Welcome:

Welcome to the site. I'm a scribbler of horror and other dark fictions, and my novels and stories have been published in the UK and the US for the last fifteen years. I currently live in India, having been in Scotland for over a decade. For most of that time I've been writing one thing or another. Hopefully some of it has entertained you, or soon will. Let me know.

Kudos:

"In a genre where some of the most respected voices can't seem to get past vampires and serial killers, Wright doles out startlingly original ideas like he's throwing stones. More importantly, he's knocking us upside the head with them and making us think in a very enjoyable way." - Louis Maistros, Chiaroscuro

Hiram Grange and the Chosen One

Poor Belfast.  If you think the city’s been through the ringer in the last forty years, you haven’t seen what Hiram’s going to do with it when he lands.

Yep, Kevin Lucia’s Hiram Grange and the Chosen One has now been released from Shroud Publishing, and is available from the publisher and Amazon (in the US – I’ll throw some links up when it appears on international sites).  Taking the opportunity to get Hiram out of America for a spell, Kev keeps up the action from the previous book, but spices it a little differently.  Where Rob delivered a techno-supernatural thriller, Chosen One serves up a tentacled extravaganza of old school horror.  Faeries (not your mother’s), damsels, possessions, shadowy figures in white playing manipulative games behind the scenes – and everyone, it seems, wants a piece of Hiram.  Illustrated by Malcolm McClinton, with woodcuts throughout from Danny Evarts.  It’s all here, so roll on up.

Which means, fact fans, that the next book in the series is mine, the series finale.  Coming soon, and all that.  This is probably a good time to point out that we’ve all worked very hard to make sure that each of the books stands alone.  You don’t have to start at book one and work your way through.  Obviously, we hope you do, and there are extra rewards if that’s how you play it, but you should also be able to jump into any book in the series and have yourself a very good time indeed.

And if you haven’t got them yet…

Hiram Grange and the Village of the Damned, by Jake Burrows.  Something wicked walks the streets of the picturesque New Hampshire village of Great Bay–something that has inexplicably risen from the grave to wreak a horrifying vengeance. Only one man can stop it–provided he can stay sober long enough to answer the call!

Grab a copy from the publisher, Horror Mall, Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.ca, and other Amazon sites internationally.

Hiram Grange and the Twelve Little Hitlers, by Scott Christian Carr.  Hitler has escaped. Twelve of them, to be precise, each cloned from the original and hiding in the bizarre American underground. Hiram Grange has been tasked with hunting them down. The only problem: he’s hit rock bottom. His worst binge ever — a mad dance with absinthe, opium and depression…

Grab a copy from the publisher, Horror Mall, Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.ca, and other Amazon sites internationally.

Hiram Grange and the Digital Eucharist, by Robert Davies.  From its global headquarters in Boston, the mysterious Occlusionist Movement is preparing to control the world with its Digital Eucharist, while in the serpentine bowels of the city an ancient demon is unleashed, eager for revenge against the man who imprisoned it years ago – Hiram Grange!

Grab a copy from the publisher, Horror Mall, Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.ca, and other sites internationally.

Top tip of the day – if you go and check out the publisher, you can get three of these for the price of two…

Wither Surpise

You know, with the release of the Hiram Grange books and the Dark Faith anthology, plus anticipating my own Hiram tale becoming available, the release of Withersin 3 slipped totally under my radar.  For some reason, I thought it was coming at the end of summer, so wasn’t even looking for it.

Then it arrived in New Delhi by post the other day, a splendid, eclectic thing, and took me completely by surprise.  Withersin has until now been a magazine, released in themed runs of three issues apiece.  It’s just about to shift to a paperback anthology format however, and the planned volume 3, comprising the issues Turpentine, Arsenic and  Iodine, has been amalgamated into one big digest volume ahead of this.  My story is in the Iodine issue, which makes up the centre of the magazine.  It’s called ‘Hermanesha’, and is a twisted relationship story covering twelve months in the lives of Herman (who has a knife), and Manesha (who is handcuffed to a bed).  I hope you’ll give it a try.

This is also my first time reading Withersin, and I’m enormously impressed with the magazine.  The above descriptive, ‘eclectic’, is carefully chosen, as it’s not quite what you normally expect from a horror magazine.  The stories and interviews are there, of course, but then there are the articles, which are a strange and surprising collection.  You probably don’t think you need to know about fortean showers, famous arsenic poisonings, actual werewolf sightings, flu embrocation recipes, trunko the sea monster, and more, but once you start flicking through it’s difficult to stop.  The magazine’s tagline is ‘A Fresh and Intelligent Change of Pace’, and it certainly is that.

Check it out.  You can even pick your preferred cover, from the three that were originally intended when it was scheduled to go out as three different issues.  I like Iodine, but then, I’m biased.

Withersin 3

Withersin 3 collects three planned issues of the eclectic magazine (Turpentine, Iodine, Arsenic) into one bumper, digest sized volume.  Features the short story Hermanesha, by Richard Wright (2010).

