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Ronald Malfi | |
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Born | Brooklyn, New York | April 28, 1977
Occupation |
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Genre | Horror fiction, mainstream fiction, crime fiction |
Literary movement | Speculative fiction |
Website | |
ronmalfi |
Ronald Malfi (born April 28, 1977) is an American novelist whose genres include horror, thrillers, mainstream, and literary fiction. Malfi is also a musician, having fronted the Baltimore-based alternative rock band Nellie Blide as well as his current project, Veer. He currently lives in Maryland.
Ronald Malfi was born on April 28, 1977, in Brooklyn, New York. [1] His father was a Secret Service agent and his mother was a stay-at-home mom, who eventually raised four children, of which Ronald was the eldest. [2] His father's job saw the family transferred to various cities throughout the northeast until they eventually relocated to Severna Park, Maryland, where Ronald attended Severna Park High School until his graduation in 1995. [3] Malfi went on to study at Anne Arundel Community College and ultimately received a degree in English from Towson University in 1999. [4]
Malfi began writing stories at an early age. [5] His earliest short stories and small press novels saw Malfi using his full name, Ronald Damien Malfi, but he later dropped his middle name for his mass market releases. [6] As for his daily writing routine, Malfi has said he typically tries to write about 15 pages a day. [7] He is considered one of the new wave of literary, or "art house," horror novelists. [8]
In 2009, his novel Shamrock Alley, based on the true exploits of his own father, a retired Secret Service agent who went undercover and infiltrated the violent Irish gang in Manhattan known as The Westies, [2] was released and optioned for television. [9] The novel also won a Silver Independent Publisher Book Awards medal (IPPY) in the thriller/suspense/mystery novel category in 2010. [10]
In 2010, his novel Snow was released in paperback to much acclaim, as reviewers touted the novel's near-flawless pacing [11] and descriptive writing. [12] Malfi claims the novel was "feverishly hammered out in about two weeks." [13] The plot of the novel follows a group of strangers in to a town in Iowa which has been overrun by snow phantoms that can turn people into flesh-hungry zombies.
In 2011, the publication of his novel Floating Staircase garnered him much praise, and the novel won a Gold IPPY Award [14] [15] and was nominated by the Horror Writers Association for the Bram Stoker Award for best novel of 2011. [16]
During a 2011 radio interview, Malfi stated that most of his fiction deals with the concept of lost or confused identity. [17]
Malfi is also a musician, who has composed music for independent films, [18] and was the lead singer/songwriter and rhythm guitarist for the Baltimore-based alternative rock band Nellie Blide [19] (from 2000 to 2002) and his current project, Veer.
"I Know What You Are" (poem)
- Second Place (amateur), "Dracula '97" from the Transylvanian Society of Dracula. [25]
Shamrock Alley
- Independent Publisher Book Award (Silver) [26]
Floating Staircase
- Nominated for a Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel of 2011 [27]
- Independent Publisher Book Award (Gold Medal of Honor) [26] [15]
- Winner (third place), Vincent Preis International Horror Award [28]
Cradle Lake
- Benjamin Franklin Independent Book Award (Silver) [29]
Little Girls
- Shortlist - American Library Association's Year's Best in Genre Fiction [30]
Robert Rick McCammon is an American novelist from Birmingham, Alabama. One of the influential names in the late 1970s–early 1990s American horror literature boom, by 1991 McCammon had three New York Times bestsellers and around 5 million books in print. Since 2002 he’s written several books in a historical mystery series featuring a 17th-century magistrate’s clerk, Matthew Corbett, as he unravels mysteries in colonial America.
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Floating Staircase is a ghost story/mystery novel by American writer Ronald Malfi. It was published in 2011 by Medallion Press, with a limited edition hardcover collectors edition from Thunderstorm Books, which contained an original author's "Afterward" not in the paperback novel. The novel was nominated by the Horror Writers Association for a Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel, and it won a Gold IPPY Award for best horror novel of 2011.
Shamrock Alley is a crime novel written by American novelist Ronald Malfi. It was originally published in 2009 by Medallion Press. The novel is based on a real-life investigation Malfi's father, a retired Secret Service agent, had worked back in the 1970s against The Westies. This is also the final novel where the author used his middle name on the cover and title page. The novel won a Silver Independent Publisher Book Awards medal (IPPY) for Best Mystery/Suspense/Thriller.
The Independent Publisher Book Awards, also styled the IPPY Awards, are a set of annual book awards for independently published titles. They are the longest-running unaffiliated contest open exclusively to independent presses. The IPPY Awards are open to authors and publishers worldwide who produce books written in English and intended for the North American market. According to the IPPY website, the awards "reward those who exhibit the courage, innovation, and creativity to bring about change in the world of publishing."
December Park is a coming of age/bildungsroman suspense novel written by Ronald Malfi. It was published in 2014 by Medallion Press, with a limited hardcover collectors edition from Cemetery Dance Publications. Malfi has credited this book with being his most autobiographical to date, citing that the fictional town of Harting Farms and its titular neighborhood park are based on the Maryland suburb of Severna Park, where Malfi grew up.
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