Friday, 18 February 2022

A Grim God's Revenge to be reviewed on Big Hits Radio UK this Sunday

My latest short story collection A Grim God's Revenge: Dark Tales of Fantasy & Horror will be reviewed on BIG Hits Radio UK this Sunday on Trevor Kennedy's regular broadcast between 12 noon and 2 pm.


 

amazon.co.uk

amazon.com

Sunday, 6 February 2022

My story Lock In to be in the next issue of Lovecraftiana magazine

My story Lock In will be reprinted in the Walpurgisnacht issue of Lovecraftiana magazine.

Lock In first appeared in the First Black Book of Horror edited by the late Charles Black. 



A Grim God's Revenge reviewed in the latest issue of Phantasmagoria

There is a detailed review of my collection A Grim God's Revenge in the latest issue of Phantasmagoria magazine by Trevor Kennedy:

THIS LATEST COLLECTION of 14 stories by David A. Riley is a broad, wide-ranging selection that branches out into horror, fantasy and science fiction, with some gritty realism thrown into the mix for good measure.
    As the tagline states, “Dark Tales of Fantasy & Horror”, there is a bleak, hard edge to the author’s work overall, many of his tales very much set in the real world, one that involves murder, vengeance and Satanic cults weaved into the very fabric of their “It’s grim up North” British setting. Personally, I’ve always been attracted to this type of “kitchen sink” style of neorealism, in both literature and film, and if there’s some supernatural horrors thrown in there too, then all the better.

    Quite a few of the tales are set in the author’s regular fictional locale of Grudge End in the town of Edgebottom, “Lancashire’s shame”, a part of the world with a very dark history where some nasty stuff indeed has happened over the decades. These are my favourite types of tales by Riley and definitely those which I consider to be his strongest. The Edgebottom-set stories included here include ‘Grudge End Cloggers’ and the excellent ‘Scrap’.
    Additionally, there is also a raw and authentic tone to the delightfully titled ‘They Pissed on My Sofa’, concerning the vengeance of a harassed man against a bunch of young hooligans.
    The collection is certainly not all in this style and tone throughout though, as Riley also gives us some good old-fashioned swords and sorcery-esque fantasy with the likes of the title story, ‘Retribution’ and ‘A Girl, a Toad and a Cask’. ‘Gwargens’ is a splendidly enjoyable sci-fi yarn.
    Looking at some of the other stories featured, the opener, ‘Dead Ronnie and I’, is set during a zombie apocalypse and in part on a deserted island, ‘The Urn’ feels M.R. Jamesian in terms of style and content, while Jewish and Indian mythologies are explored in ‘Lem’ and ‘Hanuman’.
    With a beautifully vivid front cover artwork by Jim Pitts, A Grim God’s Revenge is an interesting and nice blend of some of Riley’s tales covering a period of almost half a century since their original publications.
    If you’re a fan of more edgy horror then this is one for you, with the other types of stories splitting things up well and lending something of a multifarious mix to proceedings.
    A Grim God’s Revenge is published by Parallel Universe Publications and is available to purchase from their website, Amazon and other outlets. For more information please go to paralleluniversepublications.blogspot.com.
—Trevor Kennedy

 To buy Phantasmagoria follow this link: amazon.co.uk

To buy A Grim God's Revenge

amazon.co.uk

amazon.com

 

Thursday, 3 February 2022

Craig Herbertson Interviewed about Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy Volume 3 in Phantasmagoria magazine

This month's issue of Phantasmagoria magazine contained an in-depth interview with author Craig Herbertson, whose story Wardark is included in Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy Volume 3. He discusses the book in detail, including the other stories by Lorenzo D. Lopez, Tais Teng, Chadwick Ginther, Carson Ray, Darin Hlavaz, Mike Chinn, Rab Foster, Jon Hansen, and Adrian Cole.
 
