Do You Believe In Ghosts?

When Dave and I released the ebook for At the Meade Bed & Breakfast, we included an author conversation as part of the bonus material, where we talked about writing and the genre and so on. It was just as much fun as writing the story had been, and I was looking forward to having another conversation with him to include in the ebook edition of Walk the Sky. Alas, that was not meant to be, but at least we had that one conversation, and I guess that's enough. But the first question I asked Dave, as "At the Meade Bed & Breakfast" is a ghost story, was whether or not he believed in ghosts. His answer surprised me. I figured after what happened this week, it would be good to share his response for those who hadn't read the whole conversation. Here's what he said:

I can’t say I’ve ever seen one, but yes, I do believe in ghosts. I guess my closest experience with the “other side” was a few days after my mother died. She had given me a metal sculpture of a boat on the ocean and if you wound it up, the boat would ride the waves and music would play. I kept it in my bedroom, but I hadn’t wound it up in months, so it had been both motionless and silent in all that time. Then one night while I was in bed, staring at the ceiling a few days after she had died, it started up all on its own. I knew it was her, letting me know she was okay.

RIP, David B. Silva

I learned just a few hours ago that David B. Silva passed away earlier this week. He was 62 years old. I'm not really sure what else to say about it. It fucking sucks. It sucks when anyone dies, but especially those friends and family close to you. Dave wasn't just a veteran of the horror field, he was a legend. I guess it would be best to simply share with you his bio:

David B. Silva’s first short story was published in 1981. His short fiction has since appeared in The Year’s Best Horror, The Year’s Best Fantasy & Horror, and The Best American Mystery Stories. In 1991, he won a Bram Stoker Award for his short story, “The Calling.” His first collection, Through Shattered Glass, was published by Gauntlet Press in 2001. In 2009, Dark Regions published his collection of eleven new stories and one reprint, The Shadows of Kingston Mills. His novels include All the Lonely People, Child of Darkness, Come Thirteen, The Disappeared, The Presence, and The Many.

He is probably best known as the editor of The Horror Show, which was published quarterly from 1982 to 1991. This small-press horror magazine won a World Fantasy Award in 1988 and went on to publish the first early works of some of today’s most talented and influential horror authors, such as Bentley Little, Brian Hodge, and Poppy Z. Brite.

Silva also co-edited (with Paul F. Olson) two anthologies published by St. Martins Press: Post Mortem and Dead End: City Limits. In addition, he edited The Definitive Best of The Horror Show, published by CD Publications in 1992.

From February 1997 until September 2002, and from late 2004 until the present, Silva has served as editor of Hellnotes. Originally a weekly subscription newsletter dedicated to the horror professional and horror fan alike, Hellnotes was recently purchased by JournalStone Publishing and is currently a free blog, updated several times a day by Silva with latest news in the horror genre.

Anybody familiar with this blog knows just how much I loved Dave's work. I must admit, The Horror Show was before my time, but in high school I read several issues of Cemetery Dance, which I later learned had been inspired by The Horror Show. In fact, when Jesus Gonzalez showed me some past issues of The Horror Show, it was clear that CD had used it as a model -- the layout, formatting, everything.

The Horror Show was groundbreaking and seminal and it launched the careers of so many writers. Talk to any horror writer over forty years old and they're apt to tell you just how much The Horror Show influenced them. In many ways, it helped shape and nurture the horror genre as it is today.

I don't remember exactly what my first David B. Silva story was. I think maybe it was "Dry Whiskey," or maybe it was "The Calling." Whatever it was, I remember being blown away and instantly knowing I needed to read more of his work. There are few writers out there that inspired me as much as Dave's short fiction did. I looked everywhere for his stuff. And this was before ebooks, so most of his stuff was out of print. I managed to track down his chapbook "The Night in Fog" and I managed to get my hands on a promotional copy of his amazing collection Through Shattered Glass. While I read and enjoyed a few of his novels, it was his short fiction that really shined for me, that always made me want to step up my game.

How we ended up in touch, I can't remember. Obviously it was me who contacted him, probably to tell him how much I enjoyed his work. Then, later, when I was helping edit Flesh & Blood magazine, I asked him if he would be willing to submit a story -- and was thrilled when he said yes. Unfortunately, I can't remember what that story was called; F&B folded before it ever came out. I do remember reading the story and loving it but thinking there could be one slight change. It was really nothing major -- there was mention of a character passing by a movie theater, and the movies on the marquee were The Lord of the Rings and Cheaper by the Dozen. I felt those titles would eventually make the story dated, and suggested he change the titles, perhaps make them something by Hitchcock or something else that was old, as if the theater was showing classic movies.

