On behalf of Halloweenpalooza, thanks so much for agreeing to participate. Let’s start with some quickies:
Favorite color: Blue.
Favorite scene in a horror flick: There are so many, but I always liked the scene in “The Thing” (John Carpenter’s version) where the guy is on the table and they’re trying to resuscitate him—then the man’s head becomes a living thing and tears itself away from his neck and grows spider-like legs.
Dogs or cats: I like both, but since we have a cat right now, I’d have to vote for cats.
Male or female friends: Both.
Guilty pleasure: Curling up on the couch, drinking a few beers, and watching a scary movie.
Favorite Halloween costume that you’ve seen: I’m not sure if this was a Halloween costume or not, but I saw a guy once in a Transformers costume, and when he crouched down the robot costume became a car.
Favorite Halloween candy: Anything chocolate.
Have You Ever Carved a Pumpkin: Yes, many times.
Favorite monster: I don’t know if this counts—but Christine (the car from the Stephen King novel) is my favorite. A ’58 Plymouth Fury with a taste for blood.
Favorite scene in a horror flick: There are so many, but I always liked the scene in “The Thing” (John Carpenter’s version) where the guy is on the table and they’re trying to resuscitate him—then the man’s head becomes a living thing and tears itself away from his neck and grows spider-like legs.
Dogs or cats: I like both, but since we have a cat right now, I’d have to vote for cats.
Male or female friends: Both.
Guilty pleasure: Curling up on the couch, drinking a few beers, and watching a scary movie.
Favorite Halloween costume that you’ve seen: I’m not sure if this was a Halloween costume or not, but I saw a guy once in a Transformers costume, and when he crouched down the robot costume became a car.
Favorite Halloween candy: Anything chocolate.
Have You Ever Carved a Pumpkin: Yes, many times.
Favorite monster: I don’t know if this counts—but Christine (the car from the Stephen King novel) is my favorite. A ’58 Plymouth Fury with a taste for blood.
1. What
was your best Halloween ever?
There are so many of them, but if I had to
pick one, it would be taking my son trick-or-treating when he was eight years
old. We decorated the house with fake spider webs and even built a life-size
dummy on the front porch with a werewolf mask. After we were done
trick-or-treating, Brandon begged me to tell him some scary stories. So my wife
and I turned off most of the lights, lit a few candles, and we sat in a circle
on the floor. I began telling some scary stories, and a few moments later
Brandon got so scared that he begged me to stop telling them.
2. What
do you think influenced you to write horror? And is writing horror everything
you thought it would be?
I’ve always wanted to write for as long as I
can remember. When I was eight or nine years old, I would read the sci-fi books
that my parents had on the bookshelf. I tried to write stories like the ones
I’d read, and I produced copycat Bradbury and Clarke tales.
But what really influenced me to write horror
was when I was in eighth grade and a friend of mine told me about a book he was
reading called “The Stand.” I listened to his description of it and I
knew I had to read this book. I knew who Stephen King was because I’d watched “The Shining” by myself when I was nine years old and it
scared the hell out of me. So I went to the library (which was a tiny space
next to the Winn Dixie across the street from our trailer park), and they only
had a few Stephen King books—and they didn’t have “The Stand.” So I checked out “Christine” and I burned right through it. After reading
that book, I knew I wanted to write tales like this. I checked out “‘Salem’s Lot” next, and then “The Dead Zone,” and on and on from there.
I love writing in many genres (sci-fi,
thrillers, even dramas), but I keep coming back to horror. Even if I write
something that’s a straight sci-fi or thriller, I find myself creating dark
scenes in the story.
3. With
so many types of horror out there, what do you bring to the picnic table? How
would you describe your potato salad?
I think there are many sub-genres in horror:
slasher, vampire, zombie, supernatural, serial killer—so I think there’s a lot
out there to choose from. I have to admit that a lot of my books and stories
lean more towards monsters and the supernatural. The one thing I try to do with
my books and stories is get to the action right away. I like to read books that
jump right into the story and after each chapter you’re hooked. You’re saying:
I’ll just read one more chapter. I try to do that with my books—keep teasing
the reader along. Another thing that my “potato salad” has is a twist at the
end of most of my novels and stories. I love reading books where I’m not really
sure how it’s going to end, and then when it does, it’s an ending I wasn’t
quite expecting.
4. Could
you please post a small excerpt from any book that you think best exemplifies you?
