, that was a little death for my innocence.

I asked Bryan about his choice. "Actually, the dogs in the story are Presa Canario dogs and I got those dogs from a story that happened years ago. Let me go back a bit. I had always wanted to do a "man against nature" story where some kind of monster or beast was keeping a small group of people trapped in a house. I just couldn't figure out what it would be. I toyed with Bears - even thinking maybe I should set it in the Arctic and make it a polar bear. I even thought about Bigfoot or something."

(Great minds, etcetera. )

"Then, one day, while working at a local library, I saw a book about this incident in San Francisco. A couple who were lawyers for a white supremacist who ran a dog-fighting ring were taking care of these two Presa Canario dogs. The woman had taken them up to the roof for a walk and when they came back down a neighbor was trying to get into her apartment and the dogs got loose. They tore this woman apart. And when I saw the photos, I knew that this was the animal that would terrorize my main characters. Now, I firmly believe there are no breeds that are inherently bad, so I struggled to show, within the book, that it was man who turned these dogs bad, but if there was a breed to turn bad, the Presa Canario, or Canary Island dogs, would be a very hard one to defeat."

Bryan's current facebook profile photo shows him holding a cute little pup, so I figured he must be a dog lover. "My fiance and I have two dogs" he explained, "A cockapoo and a pomeranian. I have had a dog most of my life. I had a dog growing up and had a dog for 15 years - she died in 2011. I have even stood beside the road protesting pet stores that buy from puppy mills. So, I am a very dedicated dog person. I am a big animal rights person. Writing this novel was tough, I have to say, but I really tried to convey that it was not the dogs doing this because of their breed or anything - but because a twisted human turned them into something dangerous. I don't want to give away anything, but there are also two endings of the novel because of my love of animals and dogs in particular."

I can attest to that being a challenge-making your main antagonist not only terrifying but also sympathetic. Still, it's not much of a stretch to comprehend that this animal we call Man's Best Friend could swiftly turn a corner into absolute paralyzing ferocity. With Bigfoot, I had a certain amount of leeway; as a whole, the public is still divided about the possibility of its existence, much less whether it's docile or savage. Though I researched what are believed to be the common behavior patterns of the alleged creature pretty thoroughly, I'll be the first to admit; I had the freedom to pretty much build the beast's psychology to suit the story.

Almost everyone loves dogs and has longstanding good will toward them. There's even a lovable German Shepherd in PROGENY. I wondered if it was an emotional experience to write about dogs as killers. "Yes, it was an emotional experience. I mean, I struggled with this book. I first started writing it all the way back in 2007. I started it, then stopped for a time. Then I picked it back up and wrote some more, then put it aside and wrote other things. Then, oh, I can't really remember, but around 2009-ish, maybe, I picked it up again and said, "Let's push through with this one and get it done." And I did. Then I put it aside and had plans, several times, to just release it on my own, publish it myself, but I always hesitated. I told several people I thought Vicious might be a novel that never gets published. Then, I saw this opportunity from SalGad Publishing and thought - OK, let's see if they like Vicious and, well, here we are. And within the story the characters do struggle, as well. Several times we hear their thoughts and they have discussions over the fact that these dogs have scars on them and have obviously been abused, but, at the same time, they are fighting for their lives. At some point you have to put your sympathy on hold just to stay alive."

Like VICIOUS, PROGENY's path to publishing was unpredictable and at times, harrowing. It's one of many of my works that began life as a screenplay. However, as I fleshed out these characters and found them blossoming, I realized the only way I would be truly satisfied with their journey and their changes was if I gave them the proper attention and "fullness" if you will, of a novel.


Bryan and I both write horror because that's what gets our blood pumping. His attempts at explaining why this is ring eerily familiar. "I write suspense and horror because suspense and horror has always been what interested me. And I mean, going back to an early age, which maybe means I was a twisted kid, I don't know. The first novel/movie I remember being truly fascinated with was JAWS. I read it way ahead of the intended demographic for that book. Then, when I was in 6th grade I picked up Stephen King's CUJO (a book that my current novel is getting a few flattering comparisons to) and loved it. From that point forward, I was a Stephen King nut. A couple of years back I was online chatting with a group of friends and they asked what book I was working on and I was researching a violent crime (I write some True Crime non-fiction as well as my fiction work) in Iowa where an entire family was butchered in the early 1900s by someone wielding an axe. They were butchered in their sleep. Well, my friends were horrified and one asked "Bryan, why can't you write about flowers, puppies or bunnies or something happy?" I thought about it and said, "Because I have to write about the things that interest me and unless the flowers are poisonous and the bunnies and puppies rabid - they don't interest me enough to write about."

