Competition time – win Tom Johnstone’s fab collection! #horror #competition

Competition time!

The Alchemy Press

We have five copies of Let Your Hinged Jaw Do the Talking by Tom Johnstone going free. All you need to do is answer these five simple questions. The answers can be found on this website:

  1. What shouldn’t John tell?
  2. What may be discovered in Marion’s bones?
  3. What does Mike want back?
  4. What does Peter consider to be marvellous?
  5. Where does Anne find the music?

Send your answers to us using this form.

The winners will be picked at random just after Halloween. Competition only open to UK addresses only (sorry).

       

View original post

The Return of Sherlock Holmes : Further Extraordinary Tales of the Famous Sleuth #sherlockholmes #crimefiction @MishaHerwin @mca_debbie @debjbennett

I wrote  “The Case of the Waterguard” some time ago now but after the inevitable covid delays etc it is now out. Odd how this time of covid has made these hiccups border on the normal. This story has now made it to the shelves in the brand new collection  The Return of Sherlock Holmes : Further Extraordinary Tales of the Famous Sleuth. Edited by Maxim Jakubowski. Pub. Mango. ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1642506365  

This is another fine collection of 15 brand new stories from arch editor Maxim Jakubowski with stories from:  Bonnie McBird, Eric Brown, Paul Freeman, Nick Sweet, John Grant, O’Neil de Noux, Ana Teresa Pereira, Mathew Booth, Jan Edwards, David Smith, Martin Daily, Philip Vine, L C Tyler, Cristina Macia with Ian Watson and David Stuart Davies.

The advantage of that delay is the gift of being able to approach my own words almost as an outsider, which is both spooky and enlightening. 

Return of Sherlock Holmes

Writing Sherlock stories is always huge fun, especially when writing within the canon. Given that Doyle himself played fast and loose with his own characters and timelines there is always far more scope than you might think.  I doubt, for example, that the debate over Doctor Watson’s exact number of wives will ever be entirely solved to everyone’s satisfaction. Obtaining exact differences between Waterguards and Customs Men for this story was not as simple as I had thought, but my good friend Debbie Bennett was able to give me a few pointers on that one.

Watson, however, is only a shadowy bystander in my humble addition to this Holmesian world in “The Case of the Waterguard”. Sherlock, even as he retires to the south coast with his bees, is drawn into the life of our narrator, Holmes’s, hallboy, Billy; whose father has been wrongly condemned to the gallows. 

 

 

Have you read Penumbra Over Millwall? #weirdbook #newfiction @mishaherwin @MrAdamsWrites @Jenqoe @SamanthaLHowe

I have been lax in recent weeks in blogging about my latest publications and I apologise for that.  But here is one from last month to catch you up!

My contribution to Weirdbook 44 is a little cosmic horror tale titled “Penumbra Over Millwall” . For those of you familiar with my work this is another in my ‘Captain Georgi’ collection of short stories in which Cpt G meets up with old things in a fog-bound London Docks of the 1930s. Shenanigans  ensue!

Weirdbook #44 is listed on Amazon (.UK and .com)  as “a ghoulish delight of horror and fantasy fiction, with a terrific lineup of original stories and poetry.”

It is a really great publication and well worth the £9.99 cover price. weirdbook 44

Stories featured in this issue include:

  • “Let Me Be Your Swamp Snake,” by Adrian Cole
  • “A Whisper in the Death Pit,” by Kyla Lee Ward
  • “Deadest Man in Town,” by Franklyn Searight
  • “Penumbra Over Millwall,” by Jan Edwards
  • “Birth,” by M. Stern
  • “Okiko’s Doll,” by Stefano Frigieri
  • “Heatseeker,” by Tim Curran
  • “The Librarian,” by Sharon L. Cullars
  • “Dream Warriors (1) Team Spirit,” by D.C. Lozar
  • “Bang!,” by Chris Kuriata
  • “Death and the Vampire,” by James Dorr
  • “The Dust of Sages and Fools,” by John R. Fultz
  • “Push Dagger,” John C. Hocking

Plus a selection of poetry by: Darrell Schweitzer, Allan Rozinski, Lucy A. Snyder, Maxwell I. Gold, Ashley Dioses, Ann K. Schwader, Chad Hensley, Frederick J Mayer, Cindy O’Quinn, and K.A. Opperman

Cover reveal for The Book of Extraordinary New Sherlock Holmes Stories #sherlockholmes

For those of you who may have missed it here is the cover reveal for:
The Book of Extraordinary New Sherlock Holmes Stories  
Edited by the fabulous Maxim Jakubowski.

