Table of Contents
THE GORELETTER:
Arnzen's Weird Newsletter
+++ Vol 1.2, Oct. 17, 2002 +++
U-Hell
BLATHER
Blather. Wince. Repeat.
“Ways in Which Moving is Like Death”
+ Good friends do heavy lifting. They
probably will drink and eat afterwards.
+ Your apartment is up for grabs.
+ Sadly, you will leave things behind.
But more of it will end up in the trash
than you imagined possible.
+ On the day of departure, you won't
be able to say goodbye to everyone
you'd hoped to.
+ Some of your friends will have
trouble saying goodbye for the first
time since you've known them.
+ Your past becomes legend far too
quickly. Even the secret stuff.
+ You can't take it with you. I'm
referring, of course, to that thing some
jerk borrowed and never returned.
Now it's really gone.
+ Your eating and showering habits
are altered and you will resent this.
+ Your new address is uncertain.
+ Your neighbors stink.
“To part is to die a little…” – Edmond Haraucourt, “Chanson de l'Adieu”
SADISTIC STATISTICS
Short story writers are at their “prime” from age 29 to 38; novelists from 39 to 47.
Age at which Stephen King declared his retirement: 54.
%age of men between 40 and 70 who experience impotence: 52
Age at which menopause typically sets in: between 45 and 54
Age at which the “Bloody Countess” Elizabeth Báthory died: 54.
Number of young virgins slaughtered to create Ms. Báthory's “blood bath” complexion formula: 650
*** Sources: theage.com 1 Feb 2002; astrologynow.com, 1998; bathory.sk, 2001; Passell, How To, 1976; menalive.com, 1997.
GORELETS
“Crusty Old Age”: A Microfiction
Before dawn, an old woman forks holes into a flaky piecrust, cooling down the steaming tin on her windowsill.
Outside, a lurking vampire responds. In a burst of blackened dust, he transforms into a cloud of fruit flies and drifts into her opened window. Absent- mindedly, she swats as he reassumes shape.
She tastes of lilac as he bites a frail freckled shoulder, but her runny tissue is warm over his tongue like baked fruit.
She too will develop a taste for human pie, baked by time. Brittle bones and dentures won't prevent her; she knows how to use her fork.
OUR ODD TRIPLE FEATURE
“Slow-but-Loveable Killers”
For your next movie night, rent:
SLING BLADE
OF MICE AND MEN
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST
SNIPPETS OF THE STRANGE
“You may be wondering how meat creates air pollution. After all, cows, hogs, and chickens don't have smokestacks, and the process of chopping them up shouldn't have any nefarious effect on our air.” – paragraph randomly spotted in Howard Lyman's MAD COWBOY
“Botulism. E Coli. Salmonella. Irrelevant. These diseases/organisms have virtually NOTHING to do with the topic, unless we are eating dogs and their faeces contaminate the meat.” – found in usenet newsgroup “talk.politics.animals” (9/22/97)
“Dead animals, whom you have devoured like a ghoul, will haunt you unto death.” – found in usenet group “soc.culture.czecho-slovak” (7/31/99)
ONLINE GIZMO OF THE MONTH
“Memento Morty”
Post a little notice of your own life expectancy on your web site so you never forget how much time you're wasting online. Or post the death date of your most hated enemy. Brought to you by those brilliantly bizarre boys at The Brunching Shuttlecocks:
NOT DEAD YET: PRINT REVIEWS
There's nothing hollow about WICKED HOLLOW magazine. WH is made to fit into your back pocket, but it's overspilling with good reads. As the title indicates, its focus is horror fiction, art and poetry. But what distinguishes WH from others in the small press is its distinctive character.
Because of its pocket-sized design, the mag is a delight to carry around and read whenever a dark mood strikes. Unlike so many other sloppily Xeroxed mini-mags, WICKED HOLLOW's production has real personality. Every issue has a trademark earth-toned, rib- textured card stock cover. Each edition uses a flair of red ink sparsely throughout the magazine (though one wonders if the color is used TOO economically…as most of it appears only on the cover and in the page headings). The mag regularly uses great b/w art in a smart way to accompany both stories and poems. And though I feel the magazine's edges could benefit from a printer's trimming machine, the general layout of this periodical is remarkable enough to make it uniquely fit for its contents.
In the October issue of WH (#4), a LOT of good stuff is crammed into 85 pages. The stories range from one- page flashes (like Kendall Evan's “Jack's Masterpiece” – a unique pumpkin-carving tale) to just-right short stories (like Darren Speegle's bizarre opening number, “Dance Therapeutic,” which involves viscera dangling by strings from a ceiling). There is a balance between gore and soft horror. Other good writers in this issue include Kealan-Patrick Burke, Stephen Rogers, Christina Sng, and William P. Robertson. (I've got a poem in #4 called “tortuous aorta” …but that doesn't bias me, I swear!).
Adding to its unique character, the magazine features a fun column on the back cover, “The Coma-Induced Top Five,” which features a notable genre writer each issue. These guests offer a Lettermanesque list of humorous choices related to horror each issue. In #4, Mark McLaughlin explains his five favourite low budget horror flicks; in issue #2, Bruce Boston listed his hilarious “Top 5 Things Not to Say When Being Tortured to Death.” And in a productive use of New Media, readers are invited each quarter to post their own “top 5” on the magazine's excellent web site.
