R.I.P. Holy Horrors

July 10, 2008 at 2:49 am (General Comments, Philosophy & Religion, Writing & Publishing)

Weeping angel

Weeping angel

It’s been a long road punctuated by sometimes dramatic life events. I feel a soft rush of nostalgia when I recall my initial excitement at the prospect of co-editing this anthology. I experience a kind of numinous awe when I contemplate the fact of time’s passage and the way this project has intersected and defined a major portion of the last two years (well, 22 months) of my life. I suffer a pang of guilt when I recall how thoroughly I devoted my precious few moments of “free time” to burying myself in the story submissions over a period of months, effectively removing myself for a time from the life of my family. And I’m saddened when I once again look over the truly awesome table of contents in awareness that the book will remain forever unrealized in concrete reality, like a Platonic Form or a perpetually unincarnate spirit (although we must always hold out the possibility that reality will prove different from what we expect; perhaps the door remains slightly ajar; read on.)

But, as they say, them’s the breaks. Holy Horrors is dead. Long live Holy Horrors. My co-editor, the inestimable T.M. Wright, made the announcement yesterday at the Shocklines Message Boards, as was only fitting since the project was born there in 2006 from a wonderful suggestion proffered by Randy Chandler. Below is T.M.’s announcement, followed by my own contribution/coda.

Although T.M.’s and my comments below contain an apology to all of the antho’s authors, I’ll reinforce it ahead of time by making it impossible to miss: GREAT APOLOGIES and MASSIVE THANKS to all of you who submitted stories to this project, with an especially massive dose being aimed at those who received our acceptance notices and then sat back to wonder and wait for far too long. Terry and I both hope you’ll end up selling those fine stories to high-paying publications where they’ll get the recognition and readership they deserve. Either that, or we hope an act of God will somehow resurrect the project from its present status of dead-but-dreaming.

I’m suddenly and unaccountably reminded of the kung fu Catholic priest in Peter Jackson’s Brain Dead/Dead Alive, with his deliriously wonderful delivery of the line, “Stay back, boy! This calls for divine intervention!” (Followed by the all-time classic, “I kick ass for the Lord!”) Of course, he ended up being defeated by the zombies and becoming a zombie himself.

Let’s hope a finer fate, even if only that of being a fond memory, awaits Holy Horrors.

* * * * *

TO: The Shocklines Message Boards (and all Holy Horrors authors)

FROM: T.M. Wright

DATE: July 8, 2008

SUBJECT: Holy Horrors obituary

I’ve been putting off this announcement for some time, hoping that we’d find a publisher, at last, for the really great anthology, HOLY HORRORS, which Matt Cardin and I spent no small amount of time putting together. But I can’t put off the very regrettable announcement any longer: despite our best efforts, the anthology — at least at this point — looks like it’s not going to see print. A couple of publishers referred, in their rejections, to the state of the economy, while congratulating us on putting together a wonderful anthology. It’s 140,000 words by some of the biggest names and brightest new stars in the horror business, and, again, at the moment, it has no home.

My very large apologies to all the writers who sent stories: for those whose stories I accepted, I’m going to try and secure funding to make that half-upon-acceptance payment that’s so long overdue. And, to all those writers whose stories I accepted, you are, of course, free to submit your stories elsewhere.

All of the blame for this failure falls on my shoulders: I should have had a publisher committed to the anthology BEFORE I solicited stories. Should I try to put together another anthology, I won’t make that mistake again.

Matt Cardin deserves many, many kudos for his efforts on the anthology. He has one very keen editorial eye and he certainly knows the horror business as well as anyone. I will say again, this was MY failure, not Matt’s. To large measure, the anthology itself — published or unpublished — is Matt’s great success!

So this is Holy Horrors’ obituary. Perhaps it will rise from its grave. That would be fitting. I certainly hope that, through more hard work or just plain luck, it happens.

Thanks for listening.

T.M. Wright

* * * * *

FOLLOW-UP FROM MATT CARDIN
Here’s my own heartfelt apology to all the authors we snared and then inadvertently kept waiting for a non-event. Oh, how I really, truly hate that. Especially since HOLY HORRORS turned out to be one hell of an anthology. Only a few short weeks ago at Mo*Con III, I was expressing lingering hope that things would turn out differently. As Terry says above, it is of course possible that the universe will conspire in unforeseen ways to manifest the antho. But at present, all things considered, it’s time to say goodnight.

Don’t let Terry fool you by shouldering all of the blame and heaping such praise on me (regarding which, thank you for the kind words, Terry). I, too, devoted effort to trawling the publishing pool, and I, too, came up empty. So responsibility for this failure to launch is mine as well.

For the record and in case anybody’s wondering, Terry is one swell guy to work with. Smart, sensitive, creative, and warm.

