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Manhattan On Mars – Horror Author Brian Keene Launches His Own Publishing Imprint [Interview]

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For over two decades, author Brian Keene has given fans stories filled with zombies (The Rising series), massive man-eating earthworms (the Earthworm Gods series), an occult detective (the Levi Stotzfus series), a well-meaning serial killer (“I Am An Exit”, The Complex and more), and numerous other tales of horror, dark fantasy and crime fiction.

A World Horror Grandmaster and two-time Bram Stoker Award winner, Keene has also written comic books (including works for DC and Marvel), worked on the board of the Scares That Care charity, acted as showrunner for the audio series Silverwood: The Door, and hosted the popular podcast The Horror Show with Brian Keene.

Now, Keene is embarking on the biggest move of his career – launching his own publishing imprint, Manhattan On Mars Press. To discuss this new and significant development for the writer, Mr. Keene was kind enough to field a few questions from Bloody Disgusting to fill in fans and readers on what’s coming up next.


Bloody Disgusting: You’ve said this is one of the biggest moves (if not the biggest move) of your career thus far. Can you tell readers a bit about what’s happening with Brian Keene these days?

Brian Keene: I began getting published in 1997. Those early efforts were all in indie and small press publications. But by 2001 I was splitting my work between mainstream publishing and the small press, and that’s pretty much how I’ve kept things for the last twenty years. I’d release things through the Big Five (or Big Three, depending on how whether or not the New York publishers have gobbled each other up some more by the time this interview comes out), and I’d also release things through the small press and indie press. I’ve kept one foot firmly in both camps. Now, I’m slowly removing my feet from both and standing on my own.

BD: What led you to first consider launching an imprint?

BK: J.F. Gonzalez and I had often talked about doing this, but we were both of a generation where making this sort of transition was seen as crazy talk. So we never did. But even after he died, the idea was there in the back of my brain, gnawing and gnawing. And I started watching authors younger than me, whom I admire, and the success they were having making the plunge. Two of them are thriller writer Robert Swartwood and horror/sci-fi writer Stephen Kozeniewski. They were who finally convinced me to make the move. Rob got me to see that with the size of my audience and fan base, it was ridiculous not to do this.

For the entirety of my career, other companies — big and small — have had partial ownership of my rights and my intellectual properties. And these days, IP is king. These corporations aren’t paying for books or films or comics or video games. They’re paying for IP. I want to fully own my IP again. Now, obviously, I’m not talking about the properties I’ve worked on for others — stuff like Aliens, Doctor Who, The X-Files and all of the Marvel and DC Comics stuff. That’s somebody else’s IP and I was paid to play with it. But I’ve got over fifty books and over three hundred short stories of my own. Why should somebody else get a cut of those profits and a share of the ownership when the technology and infrastructure exists for me to produce them myself and get them into stores and the hands of readers?

And I should stress, I have a great relationship with most of my current publishers. But when I reached out to each of them individually and told them this was the direction I wanted to go, they all understood. They get it. This is what’s best for my remaining years, and for my sons.

And that’s what it comes down to, really. My sons. I turn fifty-five this week, and while I’m in relatively good health (despite the misadventures of my first fifty years), I can also hear that mortality clock ticking. I don’t plan on leaving yet, but most of us don’t really get a say in that, you know? Surprises happen. When I’m gone, I don’t want the executor of my literary estate having to chase down royalty checks from twenty different sources, and I don’t want my sons to have to share my intellectual property with a bunch of other people. By bringing everything in house, they’ll have total control over all of that.

BD: Will there be both physical and e-book editions of the imprint’s titles? Are they going to be available in bookstores?

BK: Yep, hardcover, paperback, and eBooks. The only thing I won’t do is signed limited edition hardcovers and audiobooks. Both of those require an entirely different infrastructure and I’m happy to allow others to continue to produce them. But everything else will — in time — be published through Manhattan On Mars. They’ll be available in bookstores and online. There’s a multi-phase plan. Phase one, which will take several years, is to slowly get all the rights reverted back to me, and then bring everything out through the imprint. That has already begun, but I can’t stress enough — I’m doing it slowly. I recognize and am sympathetic to how this impacts my publishers financially, and booksellers as well, and the last thing I want to do is crash the system. So it’s a very slow, methodical process.

During that time, everything will be done through KDP and Ingram. But once all the rights are back in house and under the Manhattan On Mars imprint, I’ll move to offset printing, with my own warehousing and distribution. That way I can offer bookstores returns, and negotiate price and discounts with them directly, rather than through an intermediary. That will be Phase two. But again, this is a year’s long process. We’re talking seven to ten years between then and now.

BD: Can you discuss the name of the imprint, and its meaning to you?

BK: Manhattan On Mars is sort of a two-fold thing. Mainstream publishing is traditionally headquartered in Manhattan. But the other aspect is a vibe from one of my favorite comic series — Watchmen. You know when Doctor Manhattan gets tired of all the bullshit and the headaches and the drama and he’s like “Why am I still here? I should just fuck off to Mars and do my own thing.” And then he does.

It’s incredibly empowering and freeing to come to the realization that you can do just that. You can do that very thing. I’ve often wondered if Alan Moore was feeling the same way when he wrote that scene. Given that he walked away from mainstream comics a few years after, I like to think he might have. (laughs)

BD: You’ve said that the imprint will encompass all of your back catalogue, in addition to your new works. When can we expect the first title from your imprint – and will it be new, or a reprint?