"I enjoyed the first Swords & Sorceries and I enjoyed this one more. Despite a wide variety of talented authors with a wide variety of treatments and content there is a distinctly themed feel to this anthology. Harking to the past glories of fantasy, it doesn’t let the modern reader down at any moment and it is simply a fun read."
 
Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy is a biannual collection which will reach its fourth volume in June this year. 

amazon.co.uk

amazon.com

From Phantasmagoria #20

In a new series of mini-interviews, Phantasmagoria asks some quick fire questions to genre authors about their new releases.

First up: Craig Herbertson discusses his involvement in Parallel Universe Publications’ Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy Volume 3.

Phantasmagoria Magazine: Great to chat, Craig! You have a story in the recently released Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy Volume 3. Could you explain a little about the background of this volume and the series please?

Craig Herbertson: This volume is dedicated to the memory of Charles Black, horror author and editor of the critically acclaimed Black Books, who wished to complement his highly successful series with a fantasy equivalent. Charles would have been delighted with David Riley’s tribute and even more delighted with the stories themselves. David’s Introduction also presents a detailed bio on every author, which is welcome in the fiercely competitive world of authorship.

PM: What is your story in the book about?

CH: My story is titled ‘Wardark’ and I can blithely state that it’s about a reiver from the Northern Vandergan based entirely on muscled heroes like Conan, Thongor, Brak and that goodly company. Our chap, Wardark finds himself in a pickle with some horrible creatures and a ten-thousand-year-old witch. You’ll need to judge if it’s any good.

PM: What about the other stories in the book, can you tell us something about them?

CH: Certainly. Things begin with ‘Sorcerous Vengeance’ by Lorenzo D. Lopez, a fast-paced adventure which opens with a vicious village raid, a roller coaster race in the face of long odds and ends in a battle against sorcery. If you like an antihero and unremitting dark deeds, this is for you.

As an admirer of Sir Richard Francis Burton and all that Eastern Jazz, Tais Teng’s ‘Seal in Snatchers of Jorsaleem, A Tale of the Inland Sea’ is a welcome reminder of past ages and far places. Unlike Lopez, Teng advances his narrative with a dreamlike nuance reminiscent of Coleridge and the slumber of an opium den. It’s a well-crafted tale where you don’t notice the craft.

‘When the Gods Send you Rats’ they send you Chadwick Ginther, who is clearly a master of words. Ripe with metaphor, simile and poetic language, this is nevertheless a biting tale (see what I did there?). Our heroine, a midwife, has a problem in her dystopian realm which can only be solved with the aid of the ratcatcher. Strangely reminiscent of Gibson’s Neuromancer with a faint aroma of Dickens and other subtle spices, this is a dark tale of poverty and bleak house with a strangely optimistic finale.

‘Mother’s Bones’ by Carson Ray is a thoroughly enjoyable tale with an obsessed but irreverent hero on a quest to retrieve or avenge his mother’s bones. This is another piece of polished writing which creates a genuine empathy with the intrepid Knox, a warrior whose skill in combat is smoothly and expertly described as he enters the Temple of Astoralis where bad things will happen. Knox is as irreverent as any Harry Harrison hero and has a similar invincible quality. I’ve always felt that this combination of dry humour and realism is a hard act to pull off but Carson Ray manages it as easily as an expert juggler with only two oranges. Action sequences are difficult but Ray is absolutely convincing and a joy to read.

Short of cash and owing it to the wrong people, Aaram, an immensely powerful youth, strikes a bargain with the ageing Ophiochus. The wizard has lost a charm to a witch and his gold will keep the debt collectors off Aaram’s back. With luck Aaram can return to his lover and get a steady job.

‘The Lair of the Snake Witch’ is perhaps not the place to speculate on a normal life as Darin Hlavaz sends his unlikely companions up the river C’Naa. The wizard and the youth are getting to know each other and who knows where that will lead? Green-eyed Uryell is on his way to the Grafanox and Shilnof the shapeless one is overly interested. With a little nod to Jack Vance and a huge hello to Michael Moorcock

‘The Rains of Barafonn’ is a thoughtful and poignant offering reminiscent of the great days of dystopian fantasy.