My three semesters of college Latin are vestigial at this point, but I’ll risk it anyway (and probably get it wrong):

Requiescat in Pace, Atrocitates Sancti. September 2006-July 2008.

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Returning from Mo*Con III and resurrecting The Teeming Brain

June 19, 2008 at 5:59 am (Authors, Books, Daemonyx, Philosophy & Religion, Writing & Publishing) (, , , , , , , )

What’s that? I run a blog, you say? And blogs are things that you have to update? Oh, yes. I had forgotten all about that.

Yes, it’s true, I took an unannounced and unplanned month-long vacation from The Teeming Brain. I hope the suspense wasn’t too much for those of you who tune in regularly. The reasons for the hiatus are various. Among the most prominent are the advent of summer vacation from my teaching job, which led to an unplanned but much-needed period of semi-hibernation from my public appearances, even the virtual ones here at the blog; the imminent onset of some serious changes in my living situation; my assiduous pursuit of several writing jobs, an effort that is beginning to bear fruit; and the necessity for me to devote a great deal of time, attention, and energy this summer to finishing up work on “Curse of the Daimon,” the first album from my musical project Daemonyx, and also on the revisions (sometimes extensive) for Dark Awakenings, my forthcoming fat book of fiction and nonfiction dealing with religion and horror, to be published by Mythos Books late this year. I’ll be having a lot more to say about these topics in coming weeks.

Then there’s the fact that I have been doing a lot of traveling. Three weeks ago I journeyed down to San Angelo, Texas and environs on a three-day tour for reasons that will remain unspoken for the time being. Then a couple of weeks ago I spent three days attending the Missouri Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church in Springfield, where my video skills were put to use just like last year. Then, most recently — as in, last weekend — I journeyed to Indianapolis as one of the guests of honor for Mo*Con III, the third installment of a convention created by the original Sinister Minister himself, Maurice Broaddus, and devoted to exploring the intersecting issues of horror fiction and spirituality.

The Mo*Con experience was great. Other guests included Mark Rainey (”the legendary Mark Rainey,” as Maurice justly referred to him), Nick Mamatas, Kim Paffenroth, Bob Freeman, Lucy Snyder, and Chesya Burke. Plus a bunch of members of the Indiana Horror Writers were there. And Lucy’s husband, the inimitable Gary Braunbeck (one of whose books I browsed in the Springfield, MO airport before flying out on Friday), was present as well. And various members of The Dwelling Place, the groovy church-in-a-strip-mall building where Maurice serves as the “facilitator” (a minister by another name).

There was a party on Friday night involving chicken marsala, fettucine Alfredo, and a Celtic band named Mother Grove. On Saturday there was a panel on spirituality, moderated by me, followed by many varieties of chili for lunch. Then there was a panel about editing, composed of editors (including me) whom Maurice lovingly referred to as “those rat bastards who keep rejecting me,” since each of us had rejected his work in the past. Then there was a panel about issues of gender, followed by a late-night party with pizza at Maurice’s welcoming house in an Indianapolis neighborhood. On Sunday morning we all went to The Dwelling Place to attend the regular service, which had been retooled in honor of all the Mo*Conners being there. The centerpiece was a playing of the DVD of Brian Keene (”We all stand in the shadow of Keene,” Maurice said) talking about his personal spiritual journey as a writer at the first Mo*Con in 2006.

There was also much selling of books and other wares. I only found out this was going to happen shortly before the weekend arrived, so I got out the few copies of my Divinations of the Deep collection that were handy and also burned off some sampler CDs of 5 Daemonyx tracks, complete with Jason Van Hollander’s wonderful cover art. I ended up selling quite a few of these, which was gratifying. N.B., I’ll make some additional Daemonyx-related announcements here soon.

Here are images (kind of fuzzy, since I’m not good at converting PDFs to jpegs) of the flyers I handed out along with goods; click them to see the slightly bigger versions:

Daemonyx flyer

Dark Awakenings flyer

Beyond all this, there was something that has become known to insiders as the Mo*Con III.2 experience, wherein Nick Mamatas and I became refugees from an inclement weather situation that prevented flights from leaving the airport. We ended up crashing at Maurice’s house on Sunday night with his pleasant and patient wife, his two delightful kids, and a handful of other Mo*Conners. Weakling that I am, I became the only one to finally abandon the party and steal a few brief hours of sleep before the early-morning flight. Given the far-ranging nature of the conversations and debates that had taken place up until then, I can only imagine what all was talked about in the wee hours of the morning while I was zonked out.

And this was all after I missed my Friday morning flight to Indianapolis because Mapquest took me to a non-existent airport. (Yes, I had been to the Springfield-Branson airport umpteen times in the past. The Mapquest route just looked like it might be more efficient. Stupid me.)

There are other reports about the con that are worth reading. You can read Mark’s. You can read Maurice’s (complete with photos). You can read Bob’s. You can read Nick’s brief comments about his and my flight delays. Good stuff, all.

