
Happy Godzilla Day and 70 years of Skreonk!!! Long live the King.
–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

Happy Godzilla Day and 70 years of Skreonk!!! Long live the King.
–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

Behind the Shadows, 10 tales of terror by yours truly is ’round the bend and Quantum Demonology author Sheila Eggenberger has this to say about it:
“Pick your shivers. Any shivers. Ghosts? Zombies? Things Unmentionable in daylight? Whatever your preferred chills, shivers and icy winds down your spine, Ray Van Horn, Jr. has you dangerously uncovered and quaking in your armchair at a steady 150 mph in his new collection of short stories, Behind the Shadows. They’re guaranteed to leave you both quaking, shaking and emphatically stirred.”
Behind the Shadows, coming late 2024 from Raw Earth Ink.
–Ray Van Horn, Jr.



Yes, I’m still spinning Carpenter’s Halloween film scores this morning out of protest. Until next year, boils and ghouls…

–Photo by T.J. Perkins

Photo from The Shining 1980 courtesy of the public domain

Two more days… I remember when the original 1978 Halloween came out, I was living in Essex, MD and there was (and still is today, huzzah!) Bengie’s Drive-In Theater. We would pass the giant marquee advertising in bold letters: “HALLOWEEN.” Now, I don’t recall seeing the t.v. ads since I was only 8 eight years old, only that I figured it must have been a battle royale of classic monsters on Halloween night. Thus, I hocked the crap out my mom and stepdad to take me. True story!
They never caved, of course, and I laugh now at their faces I didn’t read for what they were until I became a parent myself and found myself in similar situations. I held the line with my kid to a certain timeframe, using my own path in horror exploration to what I felt was age appropriate. He dogs me all the time joking about it.
By the time I saw Carpenter’s original masterpiece, Halloween was coming on t.v. for the first time. Real deep fans of Michael Myers thus know there is a t.v. broadcast edit out there where some scenes were cut and 12 extra minutes were shot, including Jamie Lee Curtis wearing a towel over her head to hide her new crop. Best of all those t.v. only edits contained a deep probe into the sanitarium where little Michael was being held.

Let me tell you something, that scene creeped me out harder than the rest of the movie and I was on edge the entire way. To see a kid in my age bracket look utterly satanic like that! I happen to have a copy of the t.v. edit thanks to my dear friends, Jodi and Stan, two OG horror fiends like myself. By the time I saw the uncut version of Halloween, I was giddy at what I missed (P.J. Soles, looking at you, sister), but I also felt the sanitarium scenes could’ve been made part of an “Ultimate Cut” version.
Still my absolute favorite horror film EVER, Halloween 1978 has its flaws, and I tend to get surrounded with cynics eager to point them out, lol, but it’s the raw, primal fear factor John Carpenter shoved at us. He transformed a Hollywood neighborhood into a fictitious Midwestern terror zone and there is still nothing scarier than the initial WTF moments Mikey is stalking Jamie Lee before Carpenter takes his finger off the trigger long enough to leave you ripe for a Myers-style picking. You can’t kill The Boogeyman!
–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

The writing life…when the words burst most days, dam up on occasion. When you cheer on your colleagues, study the masters intently and chew on a healthy curd of envy you learn to eat in moderation lest it eats you in return. You gnaw through your failures and avoid temptation to respond to rejections. More often than not, there’s a growth opportunity in turndowns.
When format becomes as important as content. When you take a sip of your favorite drink to hide the sighs during comeuppance. When the marketing and networking supercedes your creative time. Giving your loved ones their just dues, even when you lose a day or night of work.
Rejoicing when you get that publication notice, dropping humble, fun, engaging interaction when being invited to be interviewed. Knowing how damn lucky you are even on a slow sales day when a reader travels far to buy your work based on name, or if you’re really lucky, newly vested friendship. Knowing an autograph is a sacred bond with someone who cares enough about your work to seek you out.
I love this chase as much as it pains me at times. I’m on my way up, however long it takes. I have felt both lonely and well in-arms with a wide world of fellow scribes who get me and vice versa. I pray my desire stays true until I have nothing left to give, having left my mark I some fashion that says I am a writer.
–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

Rad nab of the week. After seeing someone else post their finding of Chuck Cirino’s synth popping “robo beat” score to the 80s schlock classic, Chopping Mall, aka Killbots, I was able to track one down myself. I’ve wanted this one all these decades. Thank ya Waxwork Records! Have a nice day, lol.

—Halloween III: Season of the Witch photo courtesy of the public domain
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