Kandisha Press interview series celebrating Graveyard Smash release – part 7

Janine Pipe's avatarJanine's Blog

Every single female in this anthology is outstanding and amazing. However, there are a couple of shining stars who I think are destined to make it to The Big Times. V is one of those ladies – welcome today to V. Castro.

Q1 When did you first begin the journey to becoming a writer and why chose dark fiction?

I have always been drawn to dark stories since I was a child. I’m Mexican American and there are so many folk tales and urban legends I grew up hearing.

For me dark fiction allows me a freedom to be who I want and explore the darker sides of myself and the world.

Q2 Who are your favourite authors and how have they influenced your writing?

There are too many amazing authors and films to list. But Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark was my first horror book.

Q3 Do you…

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Kandisha Press interview series celebrating release of Graveyard Smash – part 6

Janine Pipe's avatarJanine's Blog

Welcome the lovely, gorgeous ‘ginger kid’, Lydia Prime!

Please tell me a little about yourself.

Hey Janine! Thank you so much for having me. I’m actually just your every day average ginger kid with no soul, who enjoys the darker things of life. You know, pretty standard stuff. When I’m not writing I’m usually behind an 800 number helping people pay their bills or deal with their anger. Glamorous right? C’est la vie. I absolutely love gummy bears and dark chocolate with almonds. If I’m not hanging out in the horror world, I flip over to comedy.

Thank you.

Now for some questions.

Q1 When did you first begin the journey to becoming a writer and why chose dark fiction?

I suppose, if I reach way back into the deepest corners of my mind, I’ve always wanted to be a writer. At least since my sixth grade English class when…

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The Ladies of Horror Picture Prompt Challenge June 2020 {[All Authors]}

This amazing Picture Prompt challenge has been hosted for the last 3 years by our lovely, Nina D’Arcangela. She selects four pictures and distributes them out to all the women authors who sign up to play along. Check out everyone’s work here:

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June 20th – The Far Shore by Marge Simon

June 22nd – One, Two, Three by Mary Ann Peden – Coviello

June 24th – Demon Night by Christina Sng

June 26th – At the End of the Day by Kendra Hale

June 28th – Hiding from Monsters by Angela Yuriko Smith

June 30th – Sundown by Kim Richards

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June 20th – The Reverend by Kathleen McCluskey

June 22nd – Write Drunk, Edit Sober by Sonora Taylor

June 24th – Ink by Alex Grey

June 26th – Irises by Michelle Joy Gallagher

June 28th – Ink in the Glass by Rie Sheridan Rose

June 30th – Saturated by Melissa R. Mendelson

July 1st – Poison Prey by Asena Lourenco

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June 21st – I Hunt the Giant by Elaine Pascale

June 23rd – Gates to Hell by A.F. Stewart

June 25th – Black Autumn by Anna Davis

June 27th – Immortals by Sheikha A.

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June 21st – The Katana by Naching T. Kassa

June 23rd – What We Have Become by Linda Lee Rice

June 25th – Best Left Hidden by K.R. Morrison

June 27th – Maleficium by Josie Queen

June 29th – Rebirth by Ela Lourenco

Kandisha Press interview series celebrating Graveyard Smash release part 3

Janine Pipe's avatarJanine's Blog

Today I welcome R A Busby to the blog.

Q1 When did you first begin the journey to becoming a writer and why choose dark fiction?
From the time I was six or seven years old, I was writing stories. I’ve always been attracted to fairy tales — some of the darkest fiction out there, especially for children — and in college, I focused quite a lot on Gothic fiction of the 19th century, and later on made the marvellous discovery of Mexican Gothic as well. 

I love dark fiction because it tells the truth. Sometimes, the truth of a human experiencecan be more powerfully and meaningfully conveyed when it’snotprecisely literal — when being pregnant with Satan’s baby allows us to understand control of women’s bodies through manipulation and gaslighting (Rosemary’s Baby), or when a vision seen in ugly room decor allows us to enter the mind of…

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Kandisha Press interview series celebrating Graveyard Smash release.

Janine Pipe's avatarJanine's Blog

Please tell me a little about yourself.

Hey there!

Well, I’m basically just a 25-year-old woman that writes when she isn’t pulling her hair out over excel spreadsheets.

I live in a small town in West Yorkshire, and I’ve spent most of my days dipping in and out of writing. In the past couple of years, I figured I rattle on about it too much not to share my work and take steps to get published. When I’m not writing, I’m probably zoning out with my headphones in and a playlist running or watching true crime documentaries. I also occasionally sketch, and love trips out to the coast.

Thank you.

Now for some questions.

Q1 When did you first begin the journey to becoming a writer and why chose dark fiction?

Since I was little, I’ve been writing on and off but I never really took it too seriously until…

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Kandisha Press interview series celebrating Graveyard Smash release part 2

Janine Pipe's avatarJanine's Blog

Welcome back to my collection of interviews with some of the mega talented ladies of horror. Today I welcome Paula R C Readman who shares some of her writing advice and when she saw a UFO …

1) When did you first begin the journey to becoming a writer and why choose dark fiction?

Hi Janine,

Thank you for your invite onto your blog. My journey to be published started just over 20 years ago. I was working in an electronics factory at the time with a big milestone looming on the horizon, when I decided to set myself a challenge. After years of working in minimum wage jobs, due to being dyslexic and poorly educated, I wanted to see if it was possible for me to become a published writer.

I wanted to prove that anything is possible if you’re dedicated enough, so I gave myself a deadline of…

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Mental Anesthetic

Smoke swirling overhead, I lay on the cool filth covered ground, ashing in front of my face. A particularly crisp piece of dried wallpaper lights from the dropping embers. Night is nearing, the shadows cast upon the walls aren’t dancing nearly as much; I won’t be alone when the sun drops beneath the horizon. They are coming, as they always do.

I flick the butt of my cigarette and allow more pieces of detritus to smolder and pull my limbs in tighter to a fetal position. It’s easier this way, to just rest on the ground and wait rather than try with futility to hide; the past few weeks have taught me that.

The wind howls as thin branches scrape against the weakened glass, I shiver and light up another. Within minutes, the cherry of my cigarette is the only light left. A door opens a few floors below and hurried footsteps rush the stairs. I count each foot fall, there are more this time. Facing the wall and finishing my nicotine delight, the door behind me slowly slides open. My heart doesn’t quicken; the nerves I used to feel have all but been replaced by a mental anesthetic.

“Miss us?” One of the creatures questions; I don’t reply.

“Of course he did,” says the other, tapping my shoulder with its toe. My body rocks back and forth as they get into position.

I close my eyes as their teeth sink beneath the surface of my flesh. They lap from my open wounds, savoring the taste of a metallic iron liquid. The grotesque slurping and gargles wrap my stomach in knots but I know better than to fight back.

“What a shame, looks like this one’s tamed.” I hear, my head becoming fuzzy.

“Perhaps another? His daughter?” They’re taunting me, covered in my blood and snickering. My pulse quickens, not from fear but anger. “Definitely his daughter, his adrenaline is starting to rev.” These wicked beasts cackle and I stay silent, nothing I do will help me now.

“D-D-Daddy? I’m scared.” A faint cry from the hallway. It’s her.

“There we go!” Blood pressure springing through the roof, my lesions gushing while the freaks continue their feast.

I try to get up, to fight them off, but all I can do is mumble, “Youuu-bazztir…” As the silence and darkness consume me.

∼ Lydia Prime

*Originally posted on Pen of the Damned.
© Copyright Lydia Prime. All Rights Reserved.

The Noise Stopped

Advisory for anyone who needs: This is a post about mental health – mine – yours – doesn’t matter. I don’t make any specific graphic references, but if you just come here for the fiction; there’ll be some in a couple days. Today, I just needed to get this out of my head. Hopefully, someone relates, or gets something from it. I try to be a little silly in places, maybe that’ll help haha.
Now, carry on!


For an incredibly long time, I was pretty ashamed of needing help – actually went so far as to make jokes about it. Innumerable altered medication combinations, almost my whole life in some psych office, group therapy, facility, meeting, whatever. If you changed the paint and degrees on the wall, we could make a montage! See? Even now, still cracking jokes. Because my discomfort bursts through as humor, especially, if not specifically when it’s horribly inappropriate. Maybe that made it less… sad? Less offensive? I don’t actually know, but whatever it did, it stuck. I know there was always a fear. A feeling that if other people knew that I had to talk to someone and take mind altering chemicals, well, that’d be absolute comedy gold! Humiliation could spread coast to coast as each and every person I encountered whispered secrets that they’d magically just know. Distant relatives would stick up their noses and deny they’d ever known me, closer ones would ignore it, they’d be unsure of how to handle it.  It’s that eggshell floor they build after they know. The one they’re terrified to step through to get to you; the you they perceive to be a slimy fragile yoke. What they don’t expect is that the eggs might be hard boiled when stepped on and when they do make their way through to you, they’ll find the golden one.

This is my open letter to anyone struggling, trying to find help, trying to find the right combination. This is my statement to say, it’s okay, and you’re not as alone as you feel.

*** 

Years passed, and as doctors changed my medications did with them. My extra curricular activities could be chalked up to that of the people they’ always seemed to have warnings about. I suppose those warnings exist for good reason if I’m being honest…

Self medication becomes a grand idea when those strangers you pay to listen, stop hearing you. They start seeing dollar signs and a person trying to live in Never Neverland. You have an answer for why every suggested solution just won’t work. It’s objectively not because you’ve tried them all, several times, and can’t bring yourself to try again – or sometimes, you’re just so utterly exhausted. So you scream, and you cry, and you break the only thing you managed to care about in the last five years (which only makes it that much worse). Or, maybe you don’t. Maybe you sit there quietly, and watch as the cents trickle from your piggy bank into their pocket with every overly loud tick of the doctor’s clock.

