Welcome to night two of the Dead Roses Special week.
Tonight sees the first author interview with the
fantastic Edward Lorn. He will be answering some general questions about
himself and his writing and then some specific questions about Cinder Block,
his story in the book.
Of course, at the end, Edward will take on The Ten
Confessions!
Grab your drink, settle down with a HUGE pepperoni and salami pizza (that's exactly what I'm having now!).......and enjoy!
COAF - So tell everyone a bit about yourself in general?
EL - I’m a husband and a father. I’ve been with my wife for
fifteen years, and my kids are, currently, nine and two, but they both have
birthdays coming up in April. My family is the best thing about me.
COAF - Why writing? Why decide on that as a career?
EL - I have a face for radio and a voice for writing. Besides,
how else am I to get people to pay me for lying to them? But, on a serious
note, who wouldn’t choose writing as a career, you know, given the option? If
you could get paid to make shit up all day, wouldn’t you?
COAF - Cruelty is a series of yours with a rather interesting
murderer. How did you come up with the idea for this and the continuing ideas
to sustain the series?
EL - Baby dolls scare me. Some people are afraid of clowns;
I’m afraid of dolls. The problem with that is, dolls are notoriously small.
Nothing to be scared of, really. So I decided to create a killer that was
literally a life-sized baby doll. Then I named it Cruelty and gave it a
fondness for dismemberment. Cute, right?
COAF - Take us through your process for a story. How do you
start it and follow through to the final product?
EL - I start writing and don’t stop until I’m finished. I’m
not trying to be funny, either. That’s honestly my process. Whatever comes out,
comes out. More often than not, what comes out isn’t fit for anything but the
bin, but now and again I’ll get lucky and it will be something of which I’m
proud. I find that if you question too hard where your inspiration comes from,
your muse takes it as a cue that you want to play a game of Hide and Go Fuck
Yourself.
COAF - What’s the most difficult part of writing for you?
EL - The actual act of writing. I’ve had four back surgeries
since 2005 (one every three years) and sitting in a chair for more than an hour
is murder on my moneymaker. I’ve been known to put myself in the emergency room
with my writing marathons. I don’t notice the pain while I’m writing, and see
no reason to stop. But once I snap out of that trance, brother, I’m toast.
COAF - I know you have a Stephen King novel as your number one
in your top twenty but who are some of your favourite authors or authors you
would consider to be influential in your writing?
EL - Richard Laymon taught me a great deal about pacing. I
don’t think I’ve ever been bored while reading one of his novels. I took a
great deal of my character development cues from Robert McCammon and Dean
Koontz (back when Koontz didn’t write the same novel every year). Bentley
Little and Stephen Laws are two more that helped me along the way. My personal
favorite right now is Joe Hill. I’m really looking forward to The Fireman.
COAF - Do you prefer short stories or full length novels?
Which do you think you get more out of?
EL - I love writing short stories, but prefer to read novels.
I think that might stem from a bit of performance anxiety. I’m always terrified
I’ve gone on too long. And then I get comments from readers about how they
wished [insert story title here] were longer.
COAF - Do you ever regret telling the story about your
“fictional” brother dying when you were in school, aged 7? What did you get out
of that?
EL - Nah, I never regret it. It’s part of who I was, who I am.
I told that story because I like garnering reactions from people. Even if
someone hates my work, at least I inspired that hatred. I did that. I caused
that. Maybe that sounds like the ramblings of an unstable mind, but I like
knowing I can affect people. And I’m a bit of an attention whore. I’m better
nowadays, but when I was a kid, it was all about “Look at me! Look at me!”
COAF - What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
EL - Minecraft and audiobooks. Both. At the same time. That’s
probably my favorite thing right now. Has been for the past year. It allows me
to decompress.
COAF - What’s coming in the future from Edward Lorn?
EL - The final episode of Cruelty is on the horizon. I have
some rewrites I need to wrap up, so people can look forward to that come
mid-April… if not sooner. The second novel in my Larry Laughlin series should
finally be seeing the light of day this Spring. That one’s titled Pennies for the Damned and will be
coming out courtesy of Red Adept Publishing. I also have another short story
collection that will drop this year, and I’ve submitted two new novels to
publishers.
COAF - Moving on to Dead Roses, give us your take on Cinder Block. What did you want it
to convey?
