No one quite knows where Dave Migman came from. When I took over Dog Horn Publishing, he came with all the computers, files and folders Ellis France had accumulated over her two years in charge. His manuscript swam to the top of official letters and contracts and said 'Read me' in an ethereal, acidic whisper.
See, Dave's writing is incandescent. It's toxic. It's corrosive. And he seems to secrete it from every pore, like Giger's alien.
We hear very little from him and frequently have no clue where he is--whether it's the Highlands or some farflung colony off the coast of Indonesia. But every quarter he floods our inbox with the creative meanderings of the past three months and scares our socks off! He is at once artist, poet and author, and his first novel, The Wolf Stepped Out, is evidence of his cross-disciplinary skills. He's designed the covers for each edition himself and there's a haunting lyrical quality which shakes you to your bones.
Wolf is a story of religious obsession, urban psychosis and razor-edged revenge. If you like Polluto, you'll love this!
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Monday, March 16
by
beyonce
on Mon 16 Mar 2009 12:00 PM GMT
Saturday, March 14
Sunday, March 1
by
beyonce
on Sun 01 Mar 2009 10:00 PM GMT
I'm surprised I never encountered Steve Redwood before. He is entirely not what I expected when Rhys first (electronically) introduced me to him, but he's everything I love in an author. Now I can't help but keep in constant contact via Facebook and email!
Steve, like Rhys, writes satire. But whilst Rhys is a pervy Python, Steve is a slightly twisted Tom Holt or Terry Pratchett. His humour is jovial, but nearly always black. He chills and thrills in equal measure. In fact, if Rhys is the Monty Python crew, Steve is the cast of The League of Gentlemen. His are characters with devious plans, selfish whims and an eager urge to fuck others over for their own good. And yet, they still make you laugh, the way Blackadder's abuse of Baldrick always does. It's mean, it's slightly terrifying, but it's always entertaining. Broken Symmetries seems to me the perfect title for this latest collection of Steve's. For in his own wonderful way, he takes popular tropes, commercial icons and mythological familiars and shoves them in a blender to make something bloody, wonky and fun. The symmetries are there, but they're always skewed. So in this collection you'll see hues of this, that and the other, all glued together with Steve's confiding, man-sat-on-the-stool-next-to-you-in-your-local-pub style. There's a more biting wit than Pratchett could ever manage, and whilst Rhys is surreal he is brutally down-to-earth, but these two are the closest approximations we have to Steve's work, for the uninitiated. You can check out a bunch of his stuff over at Whispers of Wickedness and see what you think. If you love him as much as we do, check out Broken Symmetries later this year. Tuesday, February 17
by
beyonce
on Tue 17 Feb 2009 11:00 PM GMT
Deborah Hoag, for anyone who's read Polluto, is one of our favourite new authors. And with good reason.
Deb and I first met back on Orson Scott Card's wonderful Hatrack River Writer's Workshop, along with fellow contributor for Issue 4, Anne Pinckard. Deb was one of the most attentive workshoppers, who really read everything I'd sent her and gave invaluable comments regarding every letter. She also wasn't put off by some of the more . . . extreme stories I've written. Little did I know, back then, that this mother of many was just as much a deviant as I was. When Polluto first formed in my manic, substance-abused mind, Deb was immediately interested. In the early call for submissions, I'd mentioned types of stories that might appear in the mag, including one about a battered wife werewolf. This was the seed for the first of Deb's anti-genre works: 'Wereworlf of Sappho'. Teaming up with Vince Locke, who illustrated the story, she received good reviews from the likes of The Fix and Whispers of Wickedness, and she's stuck along for the ride. With each issue, her stories get darker, funnier and more appropriate to the concoction of perversions Polluto has become. Crashin' the Real is tamer than her Sex in the Time of VHS story, or the transgender/race politics of her bastard Queer & Loathing on the Yellow-Brick Road, but this is perhaps her returning to the beginning and explaining who she is and why she writes what she does. Until I read Crashin' the Real, I knew a whole lot less about our Deb. This story of one ageing punk's quest for Steve Tyler is partly biographical, and this infuses the text with a raw, confessional energy and an emotional impact her shorter, more kickass stories haven't had (or needed). But that aside, it's just as much rollicking fun as anything else she's written. In fact, it's fucking hilarious, and is guaranteed to make you love her journalist heroine, for better or for worse. Other projects from Deb include the intriguing Dragula, which is an account of what happens when Dracula meets Dr Freud. But that, dear readers, is for another time. [Crashin' the Real is expected to be released in time for Mother's Day, for all you punk mammas out there!] Wednesday, February 4
Tuesday, February 3
by
beyonce
on Tue 03 Feb 2009 10:00 PM GMT
These are going up here before they'll be updated on the site. This isn't ideal, but the main website will be relaunched over the next few months once our already slave-driven Creative Director/web designer/deformed ghoulish side-kick Michael Dark finishes the Polluto and Troglodyte Rose websites.