‘The Foliage’ by Rab Foster is a well-conceived tale with echoes of sleeping beauty, but only echoes. When a witch, her acolyte, three fleshers, a gravedigger and an old Town Guardsman enter a forest to see why half the village has disappeared expect the answer to be magical in nature. Foster’s one weakness is that occasionally he explains rather than shows but this does not detract from the tale and is counterbalanced by some gems in dialogue which made me laugh out loud – a rare event. The most appealing aspect of this tale is Foster’s depiction of the characters and particularly Gudruun, who is a witch you’d definitely like to encounter.

‘In the Lair of the Moonmen’ by John Hansen starts with our hero Varkez crawling on his belly towards the frog king. Wonderful stuff told with a dry and insouciant wit. There is just a hint of a minor Burroughsian warrior on the lines of A Fighting Man of Mars with Hansen’s shackled princesses and impossible skychariots. The story is long, I would regard it as a novelette, but reads so comfortably I look forward to a novel. Very nice indeed.

We finish with Adrian Cole, another novelette entitled ‘Sailing on the Thieves’ Tide’, a tale of Elak of Atlantis. Lycon is boozing in the local tavern where he meets with an old pal. Talk turns to sea battles, magic, druids and the Dragon Throne which the young and popular King Elak has designs upon. The problem, simple enough, is that it just can’t be moved. Lycon’s old pal has uncovered a map, so what can go wrong? Tell that to the wise old druid as King Elak makes some impetuous, foolhardy and irresponsible decisions to seek out some rather peculiar bones – and that is how adventures begin.

PM: I believe fantasy artist legend Jim Pitts provides the illustrations once again?

CH: Yes, indeed. Jim Pitts rounds off the entertainment with his best cover in the series and some neat internal illustrations which lend a classy feel to the production.

PM: It’s always nice to chat, Craig. Before we wrap things up, could you leave us with your final thoughts on the book overall?

CH: I enjoyed the first Swords & Sorceries and I enjoyed this one more. Despite a wide variety of talented authors with a wide variety of treatments and content there is a distinctly themed feel to this anthology. Harking to the past glories of fantasy, it doesn’t let the modern reader down at any moment and it is simply a fun read. 

To buy Phantasmagoria follow this link: amazon.co.uk

 

Sunday, 30 January 2022

Monday, 24 January 2022

Robert Aickman: An Attempted Biography by R. B. Russell

Just received this great, heavy tome in the post today: Robert Aickman: An Attempted Biography by R. B. Russell, published by Tartarus Press. Should provide many hours of fascinating reading.

Friday, 31 December 2021

Winter on Aubarch 6 reprinted in The Martian Wave - contributor's copy received today

On the last day on 2021 I received my contributor's copy of the The Martian Wave for October 2021, containing my science fiction story Winter on Aubarch 6.  

This story first appeared in Fear magazine #11 in 1989.

 


 

Saturday, 18 December 2021

How Weird Tales reviewed my novel The Return seven years ago

Weird Tales review of The Return

Seven years ago my Lovecraftian crime noir horror novel The Return received the above review on the Weird Tales website.

"David A. Riley's "The Return" is an amazing read. Do you like gritty noir? Brit Horror? Masculine (but not macho) protagonists? Eldritch Horror in bleak industrial slums? "The Long Good Friday" meets "the Mythos"? The writing is dense and sleek. Never boring enthralling page turners. Do you like to read just a few more pages even though you need to sleep? Then this is THE BOOK!

THIS IS ONE FINE HORROR NOVEL!"
 

 

Thursday, 16 December 2021

A Grim Gods Revenge: Dark Tales of Fantasy & Horror reduced to £6/$7.94 till January 1st

A Grim God's Revenge: Dark Tales of Fantasy & Horror by David A. Riley is now available in paperback and kindle.We have reduced the price of the paperback from £11.99 to £6.00/$7.94 till the 1st January 2022.

amazon.co.uk

amazon.com

Artwork: Jim Pitts
 

The short story collection includes fourteen dark tales of fantasy and horror ranging from 1971 to 2020.