I couldn't say it better myself.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Friday, October 19, 2012

Are you ready for Halloween??

A Special Halloween Double-Shot of short stories by PROGENY author Patrick. C. Greene. In the first, lonely widow Mrs. Tucker suspects something besides trick-or-treaters is lurking outside. Then - a second nail-biting tale of teenage pranksters and the real cost of choosing "tricks" over "treats."
]

Just click on the scrolling banner at the top of the page to order for the Amazon Kindle! 
Also available for NOOK and KOBO.
CLICK HERE TO BUY FOR NOOK
CLICK HERE TO BUY FOR KOBO

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

CHOOSING THE PERFECT TITLE: PART 1



A glance at the venerated New York Times Bestseller List reflects whatever might pass for current "trends" in titling. Alliterative, (Gone Girl, Winter of the World) lyrical (The Light Between Oceans), to-the-point (A Wanted Man), enigmatic (The Casual Vacancy), whimsical (This Book is Full Of Spiders), and generic (Phantom, Down To You). Looking over these, I'm given to wondering if anyone has ever agonized -as I have- over the perfect title for their work.
It seems like a lot of factors to consider. Too pedestrian and it may not stand out as interesting. Too wordy might seem pretentious. A little descriptive might give away plot details. Too simple might give the impression that the author has little imagination. A perfect happy medium then, would hint at the story, offer a poetic hint and be easy to remember. Right? One would think. 
If I'm honest, I have to admit that I lean toward the pretentious, or at least the imaginative. My novel PROGENY has at its core, a horror story about a ferocious family of sasquatches. If asked what it's about, I would be tempted to stress its theme of father/son relationships and the delicate dynamics thereof--and I'd pretty much sound like a jackass. The title makes that point--enigmatically and via a nifty vocab word that makes me sound smart. Now I have to rely on the cover art and word of mouth to convey that it has monsters in it. But I stand by that title. There are enough books and films with the word bigfoot in the title; more than one with that word alone as its title, in fact. Now if only there weren't a couple of dozen other books called PROGENY. 
Still, mine is the only book called PROGENY that features rampaging bigfoots! 
Some of you horror fans may have seen a film called Pumpkinhead. Back when that film was first completed, it fell into a sort of limbo. The distributing studio switched heads and may well have gone the direct-to-video route, thanks to the new suit, who wanted to re-title it Vengeance: The Demon, and dump it into video stores. Clearly, that title denotes little imagination and his decision shows no faith in its theatrical potential. Not sure what happened next; but obviously at some point, this guy was no longer in the picture. Pumpkinhead got its original title back and had a nice theatrical run. However, can I honestly say I would have been less interested in seeing it under the Vengeance title? No. I'd have probably seen it anyway. But I'm strange--what of the average filmgoer? 
So there's another facet to my dilemma. How do I know whether my quirky sense of what sounds cool will ring to potential readers? 
I've submitted scripts to filmmakers who have told me they liked everything but the title. I've had the same script dismissed by someone different-who then wanted to do something else with the title! I guess William Goldberg was right: nobody knows anything. 
MORE TO COME

Monday, October 8, 2012

A BITTERSWEET OCTOBER



As fall winds usher in not only my favorite season but the occasion of my first novel, PROGENY, being published, I’m given to some introspection.

Four years ago in October, my father passed away suddenly. A journalist and novelist himself, Lewis W. Green was hugely supportive of my writing efforts. From my childhood’s Godzilla fan-fic pieces scribbled on yellow notepads to my more recent short stories and screenplays, my father was always enthusiastic in wanting to read my work. A short film I made based on a script I’d written in 2004 made him so proud he cried. He immediately had copies made to distribute to anyone who would take one.

