Showing posts with label cameron trost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cameron trost. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 January 2025

Best Wishes for 2025


I'd like to wish all my faithful fans and all the potential readers out there the very best for 2025. If you haven't yet read my three novels and three collections, this is the year to do it. You'll find puzzles to solve, post-apocalyptic wastelands to navigate, strange neighbours who'll have you checking the doors and windows are locked, a mysterious postman terrorising a country town, tunnel runners living beneath your street, a homicidal botanist and so much more! Read, review, and tell your friends about my books. Happy 2025 and stay tuned for new stories this year!  

 

Friday, 11 June 2021

Welcome to Mirebury

Letterbox is a short novel, but a long story. It began about fifteen years ago with an idea for a truly original suspense novel, and I'm confident that it is indeed original. Take a quiet country town, little more than a village really, preferably in an isolated location, and toss a maniac hellbent on tearing the community apart in there. Now, to make it original, the antagonist mustn't hurt anyone with his own hands, but rather use the locals' underlying tensions and fears to provoke them to violence. How? By making nocturnal deliveries to their letterboxes. 

The result was a rollicking suspense novel full of dark humour and quirky small-town characters. Letterbox was picked up by a small publisher called Naked Snake Press, and (there's no other way to say it) barely made a splash in a bathtub. The publisher later folded (I'd like to assume not as a direct result of publishing my novel) and Letterbox was back in my hands. Armed with experience and invaluable reader feedback (hats off to fellow Australian writer, Anthony Ferguson, in particular), I decided to rework it, and that's just what I did, but I got on with other writing at the same time, including my urban adventure novel, The Tunnel Runner.

Fast forward to 2021, and Letterbox is finally ready to be unleashed once again after major rewrites. The bad news is that I can't really explain the changes to you without spoiling the ending. Suffice to say that Letterbox is now as much a mystery novel as it is a thriller. Think Midsomer Murders with a teacher as the unlikely hero and the craziness turned up a notch or two! 

Welcome to Mirebury. Are you ready to check your letterbox? I dare you!



Ian Carew is a mild-mannered teacher at the primary school in Mirebury, a quiet town lost in the moors. Six years after leaving London, he's still considered a newcomer, but his elderly neighbour, Mary Hopkins, treats him like a son, and the local butcher, Jack Fuller, is his best friend. All that's missing from Ian’s life is a touch of romance and a dash of adventure. Little does he know, he's about to get a taste of both. When Mary Hopkins opens her letterbox and makes a gruesome discovery, Mirebury is thrown into a state of shock and outrage. At first, the townsfolk assume it was a random act, but the horrible deliveries continue and they're forced to acknowledge they have become the target of a campaign of terror - and nobody’s letterbox is safe.

Letterbox is available through all good retailers, including Amazon and Bookshop, or you can order a copy directly from Black Beacon Books

Thursday, 8 February 2018

KindleScout

My forthcoming collection has been accepted for KindleScout. This means you can read it and nominate it. If it gets enough nominations, I'll be able to sign a gargantuan book deal that will allow me to spend more time writing stories you love. Check it out here: https://kindlescout.amazon.com/p/3PDH4KZWOZHYN



The Animal Inside is a collection of thirteen strange and twisted stories that will take you for a walk along the fine line between insanity and reason, the peculiar and the prosaic, and the animal kingdom and human society, then leave you wondering where one ends and the other begins. These tales will confuse you, amuse you, shock you, and intrigue you, but they will also cause you to question the world and contemplate your own animal inside.

Wednesday, 20 December 2017

Paperback Giveaway: The Tunnel Runner

Would you like to start 2018 with a FREE paperback copy of The Tunnel Runner by Cameron Trost?
For your chance to win, simply click on Enter Giveaway below.

If you don't like free books, you can buy a copy here: The Tunnel Runner, print or ebook

Please share this giveaway with your family and friends, and join Cameron on Facebook, Goodreads, and Amazon.



Goodreads Book Giveaway

The Tunnel Runner by Cameron Trost

The Tunnel Runner

by Cameron Trost

Giveaway ends January 06, 2018.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter Giveaway

Friday, 8 December 2017

Like Sisters

I would like to thank P. Emerson Williams for his wonderful artwork which accompanies by short tale of sororal suspense, Like Sisters. It features in Morpheus Tales #31.

https://www.amazon.com/Morpheus-Tales-31-Ebook-Magazine-ebook/dp/B077S5LLHY/

The thirty-first issue of the UK's most controversial weird fiction magazine is out now and features Black Raindrop By Christopher T. Hamel Illustration By Greg Chapman, The Experimental Man By Todd Outcalt, Dark Work By Shamus McGillicuddy Illustrated By Jeffrey Oleniacz, Once We Were All Readers By Richard Farren Barber, Bodies By Chuck Lyons, The Screecher By Anthony Watson, Child Of His Desire By Alan Loewen, Like Sisters By Cameron Trost Illustration By P. Emerson Williams. Read the magazine Christopher Fowler calls "edgy and dark".


