Loren Rhoads | |
---|---|
Born | 1963 Michigan |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of Michigan |
Occupation | Author |
Loren Rhoads is a San Francisco-based author, editor, and lecturer on cemetery history. She is a member of Horror Writers Association, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, and the Association for Gravestone Studies.
Inspired by volunteering for RE/Search Publications, Rhoads and her husband Mason Jones founded Automatism Press in 1993. Automatism published two anthologies, Lend the Eye a Terrible Aspect (edited by Jones and Rhoads) and Death's Garden: Relationships with Cemeteries (edited by Rhoads alone), before she created Morbid Curiosity (magazine) in 1997. The magazine, which published true first-person confessional essays, was a Finalist for the Bram Stoker Award in 2004.
In 2006, Rhoads shut down Morbid Curiosity magazine to concentrate on her own writing. Her first big break came when her story "Still Life with Shattered Glass" took third place in the Fiction Contest at the 2005 World Horror Convention and was later published in Cemetery Dance magazine. That led in 2008 to the publication of four of her stories in Sins of the Sirens: 14 Tales of Dark Desire edited by John Everson for Dark Arts Books.
Rhoads edited Morbid Curiosity Cures the Blues: True Tales of the Unsavory, Unwise, Unorthodox, and Unusual, a collection of her favorite essays from Morbid Curiosity magazine, for Scribner in 2009. She subsequently edited anthologies for Damnation Books and Tomes & Coffee Press.
Her first novel, co-written with Brian Thomas, was published by Black Bed Sheet Books in 2014, followed by a space-opera trilogy published by Night Shade Books in 2015.
In November 1997, Rhoads began writing a monthly column about visiting cemeteries for Gothic.Net. Many of those essays were collected into a cemetery memoir called Wish You Were Here: Adventures in Cemetery Travel, first published by Western Legends Publishing in 2013.
She began blogging at CemeteryTravel.com in February 2011, which led to 199 Cemeteries to See Before You Die, published by Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers in 2017.
Rhoads has written about cemeteries for Mental Floss, [1] Legacy.com, [2] The Daily Beast, The Cemetery Club, [3] Gothic Beauty, [4] the Association for Gravestone Studies, [5] the Horror Writers Association, among others.
She lectured about cemeteries at the Death Salon, [6] Reimagine End of Life, [7] the San Francisco Lit Crawl, [8] StokerCon, [9] the SFWA Nebula Conference, [10] and on NPR. [11]
She continues to advocate for the preservation of historic cemeteries.
Karl Edward Wagner was an American writer, poet, editor, and publisher of horror, science fiction, and heroic fantasy, who was born in Knoxville, Tennessee and originally trained as a psychiatrist. He wrote numerous dark fantasy and horror stories. As an editor, he created a three-volume set of Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian fiction restored to its original form as written, and edited the long-running and genre-defining The Year's Best Horror Stories series for DAW Books. His Carcosa publishing company issued four volumes of the best stories by some of the major authors of the so-called Golden Age pulp magazines. He is possibly best known for his creation of a series of stories featuring the character Kane, the Mystic Swordsman.
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Cemetery Dance Publications is an American specialty press publisher of horror and dark suspense. Cemetery Dance was founded by Richard Chizmar, a horror author, while he was in college. It is associated with Cemetery Dance magazine, which was founded in 1988. They began to publish books in 1992. They later expanded to encompass a magazine and website featuring news, interviews, and reviews related to horror literature.
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Morbid Curiosity was an annual magazine published in San Francisco, California between 1997 and 2006. Helmed by editor and publisher Loren Rhoads, the magazine was devoted to confessional first-person nonfiction essays. Morbid Curiosity explored "the unsavory, unwise, unorthodox, and unusual: all the dark elements that make life truly worth living."
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