He found the screenplay format confounding; offering little opportunity, in its leanness, for descriptive expression. He made an effort to look past this for the sake of giving me an honest critique. His reviews were always shining. While I was well aware of his bias, I was no less encouraged. He had several novels and a collection of short stories under his belt, had worked for years as a newspaper journalist and editor and taught classes in both creative writing and journalism. Whatever talent I can be said to have I owe to him.

On November 13th, the good folks at Hobbes End will release The Endlands: Volume 2. I’m lucky to be a part of this anthology, which, like the last volume contains a story of mine as well as my introduction. More importantly, it will also feature a story by my own son Deklan. To be published alongside my son is a special occasion for me, a milestone that fills me with as much pride as I hope my father would have felt if he and I had been published together.

I’m sad that he is not here to see that his grandson has also inherited his gift, perhaps in greater measure than I have. I wish he was around to see the publication of my first novel, as well as the production of whichever of my screenplays in development purgatory makes it to production first. I would like to have presented him with a copy, which he would have insisted on having me sign, and seen the smile and twinkle it would have brought to his eyes.

Being that PROGENY’s central theme is the often-stormy but deeply profound nature of father-son relationships, its publication is especially meaningful to me, this bittersweet October.  I’ve dedicated it to Deklan, with the hopes that he too, will one day have the joy of an amazing son. 

Thursday, September 27, 2012

BILL'S BECOMING

CLICK HERE to download story from Amazon!
"Bill Travers looked with bitter eyes at his reflection. Since puberty, that time when humans learn to care about such things, Bill had been painfully aware that he was ugly."

"Body horror, biological horror, organic horror or venereal horror is horror fiction in which the horror is principally derived from the graphic destruction or degeneration of the body" ~wikipedia

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

VOLUME 2 ~ Pre-order Today!!

PRE-ORDER TODAY!


There is a place outside human knowledge, a place where myth and legend collide. A place far beyond human reasoning. The thin veil between reality and make-believe is lifted in The Endlands, a place not of imagination, for everything you see here is real.
In the Endlands, nothing is what it seems. noises are not what you think, no place is off limits.
Nothing is safe.
Welcome to a place where time stands still . . . no one leaves and no one will
Welcome to The Endlands

Monday, September 17, 2012

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW 3D TRAILER HAS ARRIVED...



Whether you're a fan or not, you have to admit; the original THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE is a milestone of modern American cinema. It's gotten the remake treatment, (twice!) multiple sequels, and a prequel, not to mention numerous imitations. Having now found its way into the hands of Lionsgate, the production company that brought us the SAW series, the franchise is getting the 3D treatment. 

Due for release in January, this latest murderous adventure of the series' unique main character are teased in a trailer that arrived just last week, which can be viewed here:


I'm not a reflexive hater of the remake trend; some decent ones have come along and the originals get a little attention during the cycle, so it's all good in my eyes. I don't have to watch the remakes of PULSE or BLACK CHRISTMAS, films that are already damn near perfect-and I haven't. TC3D, as I'm sure it will come to be known, appears to fall into the re-boot category -as opposed to a full-on remake or sequel; which means our friends at Lionsgate would have had to walk a line at some point between staying true to the expectations held by fans of the original, and crossing over into the expectations of today's casual horror moviegoer. Success is based on ticket sales, after all, and not the opinions of hardcore fans.

As one of the aforementioned hardcore fans of the original -and yes, some of the other entries- I have certain expectations of my own; cherished notions of what a TCM movie should be, you might say. Looking at the trailer, I mostly like what I see--mostly.

Tobe Hooper's "Bubba Sawyer" Leatherface, whose first appearance in the original is easily one of the most intensely terrifying moments in horror history, is a different kind of slasher, if he can even be called that. There are characters who kill because they enjoy it, and there are killers who kill because they have to-that voice in their heads you know, or that compulsion from a sinister source outside themselves. Leatherface -in his truest incarnation- kills because he sees it as a job. In his childish mind, he seems to have no more interest in what his victims are experiencing than any other butcher. We are food, ingredients for the chili and sausages and whatever other meat-based recipes his family might be cooking. Witness the dementedly poignant scene in TCM 3, in which a frustrated Bubba, engaging, perhaps, in some homeschooling on his See-and Spell, tries again and again to identify a picture of a boy , hunting and pecking the little keypad with his meaty fingers to spell F-U-D, over and over.