Publication date 17 Dec. 2020
Available for pre-order now.

20 new short stories featuring that iconic detective, Mr Sherlock Holmes, including “The Case of The Missing Sister” by yours truly!

Full TOC
Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Lavie Tidhar
David Stuart Davies
John Grant
Rose Biggins
David N.Smith
O’Neil De Noux
Rhys Hughes
Catherine Lundoff
Mark Mower
Matthew Booth
Martin Daley
Jan Edwards
Ashley Lister
Keith Brooke
Naching T.Kassa
Phillip Vine
Bev Vincent
Keith Moray
and Nick Sweet

 

Alchemypress Book of Horrors book 2 : Strange Stories & Weird Tales #horror #anthology #alchemypress

It has landed! Proof copy just arrived !

Image may contain: Peter Coleborn, beard and glasses

Being Launched in April at Stokercon 2020 in Sunny Scarborough!

TImage may contain: one or more peoplehe Alchemy Press Book of Horrors volume 2 : Strange Stories & Weird Tales

Edited by Peter Coleborn & Jan Edwards

TOC (alphabetical by author)

  • Gail-Nina Anderson          Henrietta Street
  • Sarah Ash                        I Left My Fair Homeland
  • Debbie Bennett                I Remember Everything
  • Mike Chinn                       Digging in the Dirt
  • Paul Finch                        What Did You See
  • Sharon Gosling                Every Bad Thing
  • John Grant                       The Loneliest Place
  • John Howard                    The Primordial Light
  • Tim Jeffreys                      Black Nore
  • Eyglo Karlsdottir               Footprints in the Snow
  • Nancy Kilpatrick               Promises
  • Garry Kilworth                  Lirpaloof Island
  • Samantha Lee                 The Secret Place
  • Pauline Morgan               Beneath Namibian Sands
  • Thana Niveau                  The Hate Whisperer
  • John Llewellyn Probert    Hydrophobia
  • Peter Sutton                    We Do Like to Be Beside

The Case of the Missing Sister #sherlockholmes #crimefiction #shortstories

Always good to start the day with a sale!

Thrilled to hear that my short story ‘The Case of the Missing Sister’ will be appearing in The Book of Extraordinary Sherlock Holmes Stories, edited by Maxim Jakubowski.

This Holmesian anthology will be out in the USA sometime in the autumn of 2021 via Mango Publishing. More details as they appear.

 

Fables and Fabrications across more platforms – inc #applebooks #kobo #shortfiction #collections #fantasyfiction #folkhorror

Fables and Fabrications is now available across additional digital platforms!
Apple, Kobo, Scribd, Barnes and Noble, Baker and Taylor, Biblioteca, Overdrive, 24 symbols and Playster

Also available  from Amazon in paper and kindle formats!  US  / UK

Fourteen tales of mystery, mirth and the macabre. From the arctic wastes of Norway to a fun laden evening at the fair, Jan Edwards leads us through a world where nothing is as it seems. Shape changers and ancient spirits roam and cats play a crucial part in stories that unsettle and disturb the reader’s perception. Chosen from her back catalogue of horror and dark fantasy these stories leavened by a sprinkle of verse have been

Contents:
‘A Taste of Culture’, Mammoth Book of Dracula, Robinson Press 1997
‘City Canal’ (Villanelle), Whispers in the Wind, Anchor Press 2001
‘Corinna’s Reply’, Salvo 7, CHWG 2003
‘Damnation Seize My Soul’, Dark Currents, Newcon Press 2012
‘Drawing Down the Moon’, Grimorium Verum, Western Leg. 2015
‘Gallery Green’, Terror Scribes, Dog Horn Publishing 2012
‘Green Tea’, Salvo 8, CHWG 2015
‘Grey Magic for Cat Lovers’, New Horizons, BFS 2011
‘Jack Jumps Out of the Box’, Father Grimm’s Story Book, 2012
‘Mayday Springs Askew’, Tales from the Greenmantle 2011
‘Midnight Twilight’, Alt-Zombie, Hersham Horror 2012
‘Old Hat’, Salvo 6 CHWG, 2000
‘Pet Therapy’, Demonologia Biblica, Western Legends 2013
‘Princess Born’, Grimm and Grimmer 1, Fringe Works 2013
‘Thirteenth Day’, Estronomicon, Screaming Dreams 2011
‘Time’s Excuses’, Through Clouds of Despair. Triumph House 2001
‘Wind Blows the Oaks’ Salvo 7, CHWG 2003
‘Winter Eve’, Ethereal Tales 9, Ethereal Tales 2010
‘You And Me Pop’, public performance, Dysprosium, April 2015

Plus seven haiku verses – all new to this volume

13th Day – for the Winter Solstice #solstice #fiction

The King sent his Lady on the Thirteenth dayImage result for The King sent his Lady on the Thirteenth day Three stalks of corn
Three stalks of corn.
Two maids a-merry dancing.
Three hinds a-merry dancing
An Arabian baboon.
Three swans a-merry swimming
Three ducks a-merry laying.
A bull that was brown.
Three gold spinks[1]
Three starlings
A goose that was grey.
Three plovers
Two partridges, and a papaingo-aye[2].
Who learns my carol and carries it away.