So now it’s back to the real world, including The Teeming Brain, which will be significantly more active for the rest of the summer. Hope you’re all having a good one. Gas prices getting you down? Or food inflation? More gathering economic doom? Weather weirdness? Never fear. It will only get more interesting.

In the meantime, I’ve got some creative pursuits to — er — pursue. Watch this space for ongoing news about Daemonyx, Dark Awakenings, and other stuff. We may be living in the proverbial Interesting Times of the Chinese curse, but there’s no reason why that should have any other effect than to make artistic pursuits even more engaging and passionate.

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Publishing news: My interview with Stephen Jones in CEMETERY DANCE #59

April 16, 2008 at 3:22 pm (Authors, Books, Society & Culture, Writing & Publishing) (, , , )

My interview with horror editor/anthologist extraordinaire Stephen Jones has finally been given a definite publication date in the venerable horror industry magazine Cemetery Dance. I first mentioned this interview nearly a year ago, in May of 2007, in a post titled “Stephen Jones on the death of reading” that contained a substantial excerpt detailing Steve’s views on the likely cataclysmic decline of imaginative reading habits among the general population of modern entertainment-drunk societies (like Great Britain and the United States) in the foreseeable future.

CD has had a rough year, what with one of its editors suffering some family crises. They’ve fallen behind schedule but are now back on track. Just today I discovered that they’ve posted the contents of Issue #59, and that my conversation with Steve is included. Elsewhere at their site (in the April 13 update on their Breaking News page) they mention that the previous issue, #58, is shipping right now, and that #59 is “already deep in production” and should go to the printers soon.

So it’s cold beers all around!

I’m pleased to see that I’ll be keeping company between the covers of the mag with such worthy folks as Sarah Langan, Nick Mamatas, Brian Keene, Stephen Mark Rainey, Darren Speegle, Michael McBride, Steve Vernon, Paul Finch, and a few others. Very nice.

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It’s official: I’m a guest of honor at Mo*Con III

February 4, 2008 at 5:21 pm (Authors, Writing & Publishing)

I’m proud to say that I have been invited to attend as a guest of honor this June at Mo*Con III. Mo*Con is a genre convention organized by (and named after) Maurice Broaddus, who in addition to serving as the pastor/facilitator of a large nondenominational Christian church in Indianapolis is also a horror writer and cultural commentator. Hence his unofficial title, “the sinister minister.”

The two previous Mo*Cons have attracted some guests who are well known among the horror community, including Brian Keene, Wrath James White, Gary Braunbeck, and Lucy Snyder. The convention’s ongoing focus or theme is effectively expressed in the announcement for Mo*Con III at Maurice’s blog:

“Church is a communal expression of faith, to pursue spiritual formation to be the kind of people God wants us to be. To be a safe place to ask and wrestle with spiritual questions. Whose mandate should include building a sense of community, loving each other, and serving the world, all in the name of Christ. So why not have church with a bunch of horror writers?

“Continuing the tradition of exploring spirituality, art, and social issues, The Dwelling Place desires to be a refuge or sanctuary, a place of rest and freedom for people to be themselves, where we connect with God and one another by joining Jesus’ mission to bless the world. The goal of Mo*Con, pure and simple, is to continue conversations. With that in mind, I’ve invited a few friends to chat with me for the weekend.”

The huge increase in the size of this year’s guest list indicates how successful the convention has been in the past. This year’s guests of honor include Nick Mamatas, Mark Rainey, Lucy Snyder, Tina Jens, and yours truly. Additional “featured guests” will include Chesya Burke, Bob Freeman, and Kim Paffenroth, the last of whom you’ve seen me mention here at The Teeming Brain, and whose Stoker-winning exploration of religious themes in George Romero’s zombie films, Gospel of the Living Dead, you really ought to read.

I’m quite pleased to be invited to the event. This year’s theme is “the intersection of spirituality, art, and gender.” I don’t know if I’ll have anything worthwhile to add to the conversation, but I’ll certainly enjoy hearing what others have to say.

I met Maurice several years ago at a World Horror Convention — I think it was in 2002 or 2003 — and we hooked up again at the 2006 World Fantasy Convention. He’s an interesting and impressive guy who’s really into the interface between pop culture, especially horror fiction and film, and spirituality. I suppose this is why we hit it off, and why he thought to invite me to the upcoming convention: our mutual interests overlap at numerous points, as evidenced by a comparative browsing through his writings, including his blog, and my own bibliography of published works.

So here’s to the ongoing exploration of religion and horror. May the fruitful interplay of these powerful psychological, spiritual, and cultural forces never be resolved.