We are now CLOSED to submissions for 2009. We are considering projects for 2010 onwards, but please just email a query first of all. Here's what we want: -a cover letter, explaining who you are and what your publishing credits, if any, are; -a 25-word (max.) summary of your narrative, which should indicate your main character, their main conflict, and the resolution (for example: Snow White is a young girl who must defeat her evil stepmother, find her true love and overcome death to live happily ever after); -a breakdown of your plot, being as concise and direct as possible; -your contact details. You can now contact us BY EMAIL, but only for this query stage. Then we will decide if we want to read more. If we do, we'll either ask you to email it to us or post it, depending on how much clutter we have in the office (READ: my living room) and how strained our eyes are feeling this week (staring at computers to read a novel is a bitch, and we don't have the funds to print it off). DON'T email us if less than three months have passed. If more than three months have passed, it's probably a good sign. If you don't hear from us by six months, assume we've passed on your ms and couldn't come up with a nice enough excuse to tell you it wasn't right for us. We usually confirm receipt of emailed queries and emailed mss within a week. For postal receipt confirmation, send a stamped, self-addressed postcard (or email address). DON'T send any attachments without permission. Query only. DO read these guidelines. If you've at least read the ones on the website, we'll forgive you, although it does suggest you've maybe not researched your markets as well as you should have. DON'T send us typical genre stuff. We want books that break the rules and make some new ones. We want cross-genre, slipstream, bizarro, postmodern, surreal, illustrated, experimental, punky, spunky, collaged madness. No vampires, zombies, emotional drivel or realism, or we'll get our nailgun out and stick a hole in your forehead. There are always exceptions, but we've yet to encounter any. DO study us and our publications before you submit. Really think about this. Can you see yourself working with us? Do you like our other authors? How do you think our covers match your own sensibilities? Be absolutely positive we're right for you. This is a big deal. Don't just get excited about the prospect of being published. Get excited about the prospect of being published by the right people. Now, get writing, get workshopping, and then get submitting! Monday, February 2
by
beyonce
on Mon 02 Feb 2009 10:00 PM GMT
Polluto #3 writer Rhian Waller is due to shave off her hair for charity Amnesty International. If you're kind enough to donate, or nosy enough to pry, check out the Facebook group <a href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=46506923946">here</a>.
Those who loved Sigourney in Alien 3 or Demi in GI Jane will love it, I'm sure ;) Saturday, January 31
by
beyonce
on Sat 31 Jan 2009 10:00 PM GMT
[I posted this over at http://troglodyterose.blogspot.com too, but it needs to be here as well.]
Okay, so I bet you're wondering what's with the freaky title? Well here's the deal: Issue 6 of Polluto needs a theme. The above is what I'm thinking. But is that too restrictive? What I was thinking of, for this issue, is the following: -identity, body issues, identity politics, transgenderism, gender -crime, especially in the digital age -fraud, money, theft, appropriation, property (or the lack of) -mutation, transformation, genetic experiments, aliens -deep sea biology Huh? How does that translate into fiction, right? Well here's some of the possible interpretations of this theme: -anarchist cacaelia bankrobbers running round on unicycles -deep sea Westerns with cyborg shamans and damp side-kicks made of money -sucker cyber sex for sale to the highest bidder on eBay -the man who stole a mermaid's identity to emmigrate to Atlantis -a noir thriller set in a futuristic Japanese squid market, with wads of cash and oodles of noodles! Does that inspire anything? Yes? No? Wednesday, January 28
by
beyonce
on Wed 28 Jan 2009 10:08 PM GMT
I've just registered http://www.adam-lowe.com. There's my agent info
and some basic contact details, as well as links to some of the things
I do. But I reckon it needs dressing up. If anyone can design me a
splash page, not only will I include a link to your own website but
I'll put your name in my next novel and send you a bunch of freebies.
Can't say fairer than that, right?
Anyway, email info@adam-lowe.com with your suggestions and let me know! Wednesday, September 10
by
beyonce
on Wed 10 Sep 2008 06:42 PM BST
Okay, not to sound like a total Juno whore today (I've blogged about their cocktails earlier for The World in ... more »
Friday, September 5
Monday, September 1
Friday, August 29
by
beyonce
on Fri 29 Aug 2008 06:24 PM BST
For all you aspiring writers out there, here's a little information on a great magazine called Kudos:
- Hide ... more »
Thursday, August 28
by
beyonce
on Thu 28 Aug 2008 11:55 PM BST
Today we got a rather nice bit of feedback about our interview with Matt Staggs over at Nautiloid Burblings.... more »
by
beyonce
on Thu 28 Aug 2008 07:31 PM BST
Okay, it's giveaway time.
We want to create a blog explosion across the net. Simply repost this competition on your ... more »
by
beyonce
on Thu 28 Aug 2008 06:02 PM BST
Advance review copies of Polluto #3 are winging their way to reviewers now. If you'd like a review copy, send us the details at editor@polluto.com.
Wednesday, August 13
Monday, August 11
Friday, June 13
Sunday, June 8
Saturday, May 31
by
beyonce
on Sat 31 May 2008 03:12 PM BST
Okay, folks. We've had a fair few submissions to us recently for our novels/novellas line. So far we've accepted Dave ... more »
Friday, May 23
Monday, March 31
by
beyonce
on Mon 31 Mar 2008 04:01 AM BST
We accept any ms in standard ms format (size 12, Arial/Courier/Times, double spaced, underlining for italics), because they're easy to ... more »
by
beyonce
on Mon 31 Mar 2008 03:24 AM BST
We've had a few queries about the Issue 2 hardback and Issue 1.
Firstly, we will, at some point, be ... more » Sunday, March 16
Thursday, February 28
Sunday, February 24
by
beyonce
on Sun 24 Feb 2008 09:52 PM GMT
This is just a heads up that Patti Plinko, who writes frr Polluto and is about to release her new album, Dada Noir, is now the official backing music for Dog Horn. Check out Patti here.We love her manic, sultry style--and we hope you do too. Adam xxx Friday, February 22
by
beyonce
on Fri 22 Feb 2008 07:46 PM GMT
Thanks for visiting Dog Horn Publishing and checking out our blog.
I am Adam Lowe, publisher and Editor-in-Chief here at ... more » |
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This is just a heads up that Patti Plinko, who writes frr