Ross E. Lockhart's Blog, page 8

May 26, 2013

My tweets

Sat, 19:50 : Bad Bitches Never Die. Wickersham Park, Petaluma. http://t.co/pVJA3RGEiD Sat, 21:15 : RT @io9: Before the Swiss Army Knife, Victorian women wore ornate multitools http://t.co/HzxAxv3S15 Sat, 23:17 : My #firstpost on Vine https://t.co/KqlFZ8ZWT2 Sat, 23:35 : This book is dangerous! #FearTheWeird http://t.co/I58K3SoDth https://t.co/GoVcwN8GHe Sun, 01:51 : RT @LOLGOP: The free market is the perfect solution for everything. Just ignore that there's no example of this being true at any point in … Sun, 03:03 : Sock thief! https://t.co/eN9qWC4Awq Sun, 04:26 : RT @kennethhite: God has been messing around with the Tarot again: http://t.co/PYnPhYUzHu
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Published on May 26, 2013 05:00

May 25, 2013

My tweets

Fri, 13:53 : RT @mikemartinez72: #ff give it up for @sfwa @StevenGould @rachelswirsky @scalzi @Kate_Baker @jaymgates @PVBrett @MykeCole @lossrockhart @j Fri, 17:08 : RT @JoyceCarolOates: As the first sentence or paragraph in a novel is a (hidden) signal of all that is to come, so the first story in a col… Fri, 22:54 : RT @JeremyCShipp: We're hoping to sell 3 more copies of ATTIC CLOWNS before midnight tonight. Can you help? http://t.co/rUulM0V3Fu #kindle Sat, 02:19 : The Abyss: Pours sin black; sugary nose: coffee, molasses, & cacao; sweet chocolate, bourbon, & oak tongue. Decadent. http://t.co/qawahQJvYe
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Published on May 25, 2013 05:00

May 24, 2013

My tweets

Fri, 00:11 : Nuptiale Cream Ale: Creamy malt & light hops on nose; lightweight tongue, sweet caramel malt & balanced floral hops http://t.co/VihdLRDbYf
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Published on May 24, 2013 05:00

May 23, 2013

My tweets

Wed, 22:12 : Just got home. Road-rattled, but happy to be back. Now to unpack and sort the souvenirs I picked up in Oregon. http://t.co/8dhRilsdgf Thu, 02:16 : 10^2: Bitter tentacles assault the palate. Ten hops! Wry Malt backbone supports precariously leviathan's mighty maw. http://t.co/4XtGSwS1G3 Thu, 03:19 : I don't always read books about unicorns, but when I do, they have freakin' crustacean claws! http://t.co/Wcz1IOUmV7 http://t.co/avUc0ymdbL Thu, 19:34 : RT @PrinceJvstin: BOOK REVIEW: The Flames of Shadam Khoreh by Bradley Beaulieu - MY review at SF Signak! http://t.co/8TPQe6FAfp Thu, 19:35 : RT @PaulTobin: And so, the little stormtrooper found that the droids he'd been looking for, were within his heart all along.
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Published on May 23, 2013 13:54

May 16, 2013

Press Release: Jack the Ripper to return fall 2013

1888: One hundred and twenty-five years ago, a killer stalked the streets of London’s Whitechapel district, brutally—some would say ritualistically—murdering five women (that we know of): Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Jane Kelly.

The story of Jack the Ripper captured lurid headlines and the public’s imagination, and the first fictionalization of the Ripper killings, John Francis Brewer’s The Curse Upon Mitre Square appeared in October of 1888, mere weeks after the discovery of Jack’s first victim. Since then, hundreds of stories have been written about Bloody Jack, his victims, and his legacy. Authors ranging from Marie Belloc Lowndes to Robert Bloch to Harlan Ellison to Roger Zelazny to Alan Moore have added their own tales to the Ripper myth. Now, as we arrive at the quasquicentennial of the murders, we bring you a few tales more.

From Word Horde and the editor who brought you The Book of Cthulhu and The Book of Cthulhu II comes Tales of Jack the Ripper, featuring new and classic fiction by many of today’s darkest dreamers, including Laird Barron, Ramsey Campbell, Ed Kurtz, Joe R. Lansdale, Joseph S. Pulver, Sr., Stanley C. Sargent, E. Catherine Tobler, and many more.