(trad. Old Scottish carol to tune 12 Days of Christmas)

***

A story for the Winter Solstice

Thirteenth Day – Jan Edwards

‘The second day,’ said the Holly-Man. He was rugged. Fragile. A woodsman in a shabby green duster and heavy boots. Behind him stood a boy in an Acorn-hat, waiting in silence.

Kat tweaked a tight smile and went on hacking at the ice-bound soil, hoping they would take a hint and leave. They didn’t. Continue reading “13th Day – for the Winter Solstice #solstice #fiction”

Interview with Peter Coleborn & Jan Edwards

Q&A with Jenny Barber for Alchemy Press Book of Horrors #horror #fiction #alchemypress #anthology

horrors-vol-1-ver-3c

Jenny Barber

PeteJan iv3

Today it’s my pleasure to welcome Peter Coleborn and Jan Edwards to talk about their new anthology The Alchemy Press Book of Horrors, the joys of editing, horror and short fiction!

horrors-vol-1-ver-3cToday sees the launch of your latest anthology The Alchemy Press Book of Horrors – what inspired you to choose the theme and what horrors can we look forward to seeing in it?

Peter: Besides the very general theme ‘horror’ the book has no theme. I feel that stories in themed anthologies, especially tightly themed ones, can become too similar. I enjoy variety. I enjoy coming across something unexpected. In this I mirror the views expressed by Mark Morris, editor of the wonderful New Fears series.

I use the word ‘horror’ as a wide catch-all net. What you will find between the covers is 25 well-written yarns that will hopefully chill you, or at the least make you…

View original post 2,182 more words

The MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories – Part VI: 2017 Annual

Now available for pre-orders on Amazon in time for the launch on Arthur Conan Doyle’s birthday.

holmes-vi
Includes fiction by:

Bob Byrne, Julie McKuras, Derrick Belanger, Robert Perret, Deanna Baran, Gregg Rosenquist, Hugh Ashton, David Timson, Shane Simmons, Stephen Wade, Mark Mower, David Friend, Nick Cardillo, Roger Riccard, Srinivasan Subramanian, Carl L. Heifetz, Geri Schear, S.F. Bennett, Jennifer Copping, Jim French, Carla Coupe, Narrelle Harris, Arthur Hall, Craig Janacek, Marcia Wilson, Tracy Revels, Molly Carr, Keith Hann, David Ruffle, David Marcum, Tom Turley, Jan Edwards, Chuck Davis, Tim Symonds, Daniel D. Victor, and Bonnie MacBird.

 

Includes my story ‘The Curious Case of Mr Marconi’.

MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories: Part VI

holmes-viThere is a kickstarter campaign for the MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories: Part VI 2017   here

Latest in the best selling series all sold in aid of the restoration of Doyle’s former home, Undershaw (now The Stepping Stones school)

Intended publication date is  22nd May 2017 Continue reading “MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories: Part VI”

Happy New Year!

First day of 2017 and that traditional news round-up of the previous twelve months. First of all I wish you all a wonderful 2017 and thank you all for supporting my writing over 2016!

2016 was a strange year. A great deal of it felt as if life in the Edwards-Coleborn household was marking time. Health and homes and all those things that make up what is so quaintly called the rich tapestry. But all of that, darlings, is sooooooo last year! Onward (as they say) and not upward so much as forward into stardom!

front cover 003Most prominent with regard to my writing was the arrival of Fables and Fabrications (available in paper and kindle formats at all good online outlets 🙂 🙂 )   This has been a steady seller I am happy to say – even finding an audience outside of the UK, despite many of the stories being very ‘English’ in setting – as the cover blurb has it: “Fourteen tales of mystery, mirth and the macabre. From the arctic wastes of Norway to a fun laden evening at the fair, Jan Edwards leads us through a world where nothing is as it seems. Shape changers and ancient spirits roam and cats play a crucial part in stories that unsettle and disturb the reader’s perception.” Continue reading “Happy New Year!”

Christmas Ghosts – Free story for one week only!

Leinster Gardens cover CConcerning the Events in Leinster Gardens

(Title story from  Leinster Gardens & Other Subtleties (c) Jan Edwards)

The paving under his feet rumbled, setting shivers up through the soles of his boots. It was the Tube; only trains, he knew that. The ginger-moustachioed officer told him, as he’d sold Archie his ticket, how the Metropolitan Line ran right through the street, and laughed as he spoke of it. Archie had laughed along with him, though he felt less than amused now.

‘Number twenty-four.’ He checked the card again, sure that he had come to the right place. The door was solid enough beneath its ionic portico. The perfectly normal balustrade on either side of the perfectly normal step was all perfectly normal for a Regency terrace. But unlike the other residences in Leinster Gardens, there were no lights showing in any of its windows. Even without a Ball, and even if the family were not at home, servants would keep lamps burning in this kind of household. The only sign of life was a small tabby cat perched on the end of the balustrade.

‘This is all a bit wet,’ he told it. ‘Dashed poor show.’

The cat only stretched onto its toes and pulled its lips back in a silent hiss before slinking into the basement stairwell.

Archie looked at the lit windows all along the row, noting how a few drapes had been left daringly undrawn, the better to show off electrical Christmas lights; welcoming beacons for the late-night walkers. When he turned back to his dark destination he almost fell off the stoop, because in that short moment all things had changed. Continue reading “Christmas Ghosts – Free story for one week only!”

An Extract From ‘Drawing Down The Moon’ #fiction #fables&fabrications #horror

In the light (  🙂 ) of this week’s supermoon…

front cover copyAn extract from ‘Drawing Down the Moon’ – one of the creepy tales to be  found in my collection Fables and Fabrications.  (Available in paper and kindle formats)

***

…She breathed in ozone-laden moisture and remembered how she had stood on the hillside within the temple grounds on many such nights as for old enmity he held for her sisterhood.

Wilder elements always focused her psyche. This rite was something she had not anticipated acting out ever again, yet it was always there; waiting in the shadows for her to reach out and pluck it into the semi-light.

Kicking off her shoes she shed her coat, letting it slip free of her fingers. She unzipped her skirt and allowed it to drop around her ankles. I who have nothing, she crooned into the room’s silence, and smiled. In the old days men were crazed by the notion of spying on her order. In the old days the Sisters would have crazed any man known to risk that spying. She unbuttoned her blouse as she hummed the recent ballad, swaying her hips, taking her time, taunting. Any added emotion her audience brought to the rite was to be welcomed.

She stood tall in nothing but black chemise and composure. Long ago she would have been naked but temperature ruled against it. They would have their floor show soon enough. Let them leer, allow them anticipation.

Her lips moved, like a slow reader, not singing now but chanting. To herself first, and then more loudly as her conscious merged with the echoes of beyond. She called on the Keres, daughters of Nyx, on Mnemosyne and Bia and on Lethe, but most of all she called to Styx and to Hecate. She slipped into the ritual as a ripe and luscious strawberry slides into the rich, sweet, darkness of chocolate. She became the rite, the vessel, through which the tendrils wafting off the Veil strayed into this world.

Energised by her actions she moved to the fountain; stretching her arms toward the spigots, whirling three times in a twisted, fluid dance; aping the very water. She swayed beneath the liquid, allowing it to cascade around her neck and shoulders before throwing her head back to loose a wild ululation. She called once again upon Hecate and Styx to allow the soul departed a brief return.

From beyond the clouds she felt the pull of the moon. It called her and she called back, repeating her watery dance twice more. Then she dropped to the hard, cool floor; prostrating herself before her elementals, with arms outstretched.

Wind rattled the glass, reaching into the room and splaying the fountain’s water flow in its passing, rippling the voile curtains into horizontal.

Whilst this Thessalian woman worked her dark acts; diving into the world of shades and emerging with an act of full blown necromancy, just two pairs of eyes watched her, in thrall as the bodyguards, having washed the corpse had withdrawn; apparently not to be privy to any information the deceased might have.

Cin saw Jeno.

Cin saw her boy.

Their heads were almost touching. She saw them both look at her, and whisper to each other.

Betrayal? Was he also a man? Mid-rite she could not permit her own wants to intrude. She could not, would not, see her boy intimate with the man who killed so lightly.

The storm cut off as though a switch had been flicked. Where there had been only cloud, a harsh moonlight slotted across the untidy shagginess of blasted borders and winter lawns, glinting off the door panes and onto the woman who waited for its touch.