EL - All too often sociopaths and psychopaths are confused
with one another. Yeah, they both can commit murder without compunction, but
their minds function differently. Psychopaths plan, while sociopaths are
spontaneous. It is also believed that psychopaths are born the way they are,
while sociopaths are born out of environment. While doing a little background
study on sociopaths, I found out two rather interesting facts. Sociopaths do
not “love” the same way the rest of society does. Their idea of love is
ownership. “This is mine. I love it because it is mine.” I thought that fit the
theme of “twisted love” that Evans and the rest of the crew was shooting for. And,
finally, most sociopaths see nothing wrong with how they act or what they do,
while a psychopath will try not to get caught. That interested me very much.
COAF - Toby certainly had a psychotic anger in him. How do you
switch your mind from husband and father to your character’s mind to portray
the evil? Does it come easy?
EL - We’ve all been so angry that we’ve wanted to break
something we don’t really want to see broken. The moment overcomes us, we just
happen to be holding something heavy, that something heavy gets flung across
the room, and BAM! Grandma’s glamor shot is nothing but shattered glass and
regret. I think Toby is simply a more extreme version of that knee-jerk
reaction. He was mad, and nothing in his general vicinity was safe.
COAF - When I read this story I was struck by the way you
manage to get the reader to almost know everything about Toby and how he
thinks, acts and his psyche and make up in very little words. How do you do
this? Do you find it more difficult in a short story?
EL - The most interesting part of all of us is our faults.
Beauty and perfection and societal norms are boring. Our flaws make us who we
are. I think all character development comes down to finding the right flaw and
shining a light on it. It makes the reader think, “Oh, this guy’s not perfect.
Hell, he’s a bit like me, or this other someone I know, or this friend or
family member.” Perfection is not relatable because it doesn’t exist in
society. Show me ugly, show me insanity, show me different, and I’ll show you a
story.
COAF - Again when reading this, the effectiveness of the
“crime scene” and the manner in which it was carried out was fantastic while
being a bit minimalistic. Why take this approach instead of say, an all-out blood
fest?
EL - It’s the age-old cheat of letting the reader create the
horror. I give you the tools and point you in the right direction, but you have
to do the rest. Two of the most horrific scenes I’ve ever written were truly
rather sparse. One of them is in Bay’s
End and the other is in Hope for the
Wicked. I give the reader very little information, but reviews swear up and
down that I gave the most graphic descriptions. I didn’t. But it makes me smile
that they think I did. I’d like to sit down with those people and pick their
brains. I think their caverns are much darker than mine.
COAF - I’m interested to know if any of the characters in this
story are based on real people?
EL - Everybody in my stories are based on real people.
Everybody. And that’s all I can say on the subject.
THE
TEN CONFESSIONS
1 Who would you view as your main competitor in the
writing world?
Gregor Xane. Watch out for that guy.
2 What book or author have you read that you think should
never have been published?
Hitler.
3 Are any of the things your characters have experienced
in your books been based on something that has actually happened to you? What
was it?
They are too numerous to list. I would hazard a guess
that everything in my work has either happened to me or someone I know. Aside
from the supernatural stuff, of course.
4 Have you ever blatantly stolen an idea or scene and
adapted it for one of your own books? If so, care to share?
Not consciously. I once tried to copy a Hardy Boy’s book
when I was six or seven, but I grew bored after the second line. I’ve been
writing my own content ever since.
5 Have you ever anonymously left a bad review for someone
else’s book? If so, care to share?
No. I’ve left plenty of negative reviews on the interwebs
and they all bear my name.
6 What’s the one thing you are least proud of doing in
your life and why?
I had a rather nasty bout with drug addiction before I
met my wife. I don’t like to recall those days. I made quite a few enemies of
good people, and I wish I hadn’t let them down.
7 What’s the one thing you are MOST proud of doing in
your life and why?
Being a father.
8 What’s your biggest fault?
My ego.
9 What is your biggest fear?
That can actually hurt me? Spiders. If we’re going with
irrational fears, I’ll take dolls for $1000, Alex.
10 If you had to go to confession now, what would be the
one thing you would need to get off your chest?
My bra.
THE END
My huge thanks to Edward for agreeing to take part in this interview and for giving up his valuable time to provide this insight into the man behind the stories.
Check out all of E's other books below. You won't be disappointed. The man can seriously write.........and he's a top dude as well!
Check out all of E's other books below. You won't be disappointed. The man can seriously write.........and he's a top dude as well!
You can see more of Edward at his website.
Edward's author page is here.
Don't forget to come back tomorrow for night three when I will have another interview for you in this Dead Roses Special, this time with Jason Parent.
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