WICKED HOLLOW is cheaper than a bag of Halloween candy at $3 a pop (or $12/year for 4 quarterly issues). Visit their home page for ordering information and hollow out some space in your back pocket for issue #4 this “Holloween.” And while you're there, browse around “Project Pulp”…you'll be pleasantly surprised:
WEIRD SITES OF THE MONTH
The Gashlycrumb Tinies Live!:
www.edleston.cheshire.sch.uk/projects/poetry/utter.htm
Very Odd Auctions: http://www.whowouldbuythat.com/
Rude Voyeurism: [deleted]
INSTIGATION: TWISTED PROMPTS FOR SICKO WRITERS
Craft a piece whose theme is captured by this anonymous quotation from the world of zoology: “An effective way to deal with predators is to taste terrible.”
Hitchcock's famous shower scene from Psycho never actually shows the blade penetrating flesh. Emulate this: write a highly disturbing scene without actually showing gore. If this is too difficult for you gorehounds, try to use the viewpoint of a blind killer.
“Satan0666” instant messages you. Script the conversation. Be sure to have the unwelcome prince of darkness utilize emoticons and chat room shorthand. As in: ]:-← (a sad li'l devil with blood dribbling from his right fang)
ARNZEN NEWS
NEW E-BOOKS AVAILABLE AT 30%
OFF!!! Fictionwise.com has released
my Bram Stoker-awarded work in e-
book format. “An Eye for an Eye” – an
excerpt from GRAVE MARKINGS that
made an appearance in Karl Wagner's
THE YEAR'S BEST HORROR
STORIES – is available for 50 cents or
less! They've also released an e-book
version of my bizarrely funny Stoker
finalist in poetry, PARATABLOIDS, for
an insanely cheap price. This week it's
on sale for an extra 15% off. There's a
30% Halloween Season rebate on ALL
horror e-books!!! WOW! There's no
better time to try 'em out. Go to:
fictionwise.com/servlet/mw?t=author&ai=1527&id=4004
I'll have all the following new work online and in print just in time for your Halloween displeasure:
Vestal Review's cast THE CURSE OF FAT FACE here: http://www.vestalreview.net
FlashShot Daily will have a little something of mine one day this month: http://www.gwthomas.org/flashshotindex.htm
Sidereality's featuring an EYELESS
alien encounter here:
sidereality.com/index.html
The Dream People are holding down THE ONE WHOSE EYES WOULD NOT CLOSE here: http://www.dreampeople.org
Soon, Rogue Worlds will be serving
HALLOWEEN PIE here:
specficworld.com/rgworlds.html
Insolent Rudder has been mucking IN
THE MIDDLE for awhile now here:
insolentrudder.org
Dust Devil is spinning three dangerous
Arnzen poems for Halloween here
(print):
geocities.com/dustdevilzine
Macabre magazine will heave a
handful of my horror poetry here
(print):
allegrapress.com/
Lunatic Chameleon is blushing madly
with a poem or two here (print):
geocities.com/nancatbird/index.html
Paradoxa will release my academic review of Bill Sheehan's study of Peter Straub, AT THE FOOT OF THE STORY TREE (print): http://www.paradoxa.com
DATA & ERRATA
QUICK FICTIONS's price was raised
to two issues for $9 right after I
delivered last month's issue. That's
still cheap. See jppress.org
for details.
The Arnzen lot in the HWA/ProLiteracy auction went for a whopping $28.99. Not bad! Shocklines.com reports that the auction raised over $7,000 total in the name of promoting literacy. All right! Now people will be able to read those warning labels on antifreeze and so forth.
If you didn't get the premiere issue of
this newsletter, I've posted it online as
a sample here:
gorelets.com/gorelets/goreletter/samplegoreletter.htm
NEW AT GORELETS.COM
+ The animated “horror handheld” graphic on the front page has been updated for lots of clicky fun. Did you know it features a new Gorelet poem irregularly? Click on the “skull” button to read the latest one.
+ Writer Hertzan Chimera is among the many authors who have posted poetry on “The Refrigerator of the Damned” recently. It's still plugged in and buzzing. Give it a try!
BOO COUPONS
It pays to scroll this far down.
WILDSIDE PRESS – publisher of my collection, FLUID MOSAIC – kindly and exclusively offers Goreletter subscribers a 10% discount coupon on your next order! Enter the coupon code ARNZEN when you check out at their web store and save on some great titles you can't find anywhere else. Hey babe, take a walk on it here: http://www.wildsidepress.com/
FICTIONWISE offers “15% off”
discounts on a special list of e-books
for subscribers to The Goreletter:
fictionwise.com/fwa/4004/
The list of these discounts is updated
WEEKLY so revisit it time and again.
THEY'RE ALSO RUNNING A 30%
REBATE OFFER ON ALL HORROR
TITLES THROUGH HALLOWEEN!
AN UNBELIEVABLE BARGAIN!
COLOPHON
All material in The Goreletter is: © 2002 Michael A. Arnzen, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to forward the entire contents as a whole, without alterations. For reprint permissions, please contact arnzen@gorelets.com.
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PITHY MORBID THOUGHTS
“Those who welcome death have only tried it from the ears up.” – Wilson Mizner (died 1933)
ARCHIVE NOTES:
* Due to the temporary nature of internet URLs, some websites mentioned in back issues of the Goreletter may no longer be live, or may also point to unscrupulous web servers. I will try to denote these with overstrikes, red icons, and slashed globe icons as I discover them, but if you encounter a dead, changed or unscrupulous link, please feel free to inform me via email.
* “Boo Coupons” are expired in all but the current issue; providers may ask for subscription verification.
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