If they can’t won’t hear the pleas for help then what else is left for you to do? Your life and mind feel like they’re melding into this overwhelming spiraling nightmare of irrational thoughts and inexplicable behaviors.

Internalize.

Internalize.

Internalize.

Your pain inevitably bubbles to the surface: manifesting physically. You self medicate with things your fifth grade D.A.R.E. officer made you swear you’d never try. Your body now a road map of scars that mirror the way your insides feel. And still, you return to that room, to that same ‘Magic Eye’ print that you just can’t seem to get to work. You sit in that oversized chair, and spill whatever guts you can. After all, you’ve begun a new sort of pain relief. You have to hide the parts that would make you come off as dangerous. The honesty, the openness you once had shifts, and yet, no one notices. If they did, they would say SOMETHING to you, wouldn’t they? But they don’t, so you don’t, and your new cycle becomes a comforting friend where there wasn’t one before.

A n y t h i n g  is b e t t e r  than how you f e e l right now. 

After a while, when you’re in over your head and the drums are scattering any spark you might have had, you remember you didn’t want to feel like this. That the instant gratification of your blood letting or that inhale, or that sip, or those bruises – just doesn’t seem to make you feel as good as it used to. A guilt hovers over you, holding you hostage. How can you trust anyone to help you, when you tried and they missed it the last time? Some self imposed attempts might be made here or there, but at some point, if you’re one of the lucky ones, there will be someone who hears your faint cry for help. They may have been there all along, but neither of you were ready to acknowledge the problem before. Slips are made, ‘relapses’ maybe. “But that’s a part of healing,” they’ll say, “keep with it!” And you’ll hate them, and you’ll hate yourself – but if you do keep with it, maybe something different will happen.

***  

Inevitably, there came a point where I realized I wasn’t alone. Most people will need some kind of help in their lifetimes, whether it’s for the same problems or not.

They too will sit, like I sat, unwilling, uncomfortable, anxious.

A stranger will offer a kind word, a potential solution, even a warm smile and a place to tell secrets with a dead man’s promise to guard them. They’ll offer tissues and a life raft to save them when the waters capsize their boat. 

Will it be enough? For some, perhaps, for others of course, and for the rest – there’s more work to be done. But that’s okay. It’s okay to keep trying to find the right way to get help, the right treatment plan, and even the right support group.

It’s okay.

It’s okay.

It’s okay.

This strange stigma that surrounds mental health and getting help is absolutely ridiculous. Not only has it been ridiculous, but it prevented people from getting the help they so desperately needed for fear of snide comments and persistent mocking (myself included). I was scared for people to know the truth about me, to know what I’ve done, what I’ve been through – who I am. I wasn’t ready to lose people, to be forgotten by some and left to navigate on my own. Through my self medicating stages, I did in fact lose almost everyone – the very thing I feared! I reveled in it then. I didn’t care at all. And that’s why it seemed better. That comforting friend quickly became the most insidious enemy I’d ever known. When it finally came time to break through the stigma, the fear, the pain, the guilt – I tried everything, whether I believed it would help or not.

A n y t h i n g  is b e t t e r  than how I f e e l right now. 

And as I found myself, once again clinging to hope that I could get better, that maybe this time it’ll work, I did struggle through my treatment plans. I anguished over the aggravation and frustration I would get from not being heard, or at least feeling as if they didn’t hear me. I kept remembering how I originally just wanted everything to stop. I wanted a break from life, and I got it. This time, what I wanted was to be in it; to feel the highs and the lows, and not hide.

It’s taken more years than I care to admit but I couldn’t care less if anyone knows my full story. I’ll tell you the whole thing from start to finish whether you want to hear it or not. That became such a freeing moment. I didn’t hide where I was going, or make up some excuse for why I was unable to work a certain time. Why did it switch like that? Why did I not care all of a sudden? Firstly, I’d have to say because I wasn’t going to go do some shady business, but mostly, because I learned I actually wasn’t alone. There were an ungodly amount of people who felt just like me and found a way to swim to the surface. They crawled through the fires and found a way to the other side, and I wanted to do that too. I wanted to find the other side. I wanted to help show people they weren’t alone, that I felt their heartaches, that I cried their tears. For me, that was the push I needed.

Trying and failing is something I’m not unaccustomed to. It’s taken 25 or so years of my life to almost find the way to the good side. Yesterday, for the first time ever, the noise stopped. It was like I’d spent my whole existence under water. Like I could hear and understand people the same way Charlie Brown understood adults. The alarms weren’t screaming, the records weren’t spinning. My internal radio that had been blaring white noise and nonsense, finally shut off.