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Cover art for DARK AWAKENINGS

January 7, 2008 at 4:53 pm (Philosophy & Religion, Writing & Publishing)

Thanks go out to Simon Strantzas for alerting me to the fact that Jason Van Hollander has publicly posted his preliminary cover artwork for my forthcoming book Dark Awakenings, which will consist of both fiction and nonfiction.  Click here for a glimpse.

I think Jason has come up with a marvelous visual vehicle for expressing, amplifying, and complementing the dark mixture of religious and spiritual horror (or horrific religion and spirituality) that will make up the book’s fictional and nonfictional contents.  I like it at least as well as, and maybe more than, the cover art he provided for my first book, Divinations of the Deep.  And that one contributed to his winning the 2004 World Fantasy Award for best artist.  So here’s hoping this newest design gets equal traction for him.

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Update 1 of 6: Writing and publishing news

December 11, 2007 at 5:22 pm (General Comments, Writing & Publishing)

Looking back over my previous month’s postings, I find that, well, there aren’t any. Yes, I really did go the entire month of November without uploading any new posts.

I ‘d like to resuscitate The Teeming Brain with a series of posts that will provide updates on a few things. Topics will include writing and publishing news re: me, news about my musical project Daemonyx, news about the Holy Horrors anthology, thoughts and links regarding the economic tsunami that’s set to sweep through America (and probably a few other nations) beginning soon after the holidays, thoughts and links about the rapidly escalating and now undeniable reality of peak oil, and a few religion-and-philosophy related items.

For now, starting at the top of my list, here’s some writing and publishing news. I’ve recently had a couple of nonfiction pieces published. They are:

  • My literary-critical essay “The Master’s Eyes Shining with Secrets: H.P. Lovecraft’s Influence on Thomas Ligotti,” in Lovecraft Annual No. 1 (October 2007), edited by S.T. Joshi. This long and detailed piece represents my definitive statement about the relationship between two of the towering authors and persons in my literary-intellectual-emotional-philosophical-spiritual-artistic life. As I recall, I posted an excerpt or two at this blog in the past. I’m proud to see the piece published alongside additional scholarly work by the likes of Darrell Schweitzer and John Langan.
  • My review of Richard Gavin’s fine short horror fiction collection Omens in the second issue of the new review journal Dead Reckonings — which, like Lovecraft Annual, is edited by the formidable S.T. Joshi (in association with the also-formidable co-editor Jack Haringa).

As for my forthcoming fiction and nonfiction collection, Dark Awakenings, it’s still on the drawing board. I’m wanting and needing to give the whole thing a once-over and perform some stylistic revisions, but the time and energy elude me. I suspect there will be more to say about it in the relatively near future.

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HOLY HORRORS: The Table of Contents

September 25, 2007 at 11:13 am (Authors, Books, General Comments, Philosophy & Religion, Writing & Publishing)

At long last, T.M. Wright and I are able to able to announce the table of contents for the Holy Horrors anthology that we began editing a year ago this month. We received more than 600 submissions. The final TOC contains 40 stories by 40 separate authors. Many of the rejections were agonizing to make. The quality bar was set very high right from the start, simply by the nature of the submissions we received. So here’s a massive thanks to all the authors who sent us a story for what has turned out to be a massive anthology (which may well be issued in two volumes; only time will tell). Life-permitting, T.M. and I will each be contributing an original story as well, although this is not a sure thing on either count given current life situations and conditions of busyness for both of us.

We’re still deciding on a publisher. I’ll give updates as they become available.

Note that the number appearing after most titles indicates approximate word count (this was a record-keeping device for my co-editor and me).