Even the 2003 remake and its prequel, with Leatherface pointedly made over as a different character with a new name (Thomas Hewitt) and different family, kept those elements of his personality that made us feel an odd sympathy for him--as though he was a hopelessly rabid dog who should be put down as a matter of mercy.

The TC3D trailer seems to paint a different picture. One telling scene has Ol' Leathy coming up behind a bound and seated captive, resting his chainsaw across her shoulder as if to mock her and instill terror, like one of the torture-happy villains of the Hostel films. Hardly something a butcher just putting in his daily hours would do with the unfortunate livestock sent to the slaughter on his watch. Perhaps I am reading the scene wrong. Time will tell. But the trailer, together with its synopsis, implies that our old meat-loving monster is sort of squatting in the film's requisite mansion, unattended by the also deranged but more functional family members who both cared for and manipulated the old Bubba--a manchild so unstable that it's doubtful he could have made it for long on his own; another reason he was of the "tragic monster" ilk, like so many classic horrors.

Now I have no problem with the notion that Leatherface could change, grow--even become more self-reliant to some degree. In TCM 2, we find our favorite hulking cannibal smitten with the film's Final Girl, even gifting her with the freshly-removed face of her dear friend, and coming to realize on some level that his beloved power tool is a surrogate phallus. If that's not character maturation I don't know what is.

However, reducing Leatherface to a silent, lumbering thrill killer seems a bit...generic, considering all that's come before. 

Lionsgate has almost always been good to horror fans. Let's hope the film is so packed with amazing characterization that a brief trailer simply cannot do it justice-or that director John Luessenhop and the numerous writers have come up with a delicious twist that fits perfectly with Tobe Hooper's vision. 

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

PROGENY: ORIGINS



The monstrous Tsul Kalu beasts of PROGENY are drawn from actual Cherokee mythological lore, underscoring the fact that there are legends of hairy humanoid giants in countless cultures throughout the world. Tsul Kalu is revered by the Cherokee (a.k.a. Tselagi) as The Ultimate Hunter. Its spirit was invoked in pre-hunt rituals designed to imbue the Indians with some measure of the great being’s stealth and skill.

From the North comes the term sasquatch, dervived once again from the Chehalis tribal name for a creature called sasq’ets, though the legend pre-dates the actual name. Also known as siatco, this version, like the Tsul Kalu, is considered a dangerous spiritual being, best left to its own devices.

Chiye-tanka, meaning literally “big brother” is the Lakota’s Bigfoot. By contrast to the Cherokee legend, to be touched by him, they believe, is to be blessed.

Interestingly, North Dakota’s Ojibway nation sometimes refers to the beast as “rugaru”, a Cree/ Algonquian pronunciation of the French term Loup Garou—or werewolf.

There are numerous other North American Bigfoot legends-all from sources once isolated from one another before their myths and history began to be charted.

China is the home of the Yeren-a creature remarkably similar in description to western ape men legends. Lore suggests that the Yeren are descendants of slaves who escaped from China’s first emperor, who had put them to work building the Great Wall.

From Russia comes the legend of the Almasty-a female of whom is fabled to have long ago been captured, trained, and even crossbred with men from a remote village!

Perhaps the most famous version of the creature is the Tibetan yeti-a reclusive-at times even invisible-entity revered in pre-Buddhist times-like the Tsul Kalu-as…God of Hunters.

Such coincidences would seem even less likely than the existence of the beast itself-if not for the many supernatural powers attributed to it. In any case, if the existence of the creature is ever confirmed, we may be opening an entirely different can of maggots—who is truly “superior”?



Wednesday, August 1, 2012

WALKING WITH ZOMBIES



Published Halloween Season 2006:
On Friday the 13th, I attended my first zombie walk. If you’re not familiar with this growingly popular activity, it’s basically a case of life imitating art. Or life imitating death, if you prefer. A group of people get together, apply some ghastly greasepaint and ragged, often bloody zombie attire, then shamble through a populated area to a designated destination, often a cemetery or movie theatre.