This
is the very beginning of ANCIENT ENEMY:
CHAPTER ONE
New Mexico Badlands – Anasazi Dig Site
He was out there—she was sure of it.
Stella
remained perfectly still. She listened for sounds of movement around the dark
room, but all she could hear was heavy breathing, some snoring, and the ceaseless
wind that howled around the trailer. The room was claustrophobic with the
smells of body odor, sweat, and fear. She made herself wait a few more minutes
before opening her eyes. She wanted to be sure everyone else was asleep.
Under
the thin sheet that covered her body, Stella was fully dressed. She even had
her hiking boots on. She had been planning this for more than a day now. This
was her only chance.
And
David’s only chance.
Finally,
after counting slowly to one hundred, Stella opened her eyes just a crack. She
sat up, not making a sound. She looked around the dark room at the few people
who were left; some of them curled up on chairs, some of them on the floor.
Some clutched weapons in their hands as they slept: knives, archaeological axes,
anything that could be used in defense.
Jake,
who was supposed to be awake and on guard, slept in a fetal position on the
floor, a hunting knife gripped in one hand.
Stella
watched Jake as she pulled the sheet away from her body and swung her feet to
the floor. Keeping her eyes on Jake the whole time, she groped in the darkness
for her purse on the floor beside the couch. The keys to her rusted and
battered Chevy Suburban were inside the purse.
She
grabbed her coat from the end of the couch and stood up in the darkness. She
froze. Someone coughed and snorted in their sleep, but then the person rolled
over and laid still. After the four days of terror they’d been through, it was
unbelievable that they could sleep at all—but the body eventually surrenders to
its basic need for food and sleep.
And survival, her mind whispered.
Stella crept past a table cluttered with
labeled Anasazi artifacts that they had dug out of the cave only a week ago.
Had it been only a week? It seemed like
years—another lifetime.
Stella made it to the side door of the
trailer, unlocked it, opened it, and slipped out into the night.
Jake’s
eyes popped open. He sat up in the darkness and watched Stella leave. He
gripped the hunting knife in his hand, his forearm muscles bunching. He got to
his feet and walked to the back door of the trailer.
He
knew what he had to do.
*
Stella
hurried down the trailer steps and stood on the rocky ground of the canyon
floor. She spotted David forty yards away, bundled up in his coat as he gazed
out at the barren landscape under the starry night sky. Stella glanced back at
the trailer—no one coming yet—and then she hurried out to David.
She
stood beside David. He seemed so small and fragile, only nine years old. He was
at least half Navajo, maybe even full-blooded, but she didn’t know for sure.
The only thing she knew about David was that the others inside the trailer
wanted to kill him.
Stella
touched David’s shoulder, a gentle touch. He looked up at her and his eyes
seemed like dark shimmering pools of liquid in the night.
“David,
we need to leave right now. You understand, don’t you?”
He
nodded and offered her his hand.
She
took it and they ran.
* * *
5. What
scares you? Have you had any encounters with the supernatural?
A lot of things scare me. Dying and not being
here anymore is a lot of people’s fear. The fear of anything happening to my
son, my wife, or my family is another fear of mine. Getting sick and becoming a
burden to my loved ones. I guess these fears are so real that I like to escape
into the world of monsters and the supernatural.
My dad’s mother (my grandmother) seemed to
attract the supernatural when she was alive. She liked to read palms and read
people’s fortunes in the cards. And it seemed like a lot of the houses they
rented were haunted. My sister and I used to spend the summer with my
grandparents from when we were six years old up until we were twelve, and we
saw some very strange things in two of those houses—one in Crescent City,
Florida (that was the bad one), and one in DeLand, Florida. Also, my father has
some spooky stories about some of the houses they lived in when he was a kid.
6. Uh-oh!
A mad magician just cast a spell that would bring all your characters to life! What’s the name of the one character you would
most not want to meet and why should he, she, or it never be unleashed on the
unsuspecting public?
I guess the character I would most not want
to meet would have to be the ancient force from my first novel “Ancient Enemy.” The Ancient Enemy in the book is a shape-shifting force that
can slip out from its dimension into ours. It’s very powerful and it can
control the dead like puppets, getting them to do whatever it wants. There’s
really no way to fight it—you need someone like the young boy in the book
(David), so hopefully the mad magician would bring David to life along with the
Ancient Enemy.
7. Would
you be up for a ghost hunting session? If, yes, where would you most like it
conducted and who would you most like to contact? What would you hope they’d
say?