HOLY HORRORS: The Table of Contents

1. “Intentions” by William Freedman. 7800
2. “Saviour” by Gary A. Braunbeck. 6200
3. “The Sect of the Idiot” by Thomas Ligotti. Reprint
4. “The Dead Must Die” by Ramsey Campbell. Reprint
5. “The Editor” by Pamela K. Taylor. 1300
6. “Hate the Sinner, Love the Sin” by Brian Hodge. 10,000
7. “Darshan” by William Eakin. 3900
8. “At the Feet of the Forest Primeval” by Randy Chandler. 6000
9. “Vom-Beist” by Mike Norris. 4100
10. “Porta Nigra” by Darren Speegle. 3600. Reprint
11. “Purifying Vows” by Kim Paffenroth. 5000
12. “Magog” by Craig Holt. 9300
13. “The Hands of God” by Michael McBride. 4500
14. “Sanctuary” by Jim Rockhill. 330
15. “Redemption” by David Niall Wilson. 5500
16. “Thunder of the Captains, and the Shouting” by Tom Piccirilli. 5500. Reprint
17. “The Dreams of Cardinal Vittorini” by Reggie Oliver. 7300. Reprint
18. “The germ of his ideas” by Jose Lacey. 6400
19. “Abandon” by Adam Browne. 7200
20. “Bavel II” by Jens Rushing. 5500
21. “A Prayer for Captain La Hire” by Patrice E. Sarath. 6900. Reprint
22. “Behind the Bathroom Door” by Sarah Berniker. 4900. Reprint
23. “Sicarii” by Andrew Tisbert. 6700
24. “Cold to the Touch” by Simon Strantzas. 6500
25. “Darkness” by Jude Wright. 5000
26. “Ezekiel Remembers” by Kurt Dinan. 2000
27. “Bad Religion” by Douglas M. Chapman. 5000
28. “Anubis Has Left the Building” by Tim Waggoner. 3900. Reprint
29. “The Bishop Receives a Visitor” by Marion Pitman. 6500
30. “The Tattoo Artista” by Eric S. Smith. 4200
31. “In the Name of God” by Stuart Young. 5000
32. “Uncaged” by Paul Finch. 6000
33. “The Monsters We Defy” by Karen Williams. 4800
34. “The Shaft” by Brian Hodges. 6600
35. “Waters Dark as a Raven”s Wing, Flames Bright as a Dove”s Breast” by Dru Pagliassotti. 1900
36. “The Temple” by Quentin S. Crisp. 5200. Reprint
37. “The Wound of Her Making” by Gerard Houarner. 6100. Reprint
38. “And You Shall Be Adored” by Regina Mitchell. 2000
39. “On This Day of Reckoning” by Joseph Nassise. 4500
40. “Rapture” by Robert Morrish and Harry Shannon. 3700

(Note: Lest there be any confusion, I’ll point out that #6, Brian Hodge, and #34, Brian Hodges, are indeed two separate authors with remarkably similar names.)

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Penultimate HOLY HORRORS update

July 7, 2007 at 10:57 am (Books, Writing & Publishing)

I know, I know, it’s been well over a week since my last post.  I am indeed behind my time.  Currently I’m on summer break from my teaching job, and I think the “I’m on vacation!” attitude has spread out to affect my blogging behavior as well.

But for now I thought I’d take a moment to announce that T.M. Wright and I are making significant headway on the Holy Horrors anthology.  The headline is that, as of about a week ago, WE HAVE READ ALL OF THE SUBMISSIONS.  Responses are now being sent out right and left.  Many authors have already been notified and many more will hear from us shortly.

So that’s where the project stands now.  I expect that the next time I make a formal update — in the not-distant future — it will be to announce the anthology’s table of contents.

Thanks again to everybody who submitted a story!  T.M. and I really appreciate your interest, and also your laudable patience during this long reading period.  I’m thrilled to say we have attracted an absolutely amazing lineup of authors and stories.  Holy Horrors promises to be not only a good anthology, but a great one — and I say that as a pat on the back not to T.M. and myself but to all of the writers who have sent us such excellent stories.  For fans of high-quality horror fiction featuring a deep religious/spiritual element, this book promises to be a veritable feast.

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The Greeks and their daimones

March 19, 2007 at 2:32 pm (Authors, Books, Philosophy & Religion, Society & Culture, Writing & Publishing)

This week I thought I’d share another excerpt from my essay “The Angel and the Demon,” which was published recently in the two-volume reference work Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of Our Worst Fears (Greenwood Press, 2006), edited by S.T. Joshi. Regular readers of The Teeming Brain will recall that I’ve already shared a couple of excerpts from this essay in previous blog entries (which you can locate by entering the word “icons” in the search bar in the right-hand menu on this page). My current provocation to offer another excerpt is that the same essay will be included later this year in my second full-length book, a horror collection to be titled Dark Awakenings, and I thought I may as well offer yet another preview or teaser.

Dark Awakenings will be unique, I think, in that it will consist of both fiction and nonfiction. I’m not sure of the exact proportions yet, but roughly half of the book will consist of nearly all of my uncollected fiction that has been published since 2002, while the other half will consist of several essays and papers that I’ve written over the years dealing with horror–both the existential experience and the entertainment genre–and religion. The version of “The Angel and the Demon” that will appear there will be about 30,000 words long, roughly twice the length of the one published in the Icons project. A snippet of the publisher’s description for the Icons project will give an idea of what the essay features: “Horror and the supernatural have fascinated people for centuries, with many of the most central figures appearing over and over again across time and cultures. These figures have starred in the world’s most widely read literary works, most popular films, and most captivating television series. Because of their popularity and influence, they have attained iconic status and a special place in the popular imagination. This book overviews 24 of the most significant icons of horror and the supernatural . . . . Each entry discusses the central qualities of the icon and its lasting influence.”