Tales of Jack the Ripper (Preliminary Cover)

Table of Contents

Whitechapel Autumn, 1888 — Ann K. Schwader
A Host of Shadows — Alan M. Clark and Gary A. Braunbeck
Jack’s Little Friend — Ramsey Campbell
Abandon All Flesh — Silvia Moreno-Garcia
The God of the Razor — Joe R. Lansdale
The Butcher, The Baker, The Candlestick Maker — Ennis Drake
Ripping — Walter Greatshell
Something About Dr. Tumblety — Patrick Tumblety
The Truffle Pig — T. E. Grau
Ripperology — Orrin Grey
Hell Broke Loose — Ed Kurtz
Where Have You Been All My Life? — Edward Morris
Juliette’s New Toy — Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.
Villains by Necessity — Pete Rawlik
When the Means Just Defy the End — Stanley C. Sargent
A Pretty for Polly — Mercedes Yardley
Termination Dust — Laird Barron
Once November — E. Catherine Tobler
Silver Kisses — Ann K. Schwader

Tales of Jack the Ripper is coming fall 2013 from Word Horde

$15.99 Trade Paperback: 978-1-939905-00-0
Ebook also available

Cover Art by Arnaud de Vallois


To request a copy for review, or to arrange an interview, please email [email protected]

Word Horde · PO Box 2074 · Petaluma, CA 94953-2074 · www.wordhorde.com



Praise for Ross E. Lockhart’s The Book of Cthulhu and The Book of Cthulhu II:

“The enduring allure of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos, now nearly a century old, is evident in this representative anthology of modern tales, most of which were written in the last decade. The breadth of cosmic horrors they evoke range from the parochial fear of monsters found in Michael Shea's ‘Fat Face,’ to the apocalyptic doom forecasted in Ramsey Campbell's ‘The Tugging.’ Some of the stories, notably Brian Lumley's ‘The Fairground Horror’ and Brian McNaughton's self-consciously satirical ‘The Doom that Came to Innsmouth,’ are ripe with Lovecraftian references. Most others, including Joe R. Lansdale's weird western ‘The Crawling Sky’ and Laird Barron's backwoods monster tale ‘The Men from Porlock’ (original to the book), are more oblique and allusive. To the book's credit, none of the twenty-seven stories read like slavish Lovecraft pastiche, which makes this volume all the more enjoyable.” —Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

“Gathering Cthulhu-inspired stories from both 20th and 21st-century authors, this collection provides such a huge scope of styles and takes on the mythology that there are sure to be a handful that surprise and inspire horror in even the most jaded reader.” —Josh Vogt, Examiner.com

“There are no weak stories here—every single one of the 27 entries is a potential standout reading experience. The Book of Cthulhu is nothing short of pure Lovecraftian gold. If fans of H. P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu mythos don’t seek out and read this anthology, they’re not really fans - it’s that simple.” —Paul Goat Allen, BN.com

“...thanks to the wide variety of contributing authors, as well as Lockhart’s keen understanding of horror fiction and Lovecraft in particular, [The Book of Cthulhu] is the best of such anthologies out there.” —Alan Cranis, Bookgasm.com

The Book of Cthulhu is one hell of a tome.” —Brian Sammons, HorrorWorld.org

“...an impressive tribute to the enduring fascination writers have with Lovecraft’s creation. [...] Editor Ross E. Lockhart has done an excellent job of ferreting out estimable stories from a variety of professional, semi-professional, and fan venues [...] to establish a sense of continuity and tradition.” —Stefan Dziemianowicz, Locus

“…a stunning collection of Lovecraft inspired tales all centered around the infamous Cthulhu myth.” —Drake Llywelyn, Dark Shadows Book Reviews

“As he did for his previous anthology, Lockhart has cast his net far and wide to haul in outstanding stories from publications both well-known and obscure, none sampled more than once. He has also commissioned four new stories, several so good that they are likely to be selected for reprint anthologies in the future.” —Stefan Dziemianowicz, Locus

“…any fan of Lovecraft can’t afford to miss out on this one.” —Justin Steele, The Arkham Digest

“The second volume of The Book of Cthulhu exemplifies the richness of Lovecraft’s legacy: gloomy terror, mystery, thrills, vivid action, chilling visions, satire, science fiction, humor—all of that, and then some, is crammed into more than 400 pages awaiting readers eager for some apocalyptic horror.” —Dejan Ognjanovic, Rue Morgue
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Published on May 16, 2013 20:28

Press Release: Jack the Ripper to return fall 2013

1888: One hundred and twenty-five years ago, a killer stalked the streets of London’s Whitechapel district, brutally–some would say ritualistically–murdering five women (that we know of): Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Jane Kelly.