Like I said above, my grandmother was into
that kind of stuff. So I watched her read playing cards and conduct séances.
She was trying to contact her mother in some of the séances (the woman who
adopted her because she never found out who her real mother was), and some very
spooky stuff happened. But if I was in a ghost hunting session, I’m not sure
who I would like to contact—maybe some of my family members who have died.
8. What
is it about the power of the written word that has the ability to scare us so
profoundly?
I think a reader can become immersed in the
world of a story for a short time if the author can paint a picture for them—and
some writers (and filmmakers) are better at this than others. I think the same
thing happens when you watch a good film—you’re in that world for those two hours. I think it’s a little like being
in a trance or self-hypnosis. For me, as a reader, it’s pretty easy for me to
get lost in the world of the story I’m reading.
9. If
you could channel one master of horror that’s passed, who would it be and what
do you think the result of your collaboration would be?
That’s a tough one because most of my
favorites are still alive: Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Robert McCammon, Clive
Barker, and many others. There are a few writers I always wanted to meet, but
they have passed away: Arthur C. Clarke, Michael Crichton, and Ray Bradbury. I
guess Ray Bradbury would be the one I would reach out to if I had to choose
one. Ray Bradbury could be called a speculative fiction writer, and some of his
stuff could be dark (Something Wicked This Way Comes). I don’t know what I would say to Ray Bradbury;
I would probably just listen to whatever he had to say and definitely take some
notes.
10. What’s
next for Mark Lukens? We want to hear all about your next work!
I’m working with a few producers and a
production company for a horror film right now, but nothing is being shot yet.
As far as my books, I’m beginning to work on two different series. One is a
post-apocalyptic series about a group of characters who come together after the
economy and all laws collapse—but there’s something else going on, something is
happening to people, changing them.
The other series I’m beginning to work on is
a straight thriller, but I believe it would still appeal to horror fans. It’s
about an FBI consultant who was the only survivor of her family’s massacre by a
serial killer, and now she has dedicated her life to tracking down serial
killers, but her main target has always been the man who killed her family.
I’m also publishing “Devil’s Island” on
Kindle very soon, and I’m working on another collection of short stories. I’m
also working on a sword and sorcery fantasy series with my longtime friend—it’s
called “The Changing Stone.”
I have some other things I’m working on. I
have more ideas than time to write. But that’s a good thing, I guess.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR
Mark Lukens has been writing since the second grade when
his teacher called his parents in for a conference because the ghost story he'd
written had her a little concerned.
Since then he's had several stories published
and four screenplays optioned by producers in Hollywood. One script is in
development to be produced. He is the author of Ancient
Enemy, Descendants of Magic, The Summoning, Night Terrors, Sightings, The
Exorcist's Apprentice, What Lies Below, Ghost Town: a novella, and A
Dark Collection: 12 Scary Stories. He is a member of The Horror Writers Association.
He grew up in Daytona Beach, Florida. But after many
travels and adventures, he settled down in Tampa, Florida with his wonderful
wife and son, and a stray cat they adopted.
He would love to hear from you and he can be found at
www.marklukensbooks.com, and also on Facebook at MarkLukensBooks, and on
Twitter @marklukensbooks. He can be reached by e-mail at
marklukensbooks@yahoo.com.
TODAY’S GIVEAWAY
FIVE PRINT
COPIES of Mark Luken’s THE EXORCIST’S APPRENTICE! Because these are print copies, winners
are limited to U.S. and Canada!
To win: go to the
Official FB Event Page; find the post announcing today’s giveaway; and
comment, “I WANT TO WIN” in that post and you just might!!!
THE
EXORCIST’S APPRENTICE
For
centuries the Roman Catholic Church has employed a select few to investigate
the most extreme cases of demonic possession, haunted places, and paranormal
activity. Often, the calling of an Investigator is passed down from father to
son.
After
surviving a tragic accident, seventeen year old Danny Lambert is sent to live
with his father, Paul, who is an Investigator for the Church. At first Danny
resists the calling to become an Investigator, but after the horrors he sees,
he agrees to begin training with his father.
Danny
and Paul are given their first assignment: the haunting of a house in a remote
corner of upstate New York. Inside this house Danny will discover a horrifying,
mind-blowing secret that will not only change his life, but how he sees
everything forever.
Great interview! Just bought Ancient Enemy =)
ReplyDeleteVery good interview!! I have read Ancient Enemy. Now I'm on the second book.You will not be disappointed.
ReplyDelete