So my “Angel and Demon” essay surveys the history, formation, development, influence, and various literary and cinematic manifestations of the two title figures. Below is an excerpt from the subsection titled “The Greeks and their daimones” in the main section titled “The prehistory of the demon.” The Greek idea of daimons, personal guiding spirits that attach to individual humans and symbolize and/or provide their fundamental nature and character, has grown into something of acute personal interest for me during the past several years, because it expresses for me some of the deep issues involved in the questions of personal identity, artistic creativity, spirituality, and similar matters that have always captivated me. When I was invited into the Icons project and received the “Angel and Demon” assignment–which I had specifically requested–I was very pleased, since this gave me an excuse to pursue some serious research about the issue. Of course, I was obliged to write about it from an objective viewpoint and in an impartial academic tone owing to the nature of the book. But I enjoy doing that type of work, so it was a pleasure overall.

I hope you find these issues as absorbing as I do. In any event, here’s the excerpt.

* * * * *

From “The Angel and the Demon” by Matt Cardin

II. The Prehistory of the Demon

The Greeks and their daimones

Although most reasonably educated moderns are familiar with the Olympian gods and goddesses of classical Greek mythology, decidedly fewer are aware that long before the Greeks developed their beliefs about the humanlike gods of Olympus, they believed in vague and mysterious spirits called daimones that exerted a ubiquitous influence over people and events. Using the alternative form “daemon” to refer to these spirits, E.R. Dodds writes in his classic The Greeks and the Irrational that the “daemonic, as distinct from the divine, has at all periods played a large part in Greek popular belief (and still does)” (40). Indeed, as psychologist Stephen A. Diamond points out, while some classical scholars maintain that Greek writers such as Homer, Hesiod, and Plato did use daimon as a synonym for theos (god), others “point to a definite distinction between these terms. The term ‘daimon’ referred to something indeterminate, invisible, incorporeal, amorphous, and unknown, whereas ‘theos’ was the personification of a god, such as Zeus or Apollo” (Diamond 66).

If we are to believe classical scholar Reginald Barrow, modern ignorance of the daimons must be counted among the many ironies of history; Barrow argues provocatively that belief in them was so powerful, important, and prevalent that it actually formed a kind of underground mainstream in ancient Greek religion:

Because the daemons have left few memorials of themselves in architecture and literature, their importance tends to be overlooked. . . . They are omnipresent and all-powerful, they are embedded deep in the religious memories of the peoples, for they go back to days long before the days of Greek philosophy and religion. The cults of the Greek states, recognised and officially sanctioned, were only one-tenth of the iceberg; the rest, the submerged nine-tenths, were the daemons (quoted in Diamond, 67).

Like so many religious beliefs throughout history, the idea of the daimones took many different and sometimes contradictory forms. In the beginning they were conceived as abstract forces in the neuter gender. Hesiod and others described them as “invisible and wrapped in mist” (Diamond 65). Much farther back, Mycenaean and Minoan daimons, in a period ranging from 1100 to 3000 B.C.E., were regarded as servants or attendants to deities and were pictured in the form of animal-human hybrids, much like their Egyptian and Mesopotamian analogs. Barrow offers a concise summary of the evolution of beliefs about these daimons over half a millennium, and also, again, of their vaguely shadowy and underground nature as they lurked perpetually in the background of orthodox Greek religious thought:

[T]he histories of Greek religion or philosophy do not usually say much, if anything, about daemons. Though the idea occurs as early as Homer, it plays little or no part in recognized cults; for it had no mythology of its own; rather it attached itself to existing beliefs. In philosophy it lurks in the background from Thales, to whom “the universe is alive and full of daemons,” through Heraclitus and Xenophanes, to Plato and his pupil Xenocrates, who elaborated it in detail. . . . In Hesiod the daemons are the souls of heroes or past ages now kindly to men; in Aeschylus the dead become daemons; in Theognis and Menander the daemon is the guardian angel of the individual man and sometimes a family (Diamond 66).

In their most ancient forms, the daimons were neither good nor evil, or rather were potentially both. In Homer’s time (around the eighth century B.C.E.) people commonly believed that daimons caused all human ailments but at the same time also believed they could cure disease and give blessings such as health and happiness. Several centuries later the Hellenistic Greeks developed the more concrete categories of eudaimones (good daimons) and kakodaimones (evil daimons).

Arguably the most famous description or definition of daimons and the daimonic comes from a “canonical” source: Plato’s Symposium, wherein Plato has the old wise woman Diotima describe the daimonic as a kind of bridge or intermediary between the human and divine worlds:

All that is daemonic lies between the mortal and the immortal. Its functions are to interpret to men communications from the gods—commandments and favours from the gods in return for men’s attentions—and to convey prayers and offerings from men to the gods. Being thus between men and gods the daemon fills up the gap and so acts as a link joining up the whole. Through it as intermediary pass all forms of divination and sorcery. God does not mix with man; the daemonic is the agency through which intercourse and converse take place between men and gods, whether in waking visions or in dreams (quoted in Dodds, Pagan and Christian 86-7).

