Archive for January, 2010

SUNDAY SPECIAL: Joshua Scribner

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

I spoke to Joshua Scribner about his novel Mantis Nights, what drives him as an author, and what fascinates him with the darker side of life.

 LT:    Tell us about your upcoming novel, Mantis Nights.
 
JS:   Mantis is an insurance adjuster who’s alienated from his job and the world in general.  At night, while walking around town, he relaxes his body and closes his eyes.  This allows him to achieve altered states of mind, where he can become a character in dreamlike visions.  At first, his walks are just a special hobby that allows him to escape the doldrums of everyday life.  Then he becomes trapped in a vision and has to find his way back to normal reality. 
 
LT:    When did you first start writing?
 
JS:   I started writing in 1997 after reading a Stephen King book I picked up at a garage sale.  I liked it so much that I knew merely reading horror stories would not be enough. 
 
LT:    Altered states are a recurring theme in your stories. Why do you think this is?
 
JS:   I’ve spent much of my life experimenting with altered states of mind, like meditation, lucid dreaming, hypnosis, and astral projection.  Often I experience something strange or fascinating in those states and it develops into a story idea.  
 
LT:    What scares you?
 
JS:   Sometimes life is clear and sunny.  Sometimes there’s fog.  Other times, it’s so dark you can’t see two feet in front of you.  In the times it’s been the darkest for me, the times I was most afraid, there always seemed to be something spiritual with me.  The thought of being in the pitch black alone scares me.  The thought of my children being there scares me even more.
 
LT:    What challenges did you face in writing your first novel? What were the positives?
 
JS:   I wrote my first novel, Nescata, in 1997.  The challenges of writing haven’t changed.  Coming up with ideas and a plot are pretty easy for me.  The difficulty is conveying to the reader what I see in my mind.  This is something I try to get better at every day.  Thank you editors and critics!  The biggest positive of writing the first novel is getting through it.  I often tell people who want to write novels to get that first one done, even if it’s awful.  That’ll get you over the hump of thinking you can’t finish.   
 
LT:    Out of your work so far, which character is your favorite?
 
 JS:   Why don’t you just ask which of my children I like the best?  LOL.  The only way to answer this question is to cheat and say it’s a tie.  Each main character has a little bit of me in them.  In Soul Tripping, the second book of my Beyond Reception series, I split myself in two.  Half was given to the protagonist, Joseph Stanton, the other half to the villain, Donald Pagel.  I don’t want to sound like an egomaniac and say I like those two the best, but I probably enjoyed writing them the most. 
 
LT:    What draws you to the horror genre?
 
JS:   Life draws me to the horror genre.  I’ve experienced so much of the weird and scary I feel compelled to write about it. 
  
LT:    Are you currently working on another writing project?
 
JS:   Right now, Mantis Coma, book two in the Mantis series, is under contract, and I’m working with an editor on that.  I started the third book last summer and hope I can pick it back up soon.  I signed the first book of my Beyond Reception with Shadow Line Press in November.  I’m editing the second book in that series.     
 
LT:    When and where can our readers find Mantis Nights?
 
JS:    The release date is January 18th.  It will be available from onceuponabookstore.com on that day, then at fictionwise.com and other ebook retailers within a week or so.  The easiest way to get it is to go to joshuascribner.com and follow the links.
 
LT:    What authors do you read?
 
JS:   I like John Saul, Stephen King, Dean Koontz, and John Sandford.  I read various authors at places like Flashes in the Dark and Microhorror
 
LT:    Is there anything that you’d like to add?
 
JS:    I’d like to thank Flashes in the Dark for having me.

 

______

©2010 Lori Titus

A DARKER PLACE: By Joshua Scribner

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

I hover in the corner of the room, watching you, Amy, my little cardiac nurse.  You fill me with joy.

The old man on the bed grips your hand, like if he lets go he lets go of life.  He’ll forget the power he felt later and just remember that you were nice to him.  Your patients don’t realize, you don’t realize, that your touch contains magic, heals, a gift that developed with you over the years. 
 
Calmly, you wait for him to sleep.  You’re so beautiful.  I have such wonderful plans for you.

Your patient’s eyes close.  His grip recedes.  You quietly walk out of the room.  Parker sits at the station.  He gives a shy smile, then looks down.  Time for me to whisper to your mind.

“Look at him.  He’s such a cute guy, yet so sad.  Because of his quietness, everyone takes advantage of him, runs over him.”

You sit in a nearby chair, notice Parker looking at you again, decipher the expression on his face.  He doesn’t know what to say.  I whisper some more.

“He’s so nice.  It would be so cool to be with him.  He’d never ask you to be more than you are.”

You look at Parker again.  He’s turned away.  Suddenly, cute doesn’t describe him.  He’s much more than that.  You find yourself wanting to run a hand through his hair, to taste his kiss. You want to let him touch you.  Utter rapture nearly overwhelms me, but I press it down.  I have work to do, feelings to nourish.

I whisper, “You’re so incredible, the best nurse in this hospital.  You deserve someone who will treat you right, someone who wants you, loves you, for exactly what you are.”

Parker looks up.  Your eyes meet.  You share a smile.  I’m so happy I think I might explode.

I whisper, “Ask him.  Just to see.  How wrong is it just to see?”

You hesitate, but come around.  “I was going to take my break in ten minutes.  Want to come with me.  We can go up to the gas station and get coffees.”

I’m laughing, but not in a way that can affect you.

Parker seems to have lost his breath a little.

You giggle.

Parker nods, clears his throat, then says, “Yes.”

I’ve locked you in.  It will be easy from here on out.  The thrill that has overcome me is indescribable.  Because now people will die.

I will be there night after night, when you get coffees with Parker.  When he starts to tell you bad things about his wife, I’ll whisper bad things about your husband.  Remember when you wanted to be a nurse but were afraid to try it.  Remember how David said you were good enough, helped you study, supported you without a complaint.  I’ll tell you he only wanted you to be a nurse because he didn’t think being married to a waitress was good enough for him.  Remember when you wanted to try a more challenging area of the hospital, but thought the nurses there were smarter than you.  Remember how David said you were wrong, that you would blow them away and rise to the top.  Remember all the days you came home crying, wanting to quit, and he reassured you, encouraged you to press on, told you to believe in yourself.  I’ll just whisper that he wanted you to improve because you can never be good enough for him.

Oh, and then there’s your dark spells, when you get mean, irrational and unfair, when you lash out.  I’ll help you figure out a way to blame those on David too.  When he tries to get you to challenge the logic of your accusations, I’ll tell you he’s arrogant, and always has to be right.

Parker will be waiting in the wings.  He’ll never make you be more than what you already are.  He’ll never challenge you.  He can’t.  He’s simply not that smart.  You’ll stop growing.  You’ll start to miss David and lament when you’ve hurt him too much to get him back.  Then you’ll regress, and so will the powers inside you.  Your touch will cease to heal.  People who would have lived will die.  I will relish in victory.

Why?  Because I’m a scorned cupid and like to make the world a darker place.

__________

©2010 Joshua Scribner

Joshua Scribner is the author of the novels Mantis Nights, The Coma Lights and Nescata.  His fiction won both second and fifth place in the 2008 Whispering Spirits Flash Fiction contest.  Up to date information on his work can be found at joshuascribner.com.  Joshua currently lives in Michigan with his wife and two daughters.