The reason I remember this so clearly is because I was very hesitant to ask Dave to make this minor change. I mean, just who the hell did I think I was asking him to change anything about his story? He was David B. Fucking Silva. The man behind The Horror Show. One of my all-time favorite short story writers. Who was I to ask him to do anything?

But I took a chance and sent Dave the request and he replied saying sure, no problem at all, that made sense, and I realized that along with being a great writer, Dave was a true professional through and through.

When I wrote my first novel, The Calling, I contacted several writers asking if they would take a look and, if they enjoyed it enough, to possibly provide a blurb. The idea was to use these blurbs when querying agents. Dave was kind enough to agree to look at the book. After a few weeks, or maybe it was a month or more, he sent along a short blurb. I was thrilled, of course, but I could tell the blurb wasn't overly enthusiastic, just a sentence or two about the book, so I asked him if he had any comments or suggestions to make the book better. He was hesitant at first -- the reason, apparently, that many young writers in the past got angry when they were told they weren't the greatest living writers in the world -- but eventually we began a back and forth about the book, and it was one of those priceless learning experiences that every writer should be so blessed to receive. Dave didn't have to look at the book to begin with, and he certainly didn't have to give me his feedback, but he took the time and because of it I learned what I was doing wrong and how to fix those mistakes. (It's also one of the reasons why I dedicated my latest book, Real Illusions, to Dave, along with Stewart O'Nan, with these three words: inspiration, guidance, friendship.)

A few years later, I was in Las Vegas for a wedding. Dave happened to live in Vegas. I took a chance and emailed saying if he had time, it would be cool to get together. Dave was normally pretty shy; he almost never went to conventions or conferences, and I'm sure meeting up with a young writer who he'd never officially met wasn't his first choice on how to spend the day. But for some reason he agreed. We had breakfast at Kahunaville, one of the restaurant at the Treasure Island Hotel & Casino, and we talked about writing and books and just the usual stuff writers talk about when they get together. It was a great time.

We stayed in better contact after that. Sometimes we spoke on the phone. Oftentimes we communicated via Gmail chat. He had started releasing his stuff on Kindle and encouraged me to do the same. We bounced different marketing ideas off each other. At some point, I had the crazy idea to collaborate on a project. I figured it would be a novella and that we could do a blog-to-blog serialization, where one week I would post a chapter, then next week he would post a chapter, and so on. I said I thought it would be fun. He said he thought so too. And so we started working on what would eventually become a weird western short novel called Walk the Sky. We also collaborated on a ghost story -- "At the Meade Bed & Breakfast" -- which was basically just Dave taking an old story of mine and rewriting it and then me taking that rewrite and polishing it a bit.

Walk the Sky was just released by Thunderstorm Books as a limited edition a few weeks ago. Dave and I were gearing up to release the paperback and ebook late next month. Like all writers, we were nervous but looking forward to the release, hoping readers would dig it.

Like many writers, Dave's financial situation wasn't the greatest, and his health had been declining. There was a time a few months ago when he wasn't online, and when I tried calling there had been no answer. It turned out he had been in the hospital for nearly a week.

A few weeks ago his website had gone down. I called to see if he was okay and he mentioned how funds were pretty tight. So this past week or two when I hadn't seen him online I thought maybe it had to do with his financial situation. I tried calling him yesterday but there was no answer. This morning I woke up and had one of those bad feelings you sometimes get, and I wondered if something did happen to Dave, how would I find out? The pessimistic in me immediately thought the worst, and I tried not thinking about it for most of the day until I finally had a chance to call Dave again. This time someone did answer. It wasn't Dave, but a female voice (his sister), and immediately I knew either one of two things had happened: Dave had died or he was in the hospital.

I had my fingers crossed that it was the latter.

As it turned out, it was the former.

David B. Silva was a veteran and legend of the horror field. He was an amazing writer. Most importantly, he was a great friend.

You will be missed, Dave.

My Twitter Story

Many years ago, I thought Twitter was a waste of time. In fact, I thought all social media was stupid. Now, of course, I've changed my tune, at least in terms of Twitter, which I use all the time. Facebook I don't care much about, but I sometimes leave updates (usually something that I'll copy and paste from Twitter). Google +, while I still have an account, is something I haven't checked in months. Anyway, when I first started Twitter, I knew it would be pointless to just start tweeting as I had no followers, so I decided to begin my Twitter adventure by telling a story. I started it on April 13, 2009 (this was right around the time Hint Fiction was "born"). As you can see if you click that link (I tried to embed it but for some reason WordPress wouldn't allow it), it was the first line of a story -- a story that, to this day, remains titleless. I ended the story fourteen days later. Overall, it took 88 tweets. And thanks to the wonderful feature of Twitter Archives, that story has now been found. I've added it below and haven't touched a thing. Each paragraph represents its own tweet. Enjoy.