Saturday, 18 March 2017

Into the Woods: An Anthology of Sylvan Stories

"Forgotten Falls", a sylvan story about a German metaphysicist on a personal journey to a haunted waterfall in remote Australia, is out now in "Into the Woods". It joins a host of atmospheric tales set in forests from the likes of Ramsey Campbell and Tracy Fahey. Hannah Kate, the editor, has kindly answered a few questions about the anthology, forests, and her publishing project, Hic Dragones.

 1. The title of the anthology, Into the Woods, is very evocative. What inspired you to choose this theme?

A lot of our favourite fiction has a distinctive sense of place – from Stephen King’s New England to Agatha Christie’s country houses – and so we do tend towards publishing stories that have a strong connection to particular spaces (real and fictional). The novels we’ve published all have this – with the seaside (Blood and Water), the city (Aimee and the Bear and Psychic Spiders!) and the forest (The Tattooed Wolf) – and our anthologies also tend to have this focus. A lot of the stories in Hauntings focused on uncanny and unsettling inside spaces, so it made sense that our next collection would be outside. The woods were an obvious choice, because there are just so many different types of forests and woodlands, and they evoke so many different types of response.

2. Do you have a favourite forest, and what draws you to it?

I have a soft spot for those ‘forests’ that are called ‘semi-natural woodland’ in the UK. These are patches of woodland that have mostly grown up naturally – often on the site of ancient forests – but which may only be a few hundred years old and may be the result of replanting. As a child, I lived near Inglewood Forest in Cumbria and then next to Blackley Forest in Manchester, so these are the sorts of woods that I’m used to. What fascinates me about these woodlands is the way the history of trees interweaves with the history of people. Trees are felled and houses built, but then houses are demolished and a forest is planted. I think people often overlook this complex history, because they assume that a forest is either ancient woodland or a new cultivation, and that once a forest is cut down that’s the end of the story. I like the places in between, the places that aren’t ancient but aren’t new either. My story in Into the Woods takes place in urban woodland spaces – those places where the trees came back. Officially, these woodlands are created and maintained by people… but maybe the forest also finds its own ways to exert control?

My current favourite examples of urban woodland spaces are all in North Manchester: Bowker Bank Woods (in Crumpsall), Baileys Wood (in Blackley) and Boggart Hole Clough (also in Blackley).

3. Forests have always had a deep-rooted effect on the human psyche, whether as places of refuge or of danger. Why do you think this is? Has this changed over time as the world’s forests dwindle?

I think our fascination with forests goes hand-in-hand with our project of deforestation, to be honest. In Britain, ancient forests began to be systematically cut down during the Anglo-Saxon period (it’s not a new phenomenon!), but a kind of folk memory of the forest has persisted. For instance, despite the fact that it hasn’t been true for over a millennium (if, indeed, it was ever true), it’s still reasonably well-known that once upon a time you could cross the entire country without ever touching the ground. On the one hand, I think there’s a nostalgia about the forest – it’s part of the ancient landscape, and so it’s a romantic and imaginative place. On the other hand, there’s a sort of buried guilt about its destruction – it’s something natural and powerful that was destroyed (is still being destroyed) by the relentless march of human progress. In a way, it’s a bit like our relationship with certain wild animals, like wolves (in the UK particularly). We don’t have to live in the forest with the wolves anymore, so we’re free to idealise and romanticise them – but we also know it was us that killed the wolves and uprooted the trees, and there’s always the fear of being somehow held to account one day.

4. What are your aims for Hic Dragones?

Hic Dragones is a micropress with ambitions of becoming a small press – we’re not after global domination just yet! At the moment, we’re focusing on publishing a small number of new books each year, and on publishing our new editions of Victorian penny dreadfuls. As well as Into the Woods, we have another anthology coming out this year (Nothing) and then we’ll be opening submissions for our next project. We’re currently publishing instalments of our edition of George Reynolds’s Faust – an early Victorian penny dreadful about the man who sold his soul to the devil. We’re really pleased to be able to publish Faust, as this is the first modern edition of Reynolds’s serial, and we’ve been able to include the original illustrations as well. Once Faust comes to the end of its run, we’re going to be announcing the publication dates for Spring Heel’d Jack. In a nutshell, I guess our aims are pretty simple: we just want to keep publishing stories that we like and encouraging people to read them!

5. You chose to include my story, Forgotten Falls, in the anthology. Thanks, by the way. What was it that appealed to you?

For me, the story’s appeal lay in the way that all-important sense of place was combined with a sense of character. Without any heavy-handed exposition, we get to know the protagonist Schenker and the things that have brought him to where he is at the start of the story – but Schenker’s history (and his future) are completely bound up with the forest in which he finds himself. He believes he is completely in control of his surroundings – in fact, he’s so busy thinking about people that he barely gives the forest itself a second though – but is he really in control?

Another thing I liked about the story was the type of forest that you chose. As I said, there are so many different types of woods and forests, so we were keen to reflect this in the stories we chose. ‘Forgotten Falls’ takes us to a subtropical rainforest, a place that’s very different from the ancient forests, urban woodlands and patches of wilderness found in other stories in the collection. One of the real pleasures of putting together Into the Woods came from seeing the ways in which writers evoked such an interesting array of settings.

6. Lastly, where can we buy a copy?

The book is available in paperback and eBook from our website and from all good online retailers, including Amazon. For readers in the UK, the paperback edition can also be ordered by local bookshops and libraries.

Bio: Hannah Kate is an editor and writer based in North Manchester. She is the founder and editor-in-chief at Hic Dragones, and has had stories and poetry published in a number of anthologies and magazines. She also presents a weekly literature show on North Manchester FM, imaginatively entitled Hannah’s Bookshelf, and she is currently the treasurer of the Friends of Crumpsall Park.

Links: Hic Dragones – www.hic-dragones.co.uk (FB: hicdragones, Twitter: @HicDragones) Hannah Kate – hannahkate.net (FB: HannahsBookshelf, Twitter: @HannahKateish)


Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Of Devils and Deviants

Crowded Quarantine Publications have just announced that "Of Devils & Deviants: An Anthology of Erotic Horror" is now available to pre-order from Barnes & Noble. It is available as a hardcover or paperback, the ebook will be available in late May. 

This stunning anthology features artwork throughout and stories from Graham Masterton, Lucy Taylor, Aaron J. French, Mandy DeGeit, J. Daniel Stone, Kenneth W. Cain, Taylor Grant, Maynard Sims, and many, many more. My contribution, "Lauren", is a tale about what happens when boy meets girl in one of Brisbane's grooviest cocktail bars, The Bowery. Where it goes from there, you can't possibly imagine... suffice to say, it's kinky and creepy.


Place your order today at:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/of-devils-and-deviants-adam-millard/1119120676
 

Monday, 18 November 2013

Of Devils and Deviants

When I finished writing Lauren, a short story about a sexy young woman with a strange secret, I had a feeling that it would end up finding a good home one day. But I never guessed that it would be accepted for an epic hard-cover collection that is set to feature work from a long list of horror greats which includes Graham Masterton and Lucy Taylor.

"Of Devils and Deviants: An Anthology of Erotic Horror" will be released by Crowded Quarantine Publications in April next year. If you like your fiction both scary and sexy, you won't want to miss this release!

The complete table of contents can be found on the Crowded Quarantine Publications website.

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

The Month of the Moustache

Ladies and gentlemen,

As part of my ongoing commitment to supporting charitable causes, I'm participating in this year's Movember challenge.

The aims are to raise funds and awareness for men's health and to grow a finer mo than I have ever grown before. This year, to coincide with my return to France, I'm using Guy de Maupassant as my mo growing reference.


I'll keep you updated with my progress as the month (and the facial hair) progresses.

If you would like to help me, just click here: mobro.co/camerontrost             

Everybody who donates to this worthy cause will also receive a free ebook copy of "Hoffman's Creeper and Other Disturbing Tales".   

Friday, 20 January 2012




LETTERBOX now available in print for just $7.99.

Some very unpleasant deliveries end up in the letterboxes of Mirebury in my debut novel, "Letterbox". However, your letterbox now has the chance to get hold of books for cheaper than before thanks to lowered printing costs. "Letterbox" is now on sale for just $7.99 USD (plus p&h) from Amazon.com, making it five dollars cheaper than before!

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

What stalks the streets of your city at night?


Do you live in a city - a concrete jungle of skyscrapers where it's easy to get lost at night, in a maze of identical streets? Do you know the people who live in your block of flats - do you really know them? Do you sometimes think that somebody, or something, is following you home and watching you through your windows?

The "Urban Horror Special" from Morpheus Tales won't help your bad case of city jitters, but you really should read it anyway - you need to know what's out there - in the streets of your city...

My tale of urban suspense, "Noisy Neighbours", is included in this must have issue of Morpheus Tales.