The story of Jack the Ripper captured lurid headlines and the public’s imagination, and the first fictionalization of the Ripper killings, John Francis Brewer’s The Curse Upon Mitre Square appeared in October of 1888, mere weeks after the discovery of Jack’s first victim. Since then, hundreds of stories have been written about Bloody Jack, his victims, and his legacy. Authors ranging from Marie Belloc Lowndes to Robert Bloch to Harlan Ellison to Roger Zelazny to Alan Moore have added their own tales to the Ripper myth. Now, as we arrive at the quasquicentennial of the murders, we bring you a few tales more.


From Word Horde and the editor who brought you The Book of Cthulhu and The Book of Cthulhu II comes Tales of Jack the Ripper, featuring new and classic fiction by many of today’s darkest dreamers, including Laird Barron, Ramsey Campbell, Ed Kurtz, Joe R. Lansdale, Joseph S. Pulver, Sr., Stanley C. Sargent, E. Catherine Tobler, and many more.


Tales of Jack the Ripper (Preliminary Cover)


Table of Contents


Whitechapel Autumn, 1888 – Ann K. Schwader

A Host of Shadows – Alan M. Clark and Gary A. Braunbeck

Jack’s Little Friend – Ramsey Campbell

Abandon All Flesh – Silvia Moreno-Garcia

The God of the Razor – Joe R. Lansdale

The Butcher, The Baker, The Candlestick Maker – Ennis Drake

Ripping – Walter Greatshell

Something About Dr. Tumblety – Patrick Tumblety

The Truffle Pig – T. E. Grau

Ripperology – Orrin Grey

Hell Broke Loose – Ed Kurtz

Where Have You Been All My Life? – Edward Morris

Juliette’s New Toy – Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.

Villains by Necessity – Pete Rawlik

When the Means Just Defy the End – Stanley C. Sargent

A Pretty for Polly – Mercedes Yardley

Termination Dust – Laird Barron

Once November – E. Catherine Tobler

Silver Kisses – Ann K. Schwader


Tales of Jack the Ripper is coming fall 2013 from Word Horde


$15.99 Trade Paperback: 978-1-939905-00-0

Ebook also available


Cover Art by Arnaud de Vallois


To request a copy for review or arrange an interview, email [email protected].


Word Horde – PO Box 2074 – Petaluma, CA 94953-2074 – www.wordhorde.com


Praise for Ross E. Lockhart’s The Book of Cthulhu and The Book of Cthulhu II:


“The enduring allure of H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, now nearly a century old, is evident in this representative anthology of modern tales, most of which were written in the last decade. The breadth of cosmic horrors they evoke range from the parochial fear of monsters found in Michael Shea’s ‘Fat Face,’ to the apocalyptic doom forecasted in Ramsey Campbell’s ‘The Tugging.’ Some of the stories, notably Brian Lumley’s ‘The Fairground Horror’ and Brian McNaughton’s self-consciously satirical ‘The Doom that Came to Innsmouth,’ are ripe with Lovecraftian references. Most others, including Joe R. Lansdale’s weird western ‘The Crawling Sky’ and Laird Barron’s backwoods monster tale ‘The Men from Porlock’ (original to the book), are more oblique and allusive. To the book’s credit, none of the twenty-seven stories read like slavish Lovecraft pastiche, which makes this volume all the more enjoyable.” -Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)


“Gathering Cthulhu-inspired stories from both 20th and 21st-century authors, this collection provides such a huge scope of styles and takes on the mythology that there are sure to be a handful that surprise and inspire horror in even the most jaded reader.” -Josh Vogt, Examiner.com


“There are no weak stories here–every single one of the 27 entries is a potential standout reading experience. The Book of Cthulhu is nothing short of pure Lovecraftian gold. If fans of H. P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu mythos don’t seek out and read this anthology, they’re not really fans – it’s that simple.” -Paul Goat Allen, BN.com


“…thanks to the wide variety of contributing authors, as well as Lockhart’s keen understanding of horror fiction and Lovecraft in particular, [The Book of Cthulhu] is the best of such anthologies out there.” -Alan Cranis, Bookgasm.com


