Author of adventure/thriller and horror fiction

  • Home
  • The Blog
  • Email List/Contact
  • Interviews
  • Apocalyptic
  • Horror
  • Military Thriller
  • Sci-fi/Fantasy
  • All books

Why Do I Write About Zombies?

July 23, 2011 by Craig DiLouie 1 Comment

In a recent interview, I was asked how I ended up in this genre called ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE.

I’ve always been fascinated with stories about the end of the world. Plague, natural disasters, asteroids, aliens, you name it. Zombies turned out to be my favorite form of apocalypse because the familiar becomes unfamiliar, everybody you know and love suddenly turns against you and is hunting you, and you must interact with and suddenly trust total strangers to stay alive.

When I was younger, there was a bit of wish fulfillment in the end of the world, plus excitement that everything in society that you relied on to support you is no longer there. Back then, the apocalypse was a challenge, a place where people shoot zombies in the head and have thrilling adventures, something a tiny (and insane) part of me longed for. Now that I’m middle aged with a family and with it have so much to lose, there is added the parental/middle class paranoia that everything you have might be taken away. Now the apocalypse is seen as a dark place of suffering and loss, not something to long for, but to experience as a fantasy of one’s worst fears come true.

Traditionally, apocalyptic stories could be found only in the science fiction section of bookstores, while the tiny horror section was dominated by Stephen King and your choice of sexy or funny vampires. There was no zombie apocalypse genre to speak of, although films such as DAWN OF THE DEAD and 28 DAYS LATER were setting it up in the public consciousness.

Suddenly, I discovered emerging zombie fiction authors such as David Moody and Joe McKinney and pioneering small presses such as Permuted Press, and the genre opened up to me as both a reader and a writer. So I started writing a novel I always wanted to read: TOOTH AND NAIL, a story about the end of the world told from the perspective of the soldiers who fought to save it. The novel was so successful—more than 11,000 copies sold to date—that I decided to write THE INFECTION, a story about five ordinary people who must pay the price of survival at the end of the world—more of the classic formula of survivors searching for sanctuary, but with some interesting twists.

Anyway, that’s why I’m here. What about you?

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Interviews with Craig, The Infection, Tooth and Nail, Writing/Publishing, Zombies

RIP Borders Bookstores And Some Thoughts On The Future Of Publishing

July 19, 2011 by Craig DiLouie 8 Comments

bordersBorders Group said it would liquidate after failing to receive an offer that would save it. Its final 399 stores–including 250 domestic superstores and several abroad, in addition to, it appears, some 135 Waldenbooks, Borders Express and Airport stores. The $2.3 billion retailer of books, music, movies, gifts and stationery, headquartered in Ann Arbor, MI, employs 10,000 people and sells some 141,000 book, music and movie titles as well as other entertainment items.

In February, Borders sought Chapter 11 protection as it reorganized its business operations. It has since continued to lose money, and did not receive a satisfying offer to save it. As a result, Borders Group said it would liquidate its remaining stores in a process that may start as quickly as this Friday, with final operations terminating by the end of September.

This SUCKS.

Yes, ebooks are overtaking print books, particularly in fiction. But it is also true that Borders made mistakes with its business that ultimately led to its demise. Let’s assume that eBooks and online retailing is killing the big box bookstore and with it, the big publishing house. What does this mean?

Small publishing is AWESOME. If it weren’t for small presses, I can tell you for a fact there would be dramatically less choice for readers and many good authors would never have their voices heard. If it weren’t for Permuted Press, for example, I would never have considered the horror market to be accessible to my fiction. Hell, if it weren’t for small presses at all, I might never have been published. I was mailing agents and having them use my self-addressed stamped envelope to automatically mail me a rejection letter along with a flyer promoting their book on how to get published. I was mailing publishers and getting summarily rejected by interns because my pitches were coming through the “slush pile” (industry slang for toxic waste).

Digital publishing technology democratized publishing in a radical way, particularly when costs came down to a level where you could produce a cheap paperback, and to a significant extent broke the monopoly that big publishing editors had on the marketplace of ideas as the arbiters of quality. Suddenly, it was much easier to get published, and using online marketing tools, much easier to promote your work and generate sales.

There is much to dislike about traditional book publishing, to be sure, and much to admire about eBooks and the small publishers. On the other hand, one cannot help but believe there is a symbiotic relationship between the small presses and the big houses, and both benefit. If publishing overwhelmingly goes electronic, what will that mean for big publishers? Who will care what they say is quality if they don’t have the bully pulpit–the ability to choose what gets in bookstores and what doesn’t–to back them up? If the big publishers go, and the big bookstores go, and we’re all buying eBooks from smaller houses that are smart enough to specialize in a niche that people want–e.g., a zombie house, a Steampunk house, a ghost story house, a space pirates house, and so on–how will we find them, and how will we separate the gems from the huge amount of, let’s face it, low-quality stuff being put out by small presses and self publishers?