It is also Plato who provides probably the most familiar example of specific daimonic influence when he writes of Socrates’ famous daimonion (the gender-neutral form of daimon, which is either male or female). This has often been translated into English as the “sign” that Socrates claimed had visited him frequently since childhood in the form of an audible voice that warned him when he was about to commit a mistake.

Socrates’ experience of daimonic communication highlights what is, in fact, the most significant aspect of the matter: The Greeks understood their daimons to have not only objective but also subjective existence. That is, they believed the daimons were objectively real presences that made themselves known through their influence upon and within the human psyche. This tension between the objective and subjective seems to have existed on a kind of continuum. On the one hand were the more typically animistic conceptions of daimons, which associated them with particular places, natural occurrences, circumstances, or souls of the dead. On the other hand were the more subtle, psychologically oriented conceptions that gained preeminence over time and that regarded the daimons as inner influences upon human thoughts and emotions, and even as arbitrators, keepers, conductors, and emblems of individual character and destiny. This second type of understanding can be seen in the fact that the characters in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, which were probably composed around the eighth century B.C.E. and represented an inherited oral tradition extending several centuries earlier, attributed many of the events of their lives—not only outer, physical events but also, especially, inner psychological ones such as moods, emotions, sudden insights, bursts of motivation to say or do something or to refrain from speaking or acting —to the influence of daimons. Although Homer’s characters seemed to take this idea relatively lightly—“[W]e get the impression,” writes Dodds, “that they do not always mean it very seriously”—in the three centuries between Homer’s epics and Aeschylus’ Oresteia “the daemons seem to draw closer: they grow more persistent, more insidious, more sinister” (The Greeks and the Irrational, 41).

By “sinister” Dodds may have meant not that the daimons came to be regarded as predominantly evil, but that they became progressively more entangled with human interiority and also progressively more mysterious and autonomous. He calls attention to the fact that many Greek writers after Homer drew a connection between the daimons and “those irrational impulses which arise in a man against his will to tempt him,” and says that “behind [this] lies the old Homeric feeling that these things are not truly part of the self; since they are endowed with a life and energy of their own, and so can force a man, as it were from the outside, into conduct foreign to him” (41).

The twentieth century existential psychologist Rollo May, who resurrected the concept of the daimon and the daimonic for use in modern depth psychotherapy, gave definitive statement to this idea of strange internal influence in Love and Will: “The daimonic is any natural function which has the power to take over the whole person. Sex and eros, anger and rage, and the craving for power are examples. The daimonic can be either creative or destructive and is normally both” (123). Although May wrote about the daimonic in metaphorical terms, his description is still effective for giving an impression of what it must have felt like to the ancients when they found themselves thinking, feeling, saying, and doing things that were outside of their voluntary control. Modern peoples are of course still quite familiar with this experience. We can thus reasonably imagine that ancient peoples must have been all the more awed and disturbed when popular belief attributed these involuntary behaviors to the influence of the mysterious mediators of divine reality. In more dramatic cases of daimonic influence, the internal power might take control completely. “When this power goes awry,” May wrote, “and one element usurps control over the total personality, we have ‘daimon possession,’ the traditional name through history for psychosis” (123).

It was Plato (again) who gave definitive voice to this newly developing view of the daimonic as primarily an inner force. He closed his most famous work, the Republic, with the “myth of Er,” which teaches that prior to being born, each human being voluntarily chooses its own daimon, understood in this case to be a combination of guardian angel, spiritual double, and life pattern. The daimon accompanies a person throughout his or her life and constantly recalls him or her to the prechosen plan. It guides a person inevitably to evince a certain character, make certain choices, feel certain predilections, and encounter certain experiences, all in the service of fulfilling the fate chosen beforehand. Thus it is that the Greek word eudaimonia, which in later times came to mean “happiness” or “well being,” in its earliest sense literally meant “having a good daimon.” A person with a good daimon was happy and blessed, while a person with a bad daimon was inevitably miserable. The pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus encapsulated this idea in a cryptic statement that has puzzled and fascinated scholars for the past twenty-five hundred years: Ethos anthropoi daimon. The statement translates literally as “A man’s character is his daimon,” but nobody knows for certain what Heraclitus really meant to convey, although various translations and glosses have been offered, as listed by James Hillman in The Soul’s Code: “Man’s character is his Genius. A man’s character is his guardian divinity. A man’s character is his fate. Character is fate. A man’s character is the immortal and potentially divine portion of him, Character for man is destiny” (256-7).

The bottom line is that it is impossible to overstress the prevalence and significance of beliefs about daimons to the ancient world, and especially to ancient popular understandings of human selfhood and its relation to the divine. For Greek culture, including its underground tradition of daimonism, was destined to become the common coinage, as it were, of the entire ancient world. When first Alexander and then the Romans succeeded in exporting all things Greek to the farthest corners of their respective empires, the resulting Hellenistic cultural matrix was rife with daimons in the Greek mold. According to Dodds, although the Symposium’s “precise definition of the vague terms ‘daemon’ and ‘daemonios’ was something of a novelty in Plato’s day,” by “the second century after Christ it was the expression of a truism. Virtually everyone, pagan, Jewish, Christian or Gnostic, believed in the existence of these beings and in their function as mediators, whether he called them daemons or angels or aions or simply ‘spirits’” (Pagan and Christian 37-8).