The Book of Cthulhu is one hell of a tome.” -Brian Sammons, HorrorWorld.org


“…an impressive tribute to the enduring fascination writers have with Lovecraft’s creation. [...] Editor Ross E. Lockhart has done an excellent job of ferreting out estimable stories from a variety of professional, semi-professional, and fan venues [...] to establish a sense of continuity and tradition.” -Stefan Dziemianowicz, Locus


“…a stunning collection of Lovecraft inspired tales all centered around the infamous Cthulhu myth.” -Drake Llywelyn, Dark Shadows Book Reviews


“As he did for his previous anthology, Lockhart has cast his net far and wide to haul in outstanding stories from publications both well-known and obscure, none sampled more than once. He has also commissioned four new stories, several so good that they are likely to be selected for reprint anthologies in the future.” -Stefan Dziemianowicz, Locus


“…any fan of Lovecraft can’t afford to miss out on this one.” -Justin Steele, The Arkham Digest


“The second volume of The Book of Cthulhu exemplifies the richness of Lovecraft’s legacy: gloomy terror, mystery, thrills, vivid action, chilling visions, satire, science fiction, humor–all of that, and then some, is crammed into more than 400 pages awaiting readers eager for some apocalyptic horror.” -Dejan Ognjanovic, Rue Morgue

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Published on May 16, 2013 19:43

My tweets

Thu, 02:42 : Field Mouse's Farewell: Bread dough & hard candy nose; Lemonheads on waves of malt tongue; spicy bitter rye finish. http://t.co/4bvDfeM0jp
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Published on May 16, 2013 05:56

May 14, 2013

My tweets

Mon, 16:01 : Rituals make fiction possible. And vice versa. http://t.co/SCB8kOvm4z
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Published on May 14, 2013 05:01

May 12, 2013

My tweets

Sun, 02:38 : Bear witness. For years, I've thought this sampled MC was Chuck D. "Creatin' rap music 'cause I never dug disco..." http://t.co/MvKVWaqZ9t Sun, 02:50 : Melt Down: Orange oil & toffee nose; sweet caramel & bitter piney hop tongue. Harsh but refreshing. (@BeerCraft_com) http://t.co/D5aUYiv6Hv Sun, 05:44 : Keep music evil. http://t.co/53tFGmVloY
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Published on May 12, 2013 05:01

May 11, 2013

My tweets

Fri, 14:59 : I love waking up to a 5-star review. Orrin Grey calls Chick Bassist "...a pulse-pounding, page-turning great book." http://t.co/P0Cw6YxnUk Fri, 21:02 : RT @paulbogaards: EVERYONE HAS PERMISSION TO TAKE THE DAY OFF AND READ A BOOK IN THE PARK. YOU'RE WELCOME. Sat, 00:16 : RT @pourmecoffee: If you know Jody Arias found guilty but not carbon dioxide levels reached highest in recorded history this week, change y… Sat, 00:17 : RT @TeresaFrohock: I'm thrilled to announce that my urban fantasy short story "Naked the Night Sings" will be in the anthology Manifesto: U… Sat, 00:18 : RT @russellbooks: "There are three rules for writing the novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are." - W. Somerset Maugham Sat, 00:57 : RT @johnhornor: For those of you who missed it, SOUTHERN GODS was featured over at Apex Publications weird fiction month. Comment. http://t… Sat, 01:46 : Ball game on TV. Indian food on its way. Ellie in my chair. Book and glasses on my table. What sort of beer am I in the mood for tonight? Sat, 03:14 : Vas Deferens: Brown sugar & cocoa nose, emerging citrus; toast malt & candied orange tongue; bitter orange finish. http://t.co/i3CBdq3rHi Sat, 03:19 : RT @TweetsofOld: Fill a common glass with urine and let it stand 24 hours; a sediment or settling indicates a diseased condition of the kid… Sat, 03:45 : RT @TheTweetOfGod: I believe meat is murder. And that vegetables are burglary, bread is mail fraud and dairy is impersonating a police offi… Sat, 03:46 : RT @timx13: Bathroom chalk Cthulhu. http://t.co/v2JS9sq2YX Sat, 04:17 : There are unfathomable things I believe in, and then there are things too outlandish to believe. The line lies somewhere between Pi and god. Sat, 04:44 : RT @tom_six: Wanna be a part of my new centipede?#THC3 Looking for Males. 18+ Los Angeles Send pictures to [email protected]
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Published on May 11, 2013 05:00