Hard to believe just two days he was a larva, but now here he is, a fully grown housefly, buzzing through a suburban neighborhood.

The smells here are incredible -- freshly mowed grass, chicken grilling on a barbeque, flowers, and, the most perfect smell of all, trash.

A breeze picks up, volleying him into the air just as a car comes speeding his way, its music blaring and smoke chugging from its exhaust.

He hovers in the air for a moment, just hanging there as if by a thread as he watches the car, when a sweet scent catches his attention.

It's coming from the house to his left, a large two-story with blue trim, and with that sweet scent calling to him, he hurries that way.

Across the lawn, skimming over the grass, zigzagging through daffodils, and then up, up, up to the opened kitchen window.

A tray of freshly-baked brownies sits on the counter just behind the screen, the brown surface stretched and cracked like a desert.

Suddenly he hears a voice inside saying, "Uh-huh, yeah, I mean, like I know," and a teenage girl appears, a cell phone to her ear.

She grabs a set of keys off a hook on the wall, saying, "See, that's exactly what I told him," and disappears from view, her voice fading.

It's just the empty kitchen again, the freshly-baked brownies, and no hole big enough in the screen for him to squeeze through.

Rusty hinges cry out as a door opens somewhere, and then he can hear the girl's voice again, coming from around the house.

"I don't know, like five or five-thirty, okay?" She snaps the phone shut as she walks toward a yellow car ... but then stops.

Her shoulders fall, her head drops, and she mutters, "Shit." Then she's turning, heading back toward the house, and at once he's flying.

His translucent wings buzzing, hearing those rusty hinges crying out again, he flies, pushing himself harder, making himself go faster.

Around the corner, the screen door already on its downward arc, he pushes himself as hard as he can ... and slips inside just in time.

Now in the kitchen, more scents invade his senses -- both sweet and acrid -- but he focuses only on the brownies on the counter.

He almost reaches them -- the cracked brown desert so very close -- when that familiar voice shouts: "Ew, gross!" Then: "Da-aaad!"

He lands on the counter just inches away from the brownies, turned toward the girl standing only a few feet away, watching him.

A man hurries into the kitchen. "What -- what it is?"

"A disgusting fly, right there," she says, the tip of a pink fingernail pointed at him.

The man sighs. "I wonder how that got in here. Couldn't possibly have anything to do with you coming and going through the door so much."

"I forgot my lip gloss, so sue me. Would you just kill it? I'm in a hurry." Before the man can respond, she says, "Thanks!" and leaves.

The brownies are close to him now -- so very close -- it is almost as if he can taste them.

Twelve inches away, eight inches, six, moving closer and closer --

-- until he senses movement behind him and lifts off into the air an instant before the TWACK! of the rolled-up newspaper hits the counter.

He flies to the refrigerator and lands on the cool surface, crouched right between the magnets of an apple and a banana.

The man with the rolled-up newspaper stands motionless, slowly moving his head around on his neck.

He stops then, waits a moment, and begins to take one slow step after another toward the refrigerator.

The man comes closer, raising the rolled-up newspaper almost imperceptibly above his head, seven steps away, six steps, five ...

He waits an instant before the newspaper strikes the fridge before lifting off into the air, buzzing to the left, then to the right.

Cursing, the man swings at him, again and again, but he is able to dodge each blow -- until, suddenly, he's knocked out of the air.

He hits the floor hard, lays there stunned. Above him, the man says, "Goddamn pain in my ass. That girl and her mother both."

His one wing buzzes, but he can't move the other. He tries to crawl but can't seem to do that either.

"I provide and provide, and what do I get?" The man shakes his head. "I get walked all over." He steps forward, raises the paper high.

The other wing, it starts buzzing again, and then he's up in the air, shooting between the man's legs.

"Son of a bitch," the man mutters, turning and taking a swipe at him with the newspaper, but he dodges it and keeps going.

Out of the kitchen, through the dining room and into the living room, never pausing to look back.

The TV is on and there is an opened bag of potato chips on an end table. Tempting, yes, but he can hear the man's footsteps behind him.

A staircase is off to his left, and immediately he shoots for it, following the steps all the way to the second floor.

He pauses at the top, waiting for the man to give chase. The man doesn't. He just mumbles something and sits down in his chair.

He doesn't move from the top of the stairs for a long time. Behind him, down the hallway, is the sound of running water. He flies toward it.

The sound is coming from behind a door. Along with the running water he can hear a woman humming.

Curious, he buzzes along the edges of the door, trying to find an entrance. There's an opening near the floor, very tight.

He slips underneath the door and into a steamy bathroom. The humming is coming from a woman in the shower.

He flies up and lands on the towel rack. The woman's humming, it's a pleasant sound, one he's never heard before but likes very much.