The general idea is to stay in character, offering the vacant stare and clumsy shuffle that is so endearing to us lovers of the dead. Those who choose to offer themselves up as victims for the ravenous hordes usually indicate their status as would-be zombie chow by flashing a ‘V’ for victim sign, better known as a peace sign. They can then expect to be attacked and presumably dismembered. Designated victims are known to bring along some prosthetic body parts or entrails to add to the effect.

The reasons for participation are numerous. Some insist they are making a statement about how information overload is desensitizing us. Others do it as tribute to the movies of Romero, Fulci and company. It fills my twisted, black heart with pride as a member of the horror community that many of these shamble-fests double as food drives or fundraisers. Plus, it’s another excuse to dress up and have a good time. You have to see the mystified stares of innocent bystanders to appreciate the surreal nature of the event.

To add a little flavor, I brought along a brain made of jello, struck from one of those overpriced molds you can get at Halloween shops. I offered it up on the last leg of the walk, and was pleased to see it quickly devoured by the hungry hordes. However, a friendly ghoul informed me that participants are instructed not to accept anything from strangers, which, unfortunately makes good sense. Perhaps would-be servers of brains and body parts should contact the organizers of the events beforehand. Too bad this sort of kills the spontaneity, but better safe than sorry I suppose.

Organized by actor Dan Burello, this was the inaugural zombie walk for my city. Over two hundred walking dead are estimated to have participated, with some coming from several hundred miles. Some larger cities are said to have had in the neighborhood of seven hundred of the life-impaired turn out. One can imagine a future in which annual zombie walks rival the traditional Christmas parade, with macabre pageantry and coffin-shaped floats.

Be sure and support the dead when they come to your city.

...more at www.patrickcgreene.com

UNDER THE BLOODLIGHTS




First Published February 2007:
Imagine you’re sitting in a small playhouse; three hundred or so seats. The curtain rises and the performance begins. But instead of spewing confounding Shakespearean soliloquies or clever Neil Simon repartee, the actors steer the drama in a decidedly morbid direction. A few minutes in, the action has escalated, taking even nastier turns. An actress, her screams slicing through the small theatre like a scalpel, struggles against the ropes that bind her to a chair, as a top-hatted fiend goes to work on her face with hooked fingers, bent toward her with his back turned to conceal her teary countenance from you, the paying customer and casual observer. The screams escalate, as those in the murmuring audience around you alternately recoil and crane forward to see what horrible atrocity is being perpetrated on the innocent maiden. The screaming morphs into a series of gut-wrenching gasps that could almost be interpreted as relief. The fiend turns with a sudden flourish, grinning maliciously as he stares directly into your eyes, triumphantly presenting the now-slumped maiden’s eyeball high in the air between the thumb and forefinger of his dramatically splayed hand.

Such a scene was a common occurrence in Le Theatre du Grand Guignol, Paris France , circa 1900. If you’ve seen the Theatre de Vampires scene in “Interview With A Vampire”, or God help you, “Bloodsucking Freaks”, you have an idea of the concepts at work in the Grand Guignol. The plays were unique in all the world to this particular venue, where theatre patrons looking for grim, exploitative thrills could get their French-ass freak on. It was this uniqueness and notoriety that made the theatre a tourist attraction, even a pilgrimage, for jaded travelers from the Americas , England , Germany and Scandinavia . The grim and gory dramas, written in the early days by playwrights Andre de Lorde and a pair of his students, were generally short in length, allowing for as many as five or six separate plays in a row, usually interspersed with spicy sex comedies to make for a complete evening.


The highlight of a given performance of course, would be the maimings and killings, which generally turned up in –or as- the climax. De Lorde, who is said to have consulted and even collaborated with his therapist, wrote in a simple one act structure, presenting a situation that would begin innocuously enough, before spiraling into tragedy, murder, or some combination thereof, until the inevitable dreaded and anticipated moment of frisson, the horrible demise of some poor schmo, wispy femme, or even a small child, conveyed via a low-tech, gory set piece. Effects, such as the above-described eye gouging, were achieved pretty much as you would expect, using floor scraps from the local butcher shop, though the blood was presumably some concoction, using whatever the hell passed for strawberry kool aid in those days.

