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Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge
Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge







Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge

If you thought Black & Orange was good-and it most certainly is-then you haven’t seen anything yet.ĭo e-books threaten or complement the print industry?Į-books aren’t a threat in the least. That’s impossible to say! I can tell you, however, that I’m still floored by McKinney’s extraordinary collection, and that Ethridge’s forthcoming novel is going to knock everyone’s socks off. What are you most proud of thus far, and why?

Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge

Glasby, which is going to be a really terrific book, especially for fans of Lovecraftian literature. Smith recommended his novel Deadbeat to me after that, which had only seen a very limited print run previously, and that was followed by Hellborn by Gary Brandner, the author of The Howling series, which was previously out of print for almost 20 years.įorthcoming titles are Bottled Abyss, an absolutely amazing second novel from Bram Stoker winner Benjamin Kane Ethridge, and The Thing in the Mist: Selected Stories by 1950s cult UK author John S. Next came Jeremy Shipp’s Attic Clowns, which is a hyper-bizarro collection of interconnected tales ranging from lightly funny to deeply disturbing. He agreed immediately, and The Red Empire and Other Stories was born. We became friends last year at World Horror Con, and I asked him if he’d be interested in doing a book for the line. It all started with Joe McKinney, who won this year’s Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel. Talk us through some of the key authors at Redrum Horror. I deeply appreciate some of the publishers who stick with a subgenre, but my vision for the Redrum line was to be as broad as possible. The key to Redrum is that it isn’t limited to any subgenre-so far we’ve published literary horror, classic 80s pulp, avant garde stories, and there’s even a dark fantasy novel on the way next month. What type of horror does Redrum Horror publish? The same went for my publishing aspirations. From there I was hooked, so when I started writing, it was a foregone conclusion that I’d work primarily in horror.

Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge

People would say, “You haven’t seen that movie?” or “You’ve never read IT?” and I’d rush out to correct the problem. I never read or watched horror growing up, so it wasn’t until I was in my early 20s that I started catching up. I love the concept of a numbered, uniform library of genre books and wondered why there wasn’t one for horror fiction-so I did it myself. I had the idea for Redrum last year, while perusing my collection of Hard Case Crime books.









Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge