AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Kristopher Triana

Meghan: Hey, Kris. Welcome back to Meghan’s House of Books and our annual Halloween Extravaganza. What is your favorite part of Halloween?

Kristopher: As a kid, it was being out on a cold night with the leaves blowing about, seeing the jack-o-lanterns glowing, running down the street in my costume and pretending I was a werewolf or vampire or whatever. That was even better than the candy! As an adult, I cherish those memories. Now, my favorite part of the holiday is its rich traditions, and the way adults can return to that childlike wonder for a night.

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween tradition?

Kristopher: The horror movie marathon, especially when itโ€™s with a significant other or a good friend. You carve pumpkins as the sun goes down, put on scary movies, and hope to get trick or treaters.

Meghan: If Halloween is your favorite holiday (or even second favorite holiday), why?

Kristopher: It is my favorite, hands down. Iโ€™m a horror writer, and also a horror fanatic. Halloween is the time of year everyone is into what Iโ€™m always into all year long.

Meghan: What are you superstitious about?

Kristopher: Nothing, really. I donโ€™t believe in that stuff. Give me a black cat to pet!

Meghan: What/who is your favorite horror monster or villain?

Kristopher: Oh, thatโ€™s a tough one. As for the old monsters, Iโ€™d have to say The Wolfman is my favorite. Iโ€™ve always related more to a tortured soul trying to contain his inner beast than some undead bloodsucker being all suave and perfect. I also dig The Blob!

Meghan: Which unsolved murder fascinates you the most?

Kristopher: The Black Dahlia. It was such a brutal crime and so shrouded in mystery.

Meghan: Which urban legend scares you the most?

Kristopher: Iโ€™ve always loved the hook, with the teens at loverโ€™s lane who hear on the radio about an escaped maniac with a hook hand, then find the bloody hook on the handle of the car door after they drive home.

Meghan: Who is your favorite serial killer and why?

Kristopher: I wouldnโ€™t say I have a โ€œfavoriteโ€ one because I donโ€™t like when people glorify someone like that. I see someone at a horror con wearing a Richard Ramirez t-shirt and Iโ€™m just like, โ€œYou know he raped and murdered old ladies, right?โ€. Itโ€™s just messed up. People need to differentiate between horror fiction and reality. But I do find true crime stories very interesting. Edmund Kemperโ€™s story is so beyond messed up. Well worth a read if you can stomach it!

Meghan: How old were you when you saw your first horror movie?

Kristopher: I canโ€™t remember exactly, but probably eight or nine, watching the old Universal monster movies. I was about eleven when I saw my first slasher film, which was John Carpenterโ€™s Halloween, and I was hooked.

Meghan: How old were you when you read your first horror book?

Kristopher: I read the Crestwood Monster Series and Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark as a kid. Then I moved on to Stephen King and Clive Barker. I think The Mist by King was my first adult horror story, and my first novel read was The Dark Half. Then Barkerโ€™s The Great and Secret Show opened my mind to the limitless possibilities the genre could offer. By the time I was fourteen I was devouring what is now referred to as โ€œPaperbacks from Hellโ€, all the novels from the horror boom of the โ€™80s. I knew early on that I wanted to be a horror author too.

Meghan: Which horror novel unsettled you the most?

Kristopher: Kingโ€™s The Shining was the first book I ever had to put down for a few hours because I was so freaked out. Since then, there have been many that got under my skinโ€”brutal books like Jack Ketchumโ€™s The Girl Next Door and Off Season, or more recent thrillers like Come With Me by Ronald Malfi. There are even books that donโ€™t qualify as horror but are deeply unsettling, such as Last Exit to Brooklyn and The Demon by Hubert Selby Jr. His books are incredible.

Meghan: Which horror movie scarred you for life?

Kristopher: I saw part of Prince of Darkness when I was way too young and it scared the crap out of me! I never knew what is was, and then one day Iโ€™m watching this movie, and the scene I always rememberedโ€”the hobo impaling a man with a bicycleโ€”comes on and Iโ€™m like, โ€œHoly shit!โ€

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween costume?

Kristopher: I loved being Freddy Krueger and Michael Myers, but dressing as Leatherface was the best because I hid in the bushes and then chased kids with a real chainsaw! I had removed the chain, so it was totally safe, but still loud and terrifying. They came back for more every year.

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween-themed song?

Kristopher: Again, itโ€™s hard to pick a favorite. But I do love Tim Curryโ€™s song in The Worst Witch.

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween candy or treat? What is your most disappointing?

Kristopher: Reeseโ€™s Peanut Butter Cups are my Halloween staple. Even the old school label screams Halloween with its autumn colors. The worst in the world is that horrible abomination known as candy corn.

Meghan: Thanks again for stopping by, Kris. Make sure you send Bear our love. But before you go, what are your go-to Halloween movies?