Order from the following stores:

Withersin

Horror Mall

Developing Hiram III – Graft and Craft

Here’s the third in a brief series of articles about the creation of the Hiram Grange novellas, currently being released by Shroud Publishing, and due to conclude soon with my own ‘Hiram Grange and the Nymphs of Krakow’.  You can find part one here, in which Tim from Shroud Publishing lures five writers to him, and here, in which babies are mercilessly (and metaphorically) slaughtered.

I don’t often talk in any detail about what I’m writing at a given time until I’ve actually written it. An idea is not a story.  Everyone has ideas, and everyone blurts them out, and they never sound as good on the tongue as they did in the blurters head.  A story is crafted over time, honed and sharpened, and if the writer knows his or her stuff, far less disappointing than the muddled notion it grew from.  Nothing makes me lose interest in my own ideas faster than telling somebody about them before the words are pinned and polished on the page.

Of course, with Hiram we had no choice.  We had discussed him endlessly before wandering off to our own novellas, nailing down details, setting limits, pre-exploring the character as fully as we could in order to establish a consistent central figure.  In the end though, we all had to leave the nest, and get down to the solitary business of putting words on pages.

So, what went into my own Hiram tale?  Clearly, it was first held to the bible we developed, the backdrop, and the character, though I won’t say much more about those because that’s what the books themselves are for.

On the other hand, now is a great time to bring on board Malcolm McClinton, the series artist.  At some point during the brainstorm, editor Tim Deal threw out some sample images from artists he though might be a good fit for the insane, modern pulp feel we were looking for.  While I can’t place exactly when Malcolm joined the party, I can say for sure that the first images we got from him knocked us sideways.  This character Hiram, this pretend man we made up in our collective heads, suddenly had a face.  In general, I’m avoiding speaking for the team in these little essays, but on this occasion I’ll chance my arm and state that there was an instant feeling that Malcolm nailed it.  I’m still a bit staggered every time I look at one of his images, because that’s Hiram.   That’s what was in my head.  There was a very informal group vote, and a very fast one.  We had our series artist.  That we made the right choice is pretty obvious from the covers so far released.  I think my favourite remains the very first.  Hiram, on that chair, the dead piled up around his feet…

Having said that, everything Malcolm’s done within the series has been both astonishing, and absolutely right. There’s one image in particular, that you won’t have seen yet, that defined the conclusion of Nymphs in a very direct way.  It was one of the samples he produced, before the plots of each book were fully defined, and that’s why Hiram’s very final battle in the series so far is with an honest-to-goodness *spoiler*.  That defining image will be reproduced somewhere in Nymphs, though I don’t yet know whether it’s a cover or an interior.

The second big influence on Nymphs was the city of Krakow.  I’d recently taken my girlfriend, now wife, there for her birthday (a blurry but brilliant affair), and it had screamed at me to use it in a story.  Nymphs was a perfect opportunity, and there are many key locations lifted straight from our break, almost as though the book is some sort of literary photo album.  The flat Hiram exits so hurriedly, the club where he staggers to meet his nemesis, so many of them things Kirsty and I roamed by in our brief weekend.  Even the weather, though the snow wasn’t quite as bad during our brief break.  It’s a city that makes an impression, and I hope I did it a little justice.  Go visit.  It’s splendid.

Other ingredients came and went.  In homage to my favourite modern pulp hero, Indiana Jones, I was determined that my installment of the Grange saga would open with the conclusion of an otherwise unseen adventure, that then plays into the main story.  I accomplished that, taking a snippet written years ago, for an entirely different character (Jackson Greene – anybody remember him?), and finally fleshing it out.  It’s a fun storytelling gimmick, that I think be can really only pulled off with a serial character like Hiram.  It means I can drop you into a story that opens at a hundred miles an hour, and I hope you feel a touch breathless when you read it.

Hiram Grange and the Nymphs of Krakow (it’s not a random title – a little research into Eastern European / Russian mythology gave rise to the perfect beast for Hiram to race to Krakow to face down) has the further distinction of being the only published piece of writing (except for that opening, three hundred word snippet that was then adapted) I’ve ever written long-hand.  You know those self-important guys you see in coffee shops, pen in hand, looking thoughtfully out of the window?  That was me.  I really was that pretentious.  The first draft of the book exists in a moleskin notebook upstairs, written in fits and starts in Costa Coffee and Starbucks outlets across Glasgow.

Finally, there was the music.  When I write, I usually have a piece of music that I put on every time I sit down to a story.  Once you’ve got the right tunes, they’re like a short cut back into the story, a fast way to get into the particular mood of the piece.  Nymphs was written to the Zimmer/Howard soundtrack to The Dark Knight, a movie I can no longer watch without a part of me rejoining Hiram in Krakow.

By January 2009, the first draft was written and I breathed a sigh of relief.  Prematurely, as it turned out.  Editing and rewriting this book has been like nothing else I’ve experienced as a writer.  But that’s for next time.  For now, head over to your local Amazon and tap ‘Hiram Grange’ into the search box…

Personal Devotion

I mentioned a week or two ago that Apex Book Company were running a series of interviews with authors from their Dark Faith anthology.  You can find mine here, along with a short excerpt from my story ‘Sandboys’.  If they make you feel inclined to buy the book and read the whole thing, all the links are over here.

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