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Writing news: DEAD RECKONINGS and IN DELIRIUM II

December 26, 2006 at 8:47 am (Authors, Books, Writing & Publishing)

I’m making my weekly post a day late due to the Christmas holiday, which fell yesterday, on my usual day to update The Teeming Brain. I feel I can do no better by way of explanation than to quote the immortal words of Bob Cratchit to his employer to explain his late arrival at work one fateful December 26th: “I was making rather merry yesterday.”

This week I have a couple of nice bits of news to share for the post-holiday. Speaking of which, a belated Merry Christmas to one and all! Or if you don’t celebrate that particular holiday — which, let it be noted, can’t really be rejected as an exclusively Christian holiday, since it’s been almost completely secularized and commercialized by America in recent decades, and then there’s the fact that Christmas was created out of, and layered onto, ancient pagan traditions right from the start — but to regroup: if you don’t celebrate that particular holiday, well, here’s wishing you (belatedly) a nice December 25th. On the Gregorian calendar, of course, which not everybody subscribes to. So, in sum, to be safe, here’s wishing you a — well, just a day, I guess.

But to return to the subject of the above-mentioned news items: It has arisen that I’ll be appearing in a couple of forthcoming books, one of them a review journal and the other a horror anthology.

The review journal is titled Dead Reckonings and is being edited by Jack Haringa and S.T. Joshi. As Jack states at his blog (to which the title just linked will take you), the idea is to fill the void left by the death of the venerable Necrofile some years ago (whose online, non-print sister version, Necropsy, still exists). And oh, what the heck, I’ll quote Jack directly:

“Do you remember Necrofile? Do you miss its great, in-depth critical reviews of major releases in the horror and dark fantasy fields? I know I do, and I’ve lamented the loss of Necrofile, the absence of critical review venues in the genre, and the lack of much even half-decent genre reviewing in this journal more than once.

“Well, something’s being done about it. S.T. Joshi and I are co-editing a new review journal of horror and dark fantasy. Dead Reckonings will be issued semi-annually through Hippocampus Press and will contain approximately 35,000 words of essays and shorter reviews per perfect-bound issue.

“The first issue will focus on works released or to be released between September of 2006 and March of 2007, and it should be available by the end of this coming February. Reviewers and essayists scheduled for appearance in the first issue include Hank Wagner, Matt Cardin, Paula Guran, John Langan, Michael Marano, Richard Bleiler, June Pulliam, Mike Roden, Ramsey Campbell, and many more. “

So I feel I’m keeping great company here, and I was very pleased to be invited to contribute to this new publication.

As for the horror anthology, it’s none other than In Delirium II, a sequel to the original In Delirium, which was edited by Brian Keene and published earlier this year. As with the first volume, this second one is a tribute anthology to Delirium’s proprietor, Shane Staley, and is composed of stories written by authors who have been previously published by Delirium. The project was conceived and put together by John Everson, many of whose works populate Delirium’s publications catalog. John contacted me a few months ago to invite me on board, since my novella The God of Foulness had been published by Delirium in 2004 (and subsequently went on to receive a recommendation for the British Fantasy Award). I was happy to contribute. The whole thing was a secret; John assembled and edited the anthology, secured original cover art, and laid out and typeset the book without Shane’s knowledge. He then Fed Exed the finished product to Shane in a gift-wrapped box a little over a week ago.

Here’s the cover art, created by Mike Bohatch:

In Delirium II

My story in there is “The Stars Shine Without Me,” whose only previous publication was in the fiction section at Horrorfind in 2002. Ellen Datlow liked it enough to give it an honorable mention in The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror. A lot of people have asked me about it in the years since then, saying things like, “Don’t I remember reading a surreal story by you about some guy who works a desk job in a needle-shaped black tower?” The answer is yes, you do remember such a story, and this is it. I hope its appearance in In Delirium II, and then next year (I hope) in my second fiction collection, Dark Awakenings, will serve to satisfy the curious.

Incidentally, Shane Staley has posted a note at the “Delirium Insider” page of his website to express his surprise and gratitude at the gift. It’s a note that’s well worth reading, especially since it lists the anthology’s full table of contents. As with Dead Reckonings, so with In Delirium II I’m quite pleased to be featured in such a fantastic lineup of authors.

And finally, in case I don’t manage to upload another post by January 1st, here’s wishing you all a Happy New Year! (On the Gregorian calendar, of course…)

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