Yeah, I’ve been sitting on this one for a few weeks. It’s so hard to stay motivated sometimes beneath the crushing weight of one’s own failures and shortcomings—but you want to read about the fun stuff, right? Here goes!
- The Writing on the Wall: A Horror Tribute to Iron Maiden is out now from Wicked Oujia, featuring my tale “Flash of the Blade”, and you can buy that here.
- Midnight Echo 20, the twentieth anniversary issue of the Australasian Horror Writers Association fiction magazine, is out now, featuring my story “Coffee, Toast, Garden” and “Beyond the Walls” (image) by my dearest Red Wallflower, and you can find that here.
- Dirty Magick Magazine #14, the Halloween issue, is out now, featuring my piece “Count to Thirteen”, and you can grab the ebook here.
- And Samhain Screams, the Halloween anthology from Black Beacon Books, is out now too, featuring my much-vaunted “Hauntology”, and that can be acquired here.
Songs of Shadow, Words of Woe is starting to get around. Here is an interview with Ginger Nuts of Horror, and here is a glowing review from Happy Goat Horror, and here is another release notice from This is Horror, and here is another video from Happy Goat Horror where Kayleigh praises three of the stories in more detail (at 26:43). I’ve updated the Bibliography listing with more outlets where you can order the book. Also, if you happen to be an active member of the HWA (Horror Writers Association), you can (and should!) contact me for a digital copy of the book for consideration for the 2025 Bram Stoker Awards in the Best Collection category—my email address is off to the side there, or you can hit me up on Facebook.
Specul8 Publishing has announced its 2026 anthology, the 80s-slasher themed Knives, Nightmares and Neon, which will include my novelette “31/86 (Fall of All Saints)”. Due out on Friday the 13th of February, this book will also be recorded for a podcast and is set to be pressed onto physical media, too! Here’s the video trailer. My tale is set in 1986, during a department store night shift on Halloween Night—it has a cool concept behind it, was a lot of fun to write, and hopefully brings a fresh vibe to the genre whilst also playing it with a straight bat instead of trying to subvert or satirise.
Dreadstone Books has accepted my tale “Are You Gonna Be My Ghoul?” for their Deadly Duos: Funfair release, which I believe will be comprised of just two stories. I thought up mine whilst working at the Royal Adelaide Show this year—that title came about because I heard one of the rides playing that Jet song and amused myself by tweaking it, which also shaped the story as it developed—and I actually wrote much of it by hand as I sat in one of the help desk boxes! I already penned one tale based on my time working at the RAS, “Ruby’s Syzygy”, and though I considered making this story a sequel of sorts, the two are only loosely related.
I was in Canberra again at the start of October for another long weekend of panels, events, talking, drinking, and hanging out with my lovely tribe at Conflux 19. Such a wonderful community we have here, and I’m stoked to be a part of it. I didn’t win the Shadows Award I was up for, and Meg didn’t win the Ditmar Best Artwork this year, but plenty of worthy works were recognised (read the lists of winners here and here). Here’s a selection of pics from various sources.
I recorded another brief reading (of “Andromeda Ascends”) and author interview with Narratives Library while I was in Canberra, and you can listen to that here. (Scroll down to D to find me.)
Meg and I had a pretty quiet Halloween—I had to work, and then rush down the street to meet her so we could catch Halloween III on the big screen thanks to The Bonfire Horror Club. She did dress up as Mod Daphne Blake, though, which is always a treat! (I guess I was just some purple-suited rando who wrested her away from Fred for the night.)
I missed Blood Incantation and Secret Chiefs 3 because I couldn’t afford it, but I caught the Metallica concert this month at Adelaide Oval due to the fact that I worked there. I did miss Suicidal Tendencies (again!), but saw much of Evanescence’s set. Metallica were a formative influence on me as a gawky young idiot, inspiring me to pick up the bass guitar and teaching me how to write riffs and arrangements; those first five albums are fucking untouchable, and I dig the rest of their catalogue too, including the controversial/derided St. Anger and Lulu records. Metallica was one of the few points where the Venn diagram of member interests met in my band Blood Red Renaissance, Faith No More being another one, and you can see their influence if you squint at our songs in the right places. At the other end of the musical spectrum, Meg went to see James Blunt for the third time, playing 2004’s Back to Bedlam in its entirety, and loved it.
I’ve been hacking away at a couple of novels lately, one new and one old. The WIP, currently known as Desolation, is being rethought and reshaped and revised since the first draft is looking to come in at an unwieldy length; the previous work has that problem in spades, as I plotted and wrote it before my writing “career” began and I had any idea what would be publishable, so the bloody thing is an epic! Given its age and nature, I’m looking at a smaller release for that one, possibly in a serialised format; I’ve put too much work (and self) into the manuscript to just trunk it, so it would be nice to vindicate all that effort by seeing it out there in the world. I need to get back to short stories soon, as I have a contribution to a tribute anthology to write, but I’m planning to get the first draft of Desolation done by the end of the year.
Listening:
Oceanic, ISIS—Messiah, Godflesh—Carnival of Sins: Live, Mötley Crüe—Hail to the Thief (Live Recordings 2003-2009), Radiohead—Demos: 1993-1996, Acid Bath
Reading:
King Sorrow, Joe Hill—An Echo of Children, Ramsey Campbell—The Works of Vermin, Hiron Ennes—This Attraction Now Open Till Late, Kyla Lee Ward—Nightmare Logic: Tales of the Macabre, Fantastic & Cthulhuesque, Leigh Blackmore
Watching:
Monk—Night of the Living Dead—The Furies—Halloween III—Seinfeld
Good luck to you as we move away from the spooky season and into the end of the year. How has it come so fast? Why does every year seem not only shorter but more hopeless and dire? Is this an ageing thing? All these questions and more to be answered in upcoming stories, possibly… stay tuned!
MRD






















































































