Kristopher: My ideal Halloween movie/TV marathon is:

John Carpenterโ€™s Halloween
Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
Ginger Snaps
Trick or Treat (1986)
A Nightmare on Elm Street
The Simpsonsโ€™ Treehouse of Horror episodes
Night of the Demons (1988)
Night of the Demons 2
The Exorcist III
The Monster Squad


Boo-graphy:
Kristopher Triana is the Splatterpunk Award-winning author of Gone to See the River Man, Full Brutal, The Thirteenth Koyote, They All Died Screaming, and many other terrifying books. His work has been published in multiple languages and has appeared in many anthologies and magazines, drawing praise from Rue Morgue Magazine, Cemetery Dance, Scream Magazine, and many more.
 
He lives in New England.

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And the Devil Cried
When Jackie is released from prison, his boss Pino sends a limo to pick him up. Even fresh out of the joint, ruthless Jackie is ready to work, collecting money for the mob and using his special training to take care of bad accountsโ€”permanently.

But when a drunk driver kills Pinoโ€™s young son, he gives Jackie a task that goes against every moral code. The drunk driver has a pre-teen daughter, and Pino doesnโ€™t just want vengeanceโ€”he wants an eye for an eye.
Jackie accepts the job, but once he finds the girl he starts making plans of his ownโ€ฆ

And the Devil Cried is a dark thriller from Kristopher Triana, the award-winning author of Gone to See the River Man and Full Brutal. It is a vicious, unflinching novel thatโ€™s bound to keep you burning.

Halloween Extravaganza: INTERVIEW: Kristopher Triana

I had the pleasure of meeting Kristopher last year around this time, when he agreed to take part in the 2018 Halloween Extravaganza. When I saw that he won the Splatterpunk Awards a few months ago at KillerCon in Austin, I knew I needed to have him back again. He is a man with a lot of talent, and one of the most interesting and entertaining guys I’ve met in awhile.


Meghan: Hey, Kris. Welcome back. It’s been awhile since we sat down together. What’s been going on since we last spoke?

Kristopher Triana: A great deal, actually. I’ve had several things come out in the past year and my novel, Full Brutal, won the Splatterpunk Award for Best Horror Novel of the Year. My next book comes out today. It’s a Halloween-themed novel called The Long Shadows of October.

Meghan: Who are you outside of writing?

Kristopher Triana: A dog nut and a horror fanatic.

Meghan: How do you feel about friends and close relatives reading your work?

Kristopher Triana: That’s no problem. It’s when coworkers want to read it that I get nervous, given how extreme my books can be. You never know how someone is going to take it.

Meghan: Is being a writer a gift or a curse?

Kristopher Triana: It’s neither. Being a writer (or at least a good one) takes years of hard work and dedication to the craft. It isn’t something you’re born with. The imagination, however, I think is a gift.

Meghan: How has your environment and upbringing colored your writing?

Kristopher Triana: Greatly, but I think that goes for all writers. You can always find a chunk of our hearts in what we create, bits and pieces of our history.

Meghan: Whatโ€™s the strangest thing you have ever had to research for your books?

Kristopher Triana: Crime scene cleanup for Toxic Love. And it made for one twisted book. That is one bizarre profession. I like to think I could handle it butโ€ฆ

Meghan: Which do you find the hardest to write: the beginning, the middle, or the end?

Kristopher Triana: It depends on the story, really, but getting started tends to be the most challenging. I always end up going back to the beginning and changing it as I write the book.

Meghan: Do you outline? Do you start with characters or plot? Do you just sit down and start writing? What works best for you?

Kristopher Triana: Ideas come to me and I jot them down. The dots start to connect in my head and the characters are given an outline, but they really reveal themselves to me as I write the story.

Meghan: What do you do when characters donโ€™t follow the outline/plan?

Kristopher Triana: I adapt to what I think they would do, based on what theyโ€™ve become throughout the book. A character fleshes out as you write the book and are never exactly the same as when you first gave them life.

Meghan: What do you do to motivate yourself to sit down and write?

Kristopher Triana: Iโ€™m one of those writers who are compelled to do it. I enjoy it so much that thereโ€™s rarely a day I have to push myself into the chair.

Meghan: Are you an avid reader?

Kristopher Triana: Definitely. You canโ€™t be a good writer without being an avid reader.

Meghan: What kind of books do you absolutely love to read?

Kristopher Triana: The more disturbing the better.

Meghan: How do you feel about movies based on books?

Kristopher Triana: Depends. Some can be great adaptations, like No Country for Old Men and Requiem for a Dream. Others can be terrible bastardizations, like Come Back to Me, based on Wrath James Whiteโ€™s novel, The Resurrectionist, or mediocre efforts like The Lost, based on the Jack Ketchum novel.

Meghan: Have you ever killed a main character?

Kristopher Triana: Of course! Thatโ€™s what theyโ€™re there for.

Meghan: Do you enjoy making your characters suffer?

Kristopher Triana: Not in a sadistic way. The stuff I write is dark and violent. Bad things happen in my books, often to good people. Iโ€™m not adverse to the bad guy winning. Suffering is the nature of humanity. We all feel it, endure it. Expressing it through art helps us cope.