Without treatment, without admitting that I needed help, I never would have gotten here, let alone anywhere else. I’ve been in this absolutely astonished state since yesterday because of it. I can’t believe the difference. I can’t believe how much happier I am. 

***

I felt that I had some kind of obligation to get this bit out of my head (and hopefully into someone else’s). To hold all this in and not share it would be a disservice to not only myself, but the next person who hurts and doesn’t know what to do about it. If you read through this whole thing, please know that I hear you, I see you, and you’re not forgotten. For those of you who feel like there aren’t words to express what you’re feeling, what you’re seeing, how you’re living – I understand. 

Seek help if you need it, no matter what. You deserve to smile for real, and not just so people stop asking, “what’s wrong?” (To which, of course, you’ll have no reply. “Nothing!” You’ll squeak, knowing that everything in the world is packed inside so deeply that if you tried to explain, the whole thing would crumble, right?)

Ask a friend, ask a family member, ask a random person if you have to. Don’t stay quiet. And if you don’t have the resources, the money, the referrals – I guarantee at least one person you know d o e s.

In fact.. have some helpful links:
10 Crisis Help Lines That You Can Text (or Chat with)!
National Helpline Database

 

© Copyright 2020 Lydia Prime. All Rights Reserved.

Return from… Where?

Aside

clock-2535061_1920.jpgAh man, I’m pretty awful at keeping my own posts updated. I’m working on being better at that…

In the meanwhile, since the last update anyone seems to have seen from me was the #Release from #KandishaPress for: Under Her Black Wings: A 2020 Women of Horror Anthology (Volume 1), new and exciting things have been in the works. There is actually a Volume 2 on its way out to all your horror-hungry eyes! Stay tuned, it should make an appearance very, very soon. 👀!

Additionally, while you’re itching for that terror fueled fix – hop over to Pen of the Damned and check out what everyone’s putting out for #FREE!
If the somber, angst filled dark fiction of The Damned is a place you’re not yet ready to tread, perhaps one might consider,  Spreading the Writer’s Word, to check out the latest pieces from the Ladies of Horror Picture Prompt Challenge! A lot of new names in the last few cycles. If you’ve been waiting for something to read, something you can sink your teeth into, seek no further! 😉 Nina D’Arcangela has been graciously hosting this challenge on her blog for several years now. The prompts and pieces just keep on packing punches! (Also #FREE, who doesn’t love free?🤔😲!)

I’m hoping my, shall we say, “unplanned” break from Lapsed Reality will be the last. I intend to keep everyone updated on all these amazing projects and hopefully much more. 

Also, I just created an actual Facebook Author page! If you feel so inclined, come give it a like, eh? Author Lydia Prime

Thank you for sticking with me! ❤

RELEASE: Under Her Black Wings: 2020 Women of Horror Anthology

I’m super excited to announce that my story, “Sadie,” is included in this wicked anthology!

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UNDER HER BLACK WINGS
2020 WOMEN OF HORROR ANTHOLOGY
Kandisha Press

– A glamorous actress whose very flesh is reanimated by a beloved Hollywood icon

– A Boy Scout Troupe encounters a frightening mythological creature in an American forest

– A lonely woman finds a home among a group of lost-and-found souls, all cared for by a tentacled sea-creature called Mother

– A Faceless Woman attacks like a virus and takes on the identities of her victims

– A post-apocalyptic battle for survival rages between human and insect

– A Shadow Woman leads the spirits of the murdered to take revenge in the desert

These are just some of the stories nineteen women came up with when tasked with creating their own Women Monsters. Step inside and experience tales of bloodsucking entities in the jungles of Southeast Asia, Cuban river goddesses, an Aztec bruja, werewolves, mermaids, soul-stealers, obsessive lovers, furious spurned wives, bloody murder in Gothic manors and on Southern plantations… and so much more…

With Foreword by Brandon Scott (Author of Vodou and Sleight, Devil Dog Press)

Featuring:

Christy Aldridge

Carmen Baca

Somer Canon

Andrea Dawn

Dawn DeBraal

Michelle Garza

Sharon Frame Gay

Jill Girardi

Alys Hobbs

Tina Isaacs

Stevie Kopas

Marie Lanza

Melissa Lason

Malena Salazar Macía

Charlotte Munro

Lydia Prime

Paula R.C. Readman

Copper Rose

Yolanda Sfetsos

With cover art by Corinne Halbert

Click the image above to be directed to Amazon or check out the links below:

Available on Amazon

US | UK | Canada | Australia | Germany | France | Spain | Italy | Japan | Mexico | Brazil |India | The Netherlands

GoodReads