Privileged audience members could reportedly enjoy the show from the comfort of private, screened compartments called baignoires, where, much like drive-in patrons of twenty or so years ago, they could indulge in other carnal activities, if you catch my drift. These activities probably took place between shows, or more aptly during the sex farces, as the widespread affliction of ‘bored-with-it-all’ syndrome, so popular in today’s culture, had yet to catch on in that era.

Grand Guignol performances were the original torture horror, legendary for causing fainting, vomiting, even hysteria among its patrons, who then likely made immediate plans to attend the next show. When the GG troupe brought a touring version of their show to England , two productions were shut down under authority of British authorities. Such extreme censorship lives on in the UK in the form of their film rating system, which makes the MPAA look like a pretty agreeable bunch.

The movement was the logical extension of the naturalist trend, a deliberate effort to collide popular culture with harsh reality. Though many Grand Guignol plays were too far-fetched to be considered ‘reality’, they did expose a dark place in the collective psyche of humanity that the ruling class might not have liked considering.

With this opening, De Lorde and company found a pretty wide open range of grisly and forbidden topics and scenarios to explore, such as necrophilia, child murder, leprosy and rape. A typical evening’s slate of productions might include displays of victims being drawn and quartered, eviscerated, burned to death, stabbed in the eye with scissors, eaten by wild animals, and hanged.

But the Grand Guignol wasn’t just about gore and shock. Consider the bloodless “At The Telephone”, (http://gaslight.mtroyal.ab.ca/atteleph.htm) one of a handful of translated scripts from the original era.

The Grand Guignol had an impressive run, considering the disdain directed at it by snooty critics and politicians. In 1962, long after its originators had passed on, the theatre closed, owing to the popularity of motion pictures, as well as the generally more jaded outlook of the general public, who had by this time grown accustomed to a nightly dose of atrocity on the television news.

But like a good horror villain, The Grand Guignol would not stay dead. In recent years, revivals of the movement have taken root in playhouses across the country. The Tragedies Theatre Company from Portland Oregon has made Grand Guignol style presentations a regular part of its yearly schedule, taking place appropriately enough, in October. No shortage of interest here, as over 700 lovers of extreme theatre turned out for 2006’s nine performances of two original plays from Le Theatre du Grand Guignol’s bloody halcyon days, “Final Kiss”, and “Laboratory Of Hallucinations”.

They had their work cut out for them. “Today’s audiences are very desensitized to horror and blood. We had to create a real mood to actually scare the audience,” said Brian Linss, Managing Artistic director of TheTragedies.

Nonetheless- “There were screams, laughs and of course groans. One audience member had to leave during “Final Kiss” because it was too intense.”

When was the last time a film had that effect on anyone? Maybe the original “Exorcist”, back in the day.

“Final Kiss” centers around a man seeking cold revenge on a lover who scarred him with acid who sets about evening the odds –and then some.

Linss and company are generous in supplying some lucky audience members with a souvenir of sorts.

“We used several blood effects that utilized a pressure tank, ensuring that the first three rows left with something to remember us by. At other times, more subtle sleight-of-hand trickery led to some truly macabre moments. We tried to utilize the same stage craft of the original Guignol theatre,” Linss reports.

And like the original Grand Guignol itself, the venue used by The Tragedies is a former church from the 1900s, only recently converted to a theatre . Upwards of $10,000 is spent to keep the tradition alive. If you’re lucky enough to be in the Portland area come Halloween time, The Tragedies would be more than happy to give you a holiday memory to rival the best Jaycees spookhouse.

Tourists and residents of San Francisco can also get their Grand Guignol cherry popped at The Hypnodrome, 575 10th Street .

Special Thanks to Brian Linss of The Tragedies for his invaluable help in composing this article.

www.thetragedies.com
www.hypnodrome.com
www.thrillpeddlers.com
www.grandguignol.com
www.thescarletpdx.com

...more at www.patrickcgreene.com