Can’t we have our cake and eat it too? (After all, what the hell else are you supposed to do with cake?)

I’m hoping the big publishing houses add value beyond the petering momentum of their brands. That they will focus on producing highly select, beautifully designed, high-quality product for print and tons of medium-quality product for eReaders. That they will add value to eBooks, such as higher levels of interactivity currently found with the iPad (think DVD extras built into the movie, but in a book instead). That they catch on to niche publishing and find ways to innovate at a lower risk.

I’m hoping the big bookstores will find a way to stay profitable by allowing people to browse miles of bookshelves, and then buy books in print or for their eReader in the store–maybe a guy in a backroom will actually manufacture your copy book for you after you order it within the store. Or maybe educate their book buyers so they can organize their stores more granularly, recognizing that sci fi and fantasy often don’t belong in the same shelf, that horror needs its own section, and so on. Or maybe find a way to identify, stock and sell successful titles from small presses so Amazon stops eating their lunch. Or maybe break up into smaller retailers that can make the kind of profit that makes individual investors rich but would be considered a dog with fleas by public stock shareholders.

Or something else. What do I know? I’m just a horror writer.

All I’m saying is if the old model is breaking, then get a new model, guys. Because we need you, big publishing, as much as we need the small innovators like Permuted. We need you, big bookstores, as much as we need our next eBook. You are producers and the dealers of our favorite drug.

Filed Under: Writing/Publishing

Interview With ZombieZoneNews.com

July 16, 2011 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

The wonderful Wednesday Lee Friday, author of KISS ME LIKE YOU LOVE ME, A STABBING FOR SADIE and THE CAT’S APPRENTICE, interviewed me for ZombieZoneNews.com as part of her “seven authors in seven days” interview series with Permuted Press authors featured in the Audible.com ZombieFest audiobook promotion. It was a great interview and I hope you’ll check it out.

Read it here.

zombiezonenews.com

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Interviews with Craig, The Infection, Tooth and Nail, Writing/Publishing, Zombies

THE INFECTION And TOOTH AND NAIL In LEGO

June 27, 2011 by Craig DiLouie 1 Comment

LEGO Zombie Apocalypse produced and photographed LEGO dioramas for my zombie books TOOTH AND NAIL and THE INFECTION. They’re now framed and residing on a wall in my office. Thanks for producing these, Erik!

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Reader Mail, The Infection, Tooth and Nail, Weird/Funny, Writing/Publishing, Zombies

TOOTH AND NAIL To Be Published In Russian

June 22, 2011 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Tooth and Nail by Craig DiLouieI am very excited today to announce that Publishing House Eksmo has acquired rights to publish TOOTH AND NAIL in Russian, native to more than 30 million people within the borders of Russia, and a second language for some 180 million other people around the world. The deal will involve an initial print run of up to 5,000 copies with mass market distribution within the next 18 months.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Tooth and Nail, Writing/Publishing, Zombies

Interview With Ginger Nuts Of Horror

June 21, 2011 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Craig DiLouieJim Mcleod of Ginger Nuts of Horror interviewed me about my zombie novels TOOTH AND NAIL and THE INFECTION. Jim asked great questions; I really enjoyed it.

Click here to read the interview and find out what I love about apocalyptic fiction, among other things.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Interviews with Craig, The Infection, Tooth and Nail, Writing/Publishing, Zombies

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 31
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • …
  • 41
  • Next Page »

Categories

  • APOCALYPTIC/HORROR
    • Apocalyptic
    • Art
    • Film Shorts/TV
    • Movies
    • Music Videos
    • Reviews of Other Books
    • Weird/Funny
    • Zombies
  • COMICS
    • Comic Books
  • CRAIG'S WORK
    • Armor Series
    • Aviator Series
    • Castles in the Sky
    • Crash Dive Series
    • Djinn
    • Episode Thirteen
    • Hell's Eden
    • How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive
    • My Ex, The Antichrist
    • One of Us
    • Our War
    • Q.R.F.
    • Strike
    • Suffer the Children
    • The Alchemists
    • The Children of Red Peak
    • The End of the Road
    • The Final Cut
    • The Front
    • The Infection
    • The Killing Floor
    • The Retreat Series
    • The Summer Fun Massacre
    • The Thin White Line
    • Tooth and Nail
  • GAMES
    • Video & Board Games
  • HISTORY
    • Other History
    • Submarines & WW2
  • MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE
    • Books
    • Film Shorts
    • Interesting Art
    • Movies & TV
    • Music
  • POLITICAL
    • Politics
  • SCIENCE
    • Cool Science
  • The Blog
  • WRITING LIFE
    • Craig at Work
    • Interviews with Craig
    • Reader Mail
    • Writing/Publishing

Copyright © 2026 · Author Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in