BK: The first one came out last week. It’s a reprint of Sundancing — a book that hasn’t been in print since 2012 and was previously only published as a signed limited edition. Next up will be the inaugural paperback and digital release of Submerged: The Labyrinth Book 2, as well as a brand-new short story collection and a reprint of Leader of the Banned. Those are the four on deck before year’s end. Next year, I’ll start ramping things up more.

BD: Is your imprint due to be devoted solely to your own works, or will it include titles from other authors? New or reprints, if so?

BK: Just my stuff. I don’t want to be responsible for anyone else’s money or intellectual property. And I should note, none of my collaborations — stuff like the Clickers books with J.F. Gonzalez or the Bastards series with Steven L. Shrewsbury or The Damned Highway with Nick Mamatas — will fall under the Manhattan On Mars umbrella. I don’t want to be responsible for half of their royalties, and I don’t want a situation where, thirty years down the road, I’m dead and Nick is dead, and our sons are debating who got paid. I started the imprint because it as what is best for me and my loved ones. But what’s best for my friends and collaborators and their loved ones is that those books continue to stay with publishers who can divvy everything up fairly.

BD: Beyond your imprint – what’s next for Brian Keene? What would you like readers to know?

BK: My novella The Cage was just optioned for a feature length film, but I’m not allowed to say any more about that. I really like the team, and everyone involved, however, and I have very high hopes for it. Lot of other movie stuff in the works, too, but in truth, I’ve learned not to talk about any of it until production actually starts. The only thing Hollywood loves more than jumping on trends is to option things and then never do anything with them. (laughs)

Other than that, just writing every day. I can’t complain. I grew up a fan of the horror genre. And now I’m lucky enough to make my living giving back to that genre and helping to guide and shape it. That’s a great honor, and a fantastic job. But from now on, I get to do it from Mars. And I don’t think that’s a bad thing. There’s an inherent danger in being too close or too involved in something you love. Consider a person who loves bacon and sausage. Then they get a job at a slaughterhouse and over time, they can’t stomach bacon and sausage anymore. Sometimes, a little distance keeps the love blooming.


Visit Brian Keene on the web at http://www.briankeene.com.

Books

‘Halloween: Illustrated’ Review: Original Novelization of John Carpenter’s Classic Gets an Upgrade

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Film novelizations have existed for over 100 years, dating back to the silent era, but they peaked in popularity in the ’70s and ’80s, following the advent of the modern blockbuster but prior to the rise of home video. Despite many beloved properties receiving novelizations upon release, a perceived lack of interest have left a majority of them out of print for decades, with desirable titles attracting three figures on the secondary market.

Once such highly sought-after novelization is that of Halloween by Richard Curtis (under the pen name Curtis Richards), based on the screenplay by John Carpenter and Debra Hill. Originally published in 1979 by Bantam Books, the mass market paperback was reissued in the early ’80s but has been out of print for over 40 years.

But even in book form, you can’t kill the boogeyman. While a simple reprint would have satisfied the fanbase, boutique publisher Printed in Blood has gone above and beyond by turning the Halloween novelization into a coffee table book. Curtis’ unabridged original text is accompanied by nearly 100 new pieces of artwork by Orlando Arocena to create Halloween: Illustrated.

One of the reasons that The Shape is so scary is because he is, as Dr. Loomis eloquently puts it, “purely and simply evil.” Like the film sequels that would follow, the novelization attempts to give reason to the malevolence. More ambiguous than his sister or a cult, Curtis’ prologue ties Michael’s preternatural abilities to an ancient Celtic curse.

Jumping to 1963, the first few chapters delve into Michael’s childhood. Curtis hints at a familial history of evil by introducing a dogmatic grandmother, a concerned mother, and a 6-year-old boy plagued by violent nightmares and voices. The author also provides glimpses at Michael’s trial and his time at Smith’s Grove Sanitarium, which not only strengthens Loomis’ motivation for keeping him institutionalized but also provides a more concrete theory on how Michael learned to drive.

Aside from a handful of minor discrepancies, including Laurie stabbing Michael in his manhood, the rest of the book essentially follows the film’s depiction of that fateful Halloween night in 1978 beat for beat. Some of the writing is dated like a smutty fixation on every female character’s breasts and a casual use of the R-word but it otherwise possesses a timelessness similar to its film counterpart. The written version benefits from expanded detail and enriched characters.

The addition of Arocena’s stunning illustrations, some of which are integrated into the text, creates a unique reading experience. The artwork has a painterly quality to it but is made digitally using vectors. He faithfully reproduces many of Halloween‘s most memorable moments, down to actor likeness, but his more expressionistic pieces are particularly striking.

The 224-page hardcover tome also includes an introduction by Curtis who details the challenges of translating a script into a novel and explains the reasoning behind his decisions to occasionally subvert the source material and a brief afterword from Arocena.

Novelizations allow readers to revisit worlds they love from a different perspective. It’s impossible to divorce Halloween from the film’s iconography Carpenter’s atmospheric direction and score, Dean Cundey’s anamorphic cinematography, Michael’s expressionless mask, Jamie Lee Curtis’ star-making performance but Halloween: Illustrated paints a vivid picture in the mind’s eye through Curtis’ writing and Arocena’s artwork.

Halloween: Illustrated is available now.

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