Dead Ronnie and I was first published in Sanitarium issue 44, 2016
Corpse-Maker was first published in Weird Window issue 2, 1971
The Urn was first published in Whispers issue 1, 1972
Gwargens was first published in Beyond issue 3, 1995
Retribution was first published in Peeping Tom issue 3, 1991
The Bequest was first published in Dark Horizons, 2008
They Pissed on My Sofa was first published in Malicious Deviance, 2011
Old Grudge Ender was first published in The Screaming Book of Horror, 2012
A Girl, a Toad and a Cask was first published in The Unspoken, 2013
Scrap was first published in Dark Visions 1, 2013
Lem was first published in The Eleventh Black Book of Horror, 2015
A Grim God’s Revenge was first published in Mythic issue 4, 2017
Grudge End Cloggers was first published in Scare Me, 2020
Hanuman was first published in Phantasmagoria issue 16, 2020




 

Friday, 3 December 2021

The Storyteller of Koss has been accepted for publication in Summer of Sci-fi & Fantasy anthology



Just had another fantasy story - it's not quite swords & sorcery as there are no swords involved - accepted for publication next year. The Storyteller of Koss will appear in Summer of Sci-fi & Fantasy anthology, due on June 1st, 2022 from Cloaked Press in the United States.
The Storyteller of Koss is a sort of sequel to Baal the Necromancer which appeared in the last issue of Mythic magazine.

Wednesday, 1 December 2021

The God in the Keep is available in the November issue of Swords and Sorcery Magazine

My second swords and sorcery story to be published in the last few months, The God in the Keep, is now available to read online for free in Swords and Sorcery Magazine

My earlier story is Baal the Necromancer which appeared in the latest issue of Mythic magazine. 

Monday, 29 November 2021

Two Independent Publishers Whose Anthologies I Had Stories In Last Year Fold


It looks as though two of the independent publishers whose anthologies I had stories in last year have folded.

The first is Esskaye Books. Grudge End Cloggers was included in their anthology Scare Me edited by M. Leon Smith. This wasn't a bad book, though the typesetting could have been improved a lot. Double spacing should be reserved for manuscripts, not printed paperbacks. 

The other was Terror Tract, which during its brief lifetime brought out quite a few titles and looked as if it had big ambitions. But for all of that I never even saw when the press folded, though. I had a story reprinted in their "Humorous Horror Anthology" Jester of Hearts. As well as Corpse-Maker (originally published in Dave Sutton's Weird Window fanzine in 1971), this book included Ramsey Campbell's Seeing the World. 

I am always sorry when an independent publisher closes down, especially when it happens as abruptly as it did with these. Both seemed to have had great potential for the future.

Fortunately for me the stories published by them have recently been reprinted by my own Parallel Universe Publications imprint in A Grim God's Revenge: Dark Tales of Fantasy & Horror.  




Friday, 26 November 2021

Gruesome Grotesques #6 is now available

Available now through amazon and elsewhere, Gruesome Grotesques #6 Carnival of Freaks includes some great authors, such as Ramsey Campbell, Adrian Cole, Mike Chinn, Samantha Lee etc. It also includes my own short story Three Eyed Jack which I am pleased to see illustrated by Jim Pitts.

Friday, 19 November 2021

Ghosts of the Chit-Chat - Stories by M. R. James and Others Performed by Robert Lloyd Parry

I was really pleased to receive in the post a DVD of Ghosts of the Chit-Chat performed by the marvellous Robert Lloyd Parry. The James stories are Canon Alberic's Scrapbook and Lost Hearts. The other stories are Basil Netherby by A. C. Benson, The Dean's Story by R. Carr Bosanquet, and Useless Knowledge by M. R. James.

With the DVD came the postcards shown here, together with a folded booklet. 

I'm looking forward to watching this very soon.