Cinthia swept off her eye patch to expose a puckered depression. Deliberately, elegantly, she came up to full height with arms up and rigid fingers splayed wide. She flexed each digit, clawing at the shaft of light, emitting a litany of noise from deep in her throat.

Listeners could not discern words in either Greek or English, but there was an unmistakable cadence placed on the edges of those notes that shredded nerves as surely as cat-claws down velvet curtains.

The moon’s colour changed, starting on one side and creeping across its face, growing deeper and larger than its silvery persona. It had taken on a reddish hue, hanging low, resting on the jagged horizon of surrounding rooftops; a fecund and brooding night bird waiting to drop on its prey.

Fables Freebie!

The fabulous Crime and SF news and reviews site Murder Mayhem and More  is running a giveaway on Facebook for a Fables and Fabrications  extract as below!   *Note – you need to go to this Murder Mayhem and More page to enter!

*Competition***Like&Share*
FABLES & FABRICATIONS by Jan Edwards is out this week. To celebrate its publication, we have an exclusive prize-draw competition to ‪#‎win‬ an‪#‎ebook‬ edition of ‘Midnight Twilight’ – one of the 14 tales of mystery, mirth and the macabre included in this anthology.
Who is the distant figure who drives his sled across the arctic snowscape in the midnight hour? Is he man or myth? Find out in the bitter chill of isolation in ‘Midnight Twilight’
Like and/or Share the post over at  the Murder Mayhem and More page and you’ll be in with a chance to win.

In Fables & Fabrications, Jan Edwards leads us through a world where nothing is as it seems, from the arctic wastes of Norway to a fun-filled evening at the fair. Shape changers, ancient spirits and crafty cats all play their crucial parts in stories that unsettle and disturb the reader’s perception.

Chosen from Jan’s back catalogue of horror and dark fantasy, these stories are collected here for the first time in one volume, enhanced by a sprinkling of verse. ‘Midnight Twilight’ is just one of these tales – and it’s one you could win…

This is a worldwide draw. Competition closes midnight 6 May 2016.
Good luck! Come back and check on May 7th and 8th to see if you’ve won.

Murder Mayhem & More's photo.

Wicked Women Anniversary Interview: Chloë Yates

Chloe Yates talks to Jenny Barber!

Jenny Barber

Gooood morning funky peeps.  Today we’re kicking off the new year with the author of Wicked Women story ‘How to be the Perfect Housewife’ – Chloë Yates, take it away!

Tell us a little about yourself and what you like to write

chloeThis is one of my first interviews so I should apologise in advance because I’m made almost entirely from nonsense. I’m an English immigrant who’s been living in the middle of Switzerland for nearly a decade (no, my husband’s not a banker). It’s an incredible place to live, I’m very lucky, but I miss dear old Blighty. No kids, lots of books, and one elderly dog, Miss Maudie, who thinks she’s the Supreme Being. She’s probably right.

What do I like to write? At the moment WORDS WOULD BE GOOD! Damn it. I digress. My husband once called my work ‘charming anarchic oddness’, I told him to sod…

View original post 1,631 more words

Terror Tales of the Ocean out now!

cat_oceanTerror Tales of the Ocean  
Edited by the fabulous Paul Finch
Published by Gray Friar Press

available from Gray Friar  and Amazon

“The rolling blue ocean. Timeless, vast, ancient, mysterious. Where eerie voices call through the lightless deeps, monstrous shapes skim beneath the waves, and legends tell of sunken cities, fiendish fogs, ships steered only by dead men, and forgotten isles where abominations lurk …

The multi-limbed horror in the Ross Sea
The hideous curse of Palmyra Atoll
The murderous duo of the Messina Strait
The doomed crew of the Flying Dutchman
The devil fish of the South Pacific
The alien creatures in the English Channel
The giant predator of the Mariana Trench

And many more chilling tales by Peter James, Adam Nevill, Stephen Laws, Lynda E. Rucker, Conrad Williams, Robert Shearman and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre.

(includes my story  ‘The Decks Below’ – full TOC to follow)

Leinster Gardens review

An in depth review of Leinster Gardens and Other Subtleties  on  SFCrowsnest site.25128404

“In this volume of fourteen ghost stories Jan Edwards explores the nature of the ghostly event and finds ways of reinterpreting it. Many of these stories have their roots in folklore and urban myth and many reportings of ghostly sightings have already entered into the mythology of the haunted place … can be read simply as a collection of ghost stories, but on another level it explore(s) the variety of ghostly phenomena – asking the reader to wonder why(they) are so fascinated by them.”

Full review Here

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