Author
Barbara Roden, Reggie Oliver, M.R. James, Chris Bell, Richard Christian Matheson, John Gaskin, Michael Kelly
Out and Back - Barbara Roden
"My cousin-by-marriage Sean Lavery, knowing my love for weird and outre websites, sent me a link to the Dark Roasted Blend site (
www.darkroastedblend.com)," reveals the Barbara Roden, "where I found several pages featuring photographs of abandoned places.
"My imagination was fired by pictures taken at Chippewa Lake Park in Medina, Ohio, which opened in 1878 and was abandoned in 1978, with the buildings and rides left to rot where they stood, and I began looking around for some information about the park.
"I've always had a fondness for amusement parks, ever since I was a child visiting Vancouver's Pacific National Exhibition with my father and my brother: an annual trip which was one of the red-letter days on my childhood calendar. The photographs of Chippewa Lake Park were equal parts eerie and sad, for anyone who has ever thrilled to the sights and sounds of a midway, and the story sprang, almost fully-formed, into my head; one of the few times that's happened."
To see some of the pictures that inspired the following story, visit:
www.defunctparks.com/parks/OH/ChippewaLake/chippewa-lake.htm.
The Game of Bear - Reggie Oliver & M. R. James
Shem-el-Nessim: An Inspiration in Perfume - Chris Bell
"Shem-el-Nessim' (subtitled 'An Inspiration in Perfume') was inspired by a real perfume of that name," reveals Chris Bell, "or at least by a framed advertisement for it that once hung in my girlfriend's parents' house. Now that we live together, it hangs above our bed.
"The story took a year to write. I began making notes in England in 2005. When I discovered more advertisements and packaging by J. Grossmith & Son, Distillers of Perfumes (the firm fictionalized in the story) on the Internet, Stan Tooprig, the mystery woman and the
Cairo Gazette journalist narrator came alive.
"In a piece of synchronicity in the real world, Grossmith Ltd was recently resurrected and its managing director contacted me to ask how I came to write 'Shem-el-Nessim'. 'It was partly because of your description of Stan Tooprig in the story that I thought you had some special insight into the Grossmith family,' said Simon Brooke, a Grossmith descendant himself."
Venturi - Richard Christian Matheson
"Nineteenth-century physicist G.B. Venturi discovered a compressive phenomenon which effects fire, moving through a canyon, causing the flames to be intensified, feeding upon themselves," Matheson explains. "This acceleration, called the 'Venturi Effect', is as apt a metaphor for paranoia as I have encountered.
"When my own house in Malibu burned down, some years back, my senses altered. As fires ate hillsides and smoke drowned sun, I was forced to