Meghan: Whatโ€™s the weirdest character concept that youโ€™ve ever come up with?

Kristopher Triana: The Goddess in Body Art. She is stitched together by a twisted mortician using various body parts, ending up with multiple legs and arms and breasts. An unexplained evil makes her a sentient being.

Meghan: Whatโ€™s the best piece of feedback youโ€™ve ever received? Whatโ€™s the worst?

Kristopher Triana: Praise from some of my idols like Brian Keene, Edward Lee, and Jack Ketchum were huge for me. As far as constructive criticism, I ask for it from my editors. I want to know if Iโ€™m doing something wrong or if it isnโ€™t effective. If your beta readers give you nothing but praise, theyโ€™re too damn nice and arenโ€™t being helpful. The worst kind of criticism is when people bash your work because they just donโ€™t understand it or didnโ€™t realize what they were getting into as far as the horror element goes.

Meghan: What do your fans mean to you?

Kristopher Triana: The world and then some. That I can share my stories with them and that they ask for more is everything I’ve ever wanted in life.

Meghan: If you could steal one character from another author and make them yours, who would it be and why?

Kristopher Triana: Thatโ€™s a tough one. Iโ€™m going to say Iโ€™d take Michael Myers from John Carpenterโ€™s Halloween. I could write a brand new story that picks up where part four left off, ignoring all the other sequels and remakes.

Meghan: If you could write the next book in a series, which one would it be, and what would you make the book about?

Kristopher Triana: Ted Lewisโ€™ Get Carter, just so I could write a fourth novel in the series. It would deal with Carterโ€™s childhood and his earliest days in the criminal underground.

Meghan: If you could write a collaboration with another author, who would it be and what would you write about?

Kristopher Triana: Clive Barker was such an enormous influence on me. Idโ€™ love to write a supernatural horror story with him and bring him back to his days of splatter.

Meghan: What can we expect from you in the future?

Kristopher Triana: Many things, indeed! I have at least three books coming out in 2020, plus two special edition hardbacks. Lots of projects going on. And there will be a German edition of Toxic Love for my fans overseas.

Meghan: Where can we find you?

Kristopher Triana: All the social media sites and my website. And look for me at the Merrimack Valley Halloween Book Festival on October 12th in Haverhill, Massachusetts. Iโ€™ll also be signing books at Scares That Care next summer, as well as Killercon and some other events.

Meghan: Do you have any closing words for your fans or anything youโ€™d like to say that we didnโ€™t get to cover in this interview or the last?

Kristopher Triana: Halloween comes but once a year. Make it count!

Kristopher Triana is a Splatterpunk Award Winning author of horror, southern gothic, and crime fiction.

His books include Full Brutal (Winner of the 2019 Splatterpunk Award: Best Horror Novel), Toxic Love, The Shepherd of the Black Sheep, Body Art, The Ruin Season, The Detained, and Growing Dark, the latter of which was called “a must read” by Rue Morgue Magazine. His work has drawn praise from Publisher’s Weekly, Cemetery Dance, and The Ginger Nuts of Horror. Triana’s short stories have appeared in many magazines and anthologies, including Cemetery Dance, Blood Bound Book’s D.O.A. series, Year’s Best Hardcore Horror, Stiff Things, and Selfies from the End of the World, to name a few. His work has also been translated into several languages.

He lives in Connecticut.


Long Shadows of October

When Joe and Danny take on the job of housesitting Snowden Manor, they fail to realize they wonโ€™t be in the house alone. Inside the walls swarms a specter made of equal parts ghost, succubus and witch, and she uses the manse as a prison for souls. Now that Octoberโ€™s supermoon is falling over the mountains, she is ready to rise and reclaim her flesh.

Kayla has a crush on Joe, so when he asks her to come to a party at the manor she accepts his invitation. But no sooner do they get there than strange things start to unfold. People go missing, a mysterious dog appears, and then the boys begin to change . . .

Wraiths warn Kayla to save her friends before theyโ€™re devoured by the seductive witch. But she must hurry. For as Halloween approaches, the manor becomes a vessel for the black magic of the mountains, and the shadows that rule the woods return home.

Full Brutal

Kim White is a very popular cheerleader. Sheโ€™s pretty, healthy, and comes from a well-off family. She has everything a girl of sixteen is supposed to want. And sheโ€™s sick to death of it. 

In search of something to pull her out of suicidal thoughts, she decides to lose her virginity, having heard itโ€™s a life-changing event. But Kim doesnโ€™t want to do it the same way the other girls do. She seduces one of her teachers, hoping to ruin his life just for the fun of it. This starts Kim on a runaway train of sadism as she makes every effort to destroy the lives of those around her. But soon simple backstabbing is not enough to keep her excited, and she nosedives into sabotage, violence and even murder. 

When Kim finds out sheโ€™s pregnant with her teacherโ€™s child, a new madness overtakes her, and she realizes thereโ€™s only one thing that will satisfy her babyโ€™s hunger . . .