Suddenly the humming stops. So does the water.

There's a moment when nothing happens -- complete stillness -- and then the curtain is yanked open and there the woman stands, naked.

She wipes the water off her body, then starts to step out of the shower, reaching for her towel ... which he's crouched on.

He doesn't want to move but knows he has to and lifts off at the last moment, and the woman, seeing him, let's out a quick yelp.

Her foot slips on the tiled floor and her arms fly out and then she's falling to the floor, her head striking the side of the tub.

Again, stillness. And coming from under her head, a growing line of blood.

At once he flies down toward the floor, lands on her nose. He can't tell whether she's still breathing. That line of blood grows longer.

A moment passes before he lifts off into the air, heads back toward that tight space at the bottom of the door.

He slips through, then immediately buzzes back down the steps to the first floor. The man still sits in his chair, laughing at the TV.

The TV is very loud. He flies directly at the man's face. "Son of a bitch," the man says, trying to wave him away.

The man reaches for the rolled-up newspaper beside him, takes a wild swing. He manages to dodge it, then dodge another swing.

"Come here," the man says, swinging and swinging. At one point the man almost hits him but he ducks under the blow, staying in the air.

"Goddamn nuisance," the man says, almost spits. His face is red, he's having trouble breathing. "Filthy, disgusting piece of shit."

He leads the man toward the stairs, pausing on a lamp shade, pausing on the banister, then buzzing back and forth on the walls.

The man chases him, his teeth clenched, mumbling curses under his breath.

Up the steps to the second floor, down the hallway to the bathroom, he pauses on the door to make sure the man sees him. The man does.

The man steps forward, raising the rolled-up newspaper, and he shoots off the door to the space near the floor, squeezes through.

The woman is still unconscious on the floor. The line of blood has grown into a pool. Beyond the door, the man mumbles another loud curse.

"Honey," he calls, "do you see that dirty son of a bitch?"

The pool of blood continues to grow.

"Honey?" the man says, sounding quizzical now. He knocks. "Can you hear me?"

Another moment of silence and then the man opens the door, steps inside, and at once the rolled-up newspaper falls from his clenched hand.

"Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God," he says quickly, falling to his knees, taking the woman's head in his hands.

He looks around frantic, then suddenly stands, runs out of the bathroom. He follows the man down the hallway into the bedroom.

The man already has the phone in his hand, is dialing some numbers, saying, "Ambulance, please, I need an ambulance."

He leaves the man to the phone and returns to the bathroom. Lands on the woman's nose again. Senses that she's still alive, but barely.

The man returns. Tears are in his eyes. The man notices him on the woman's nose and reaches down shouting, "Get away!"

He flies up into the air, out of the man's reach. It doesn't matter anyway. The man ignores him, dropping to his knees again.

He cradles his wife's head, kisses her on the forehead. "They'll be here soon," he murmurs. "They'll be here soon."

He watches this from his place on the wall, right beside the mirror. The man, as if sensing his presence, looks up.

"What are you looking at?" he says, then wipes his nose with the back of his hand. "Get out of here! Get!"

He waits a moment, just a moment, then flies out of the bathroom. Back down the hallway, down the stairs, toward the kitchen.

The brownies are still there. He lands on the very edge of the pan, rubs his legs together. Starts forward when that screen door opens.

"I know," the girl says, talking on her cell phone again, "I can't believe I forgot my ID either, but, I mean, shit, I need it."

He freezes as she rummages in a drawer, her shoulder raised keeping the phone to her ear. Upstairs, the man calls: "Dana, is that you?"

"Shit, my dad's calling me," she says into the phone, then yells: "What do you want?"

The man's voice, strained: "Come up here. Quickly."

"I'm in a hurry, sorry!" the girl says, and the man yells, "Your mother is hurt!" The girl pauses, then says, "I'll call you back."

She hurries upstairs right away, leaving him with the brownies ... and the sound of the screen door whining shut.

He pauses, looking at the brownies, at the door, at the brownies again. He rubs his legs together once more and then lifts off into the air.

He flies, as fast as he can, and manages to slip through the crack between the door and the frame just before it closes.

Outside now, the wind picks up and he can smell even more scents, all of them wonderful and tempting.

He hovers for a moment, hanging in the air as if by a thread, warming in the sun, and then he moves off toward the sweetest one.

In Which Paul Goblirsch And I Discuss Thunderstorm Books And More

Paul Goblirsch, publisher of Thunderstorm Books, took some time out of his busy schedule to chat with me about the small press, limited editions, and more. And hey, listen to the very end to find out how you -- yes, you -- can win a copy of Walk the Sky. Here's a hint: you'll need to check out this page. Enjoy!

In Which Paul Goblirsch And I Discuss Thunderstorm Books And More