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Simon Avery
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At 4:47pm on September 25, 2008, Andy Cox said…
Hi Simon! Brag about your stories :)
At 8:27am on September 25, 2008, Deborah J Miller said…
Hi there Simon - a very warm welcome to Wonderlands! Hope you enjoy Fantasy networking. Do post some info on your work in the Forums 'Bragging Thread' if you like where everyone is most likely to see it...

Profile Information

About Me:
I live and work in Birmingham. I've been writing short fiction (slipstream, horror and crime) for almost twenty years. I've recently completed work on my first novel, Secret Skin, a hard-boiled private eye novel involving sex trafficking in Paris, and I'm already compiling notes on the second novel starring the American PI in Paris, Charlie Sandoval.
Website Address:
http://www.myspace.com/simonavery
OUT NOW:

TFBitunes_sm

Transmissions From Beyond, the brand new podcast from TTA Press, feature stories selected from the pages of the TTA Press magazines Interzone (science fiction & fantasy), Black Static (horror), and Crimewave (crime & mystery). New stories appear every other Monday.

http://transmissionsfrombeyond.com/

A READING OF BURY THE CARNIVAL WHICH FEATURED IN BLACK STATIC 1 IS AVAILABLE NOW Crimewave 10: Now You See Me features 101 Ways To Leave Paris by Simon Avery

In CRIMEWAVE 10 NOW YOU SEE ME: 101 Ways To Leave Paris - A hard-boiled tale of revenge in the City of Light

Now we get to the story I consider the best of the issue, “101 Ways to Leave Paris” by Simon Avery. Jack Chappel, a man wronged by the woman he loved and the brother he cleaned up after, comes back to Paris after a stretch in prison, looking for some kind of justice. It opens with what appears to be an unconnected vignette of a young man playing matador in the middle of Parisian traffic, described in vivid detail by Avery. His language is lush and descriptive as he describes careening cars and the delicate twirl of a red coat. After the obvious occurs, we move to the meat of the story, which looks at first to be a stereotypical revenge plot but blossoms into something better and altogether more interesting. The personalities at play here are conflicting mirrors, their actions and reactions echoing one another in a cinematic style. Avery entices the reader into Chappel’s head and then makes it impossible for the reader to leave, layering the story on, hinting at some things and bringing others full out into the light, but always leaving the reader wanting more. This is noir at its finest, with the world blurring to gray around the characters as each struggles to find some measure of balance. (THE FIX)http://thefix-online.com/reviews/crimewave-10/

Black Static 6: Features The Better Part of You by Simon Avery

In Black Static 6: The Better Part of You - A woman released from a mental institution takes her new lover home to the seaside to escape or confront the darkness of her past.

Most Black Static stories seem reluctant to make their speculative element too blatant, but Simon Avery opens the issue with 'The Better Part of You,' and dumps the speculative element squarely in front of the reader from the moment that Chelsea (an unstable young woman) and James (the narrator) make love. Chelsea feels real in a way the most writers long to achieve; she's one of many women who are a little too out-going, a little too fragile, and end up bruised by life, damaged or even self-destructing. In creating such a memorably believable character, Avery pulls off a tour-de-force. Suite101.com

Out Now:

In BLACK STATIC #1: Bury The Carnival - A twisted re-interpretation of the Pinocchio story. (The title is from a Tom Waits song, Who Are You.

bs1cover

Bury The Carnival by Simon Avery, is a fresh take on Pinocchio, with the role of Geppetto being taken on by Charousek - a man recently released from prison by despotic puritans. Originally imprisoned for his use of old magic, Charousek has returned to the village in time for the End of Darkness, a momentous occasion being witnessed for the first time by many of the town’s younger inhabitants. One of these is the reporter sent to investigate Charousek’s story. What she uncovers is terrifying and life changing. Moving and atmospheric, the gripping style of Avery’s writing delivers an excellently dark little tale... (Whispers of Wickedness)

Simon Avery's 'Bury The Carnival' opens the magazine in style with the longest story in the book; it has a fairytale feel (as in Grimm, rather than Disney), not just with it's mannequin protagonists but also a faux-Eastern European setting. But the sinister Precisemen -tools of the repressive Puritan government- give the story a contemporary twist, and the affecting protagonist and her lover invoke the reader's involvement. Highly recommended.(Suite101.com)

Avery writes with slick, chilling prose and this story will stick in my head for a while. (SFCrowsnest.com)

My fiction has been placed in numerous publications over the past fifteen years, several having been re-printed in Best of anthologies. Leaving Seven Sisters, my first crime story, published in the year 2000, was nominated for the Crime Writers Association Silver Dagger for Short Fiction.

I've just completed my first novel, Secret Skin, a private eye novel set in Paris, involving humman trafficking, diamond theft and corporate crime. I'll be revising it over the next couple of months, then sending it out to an agent.

Other recent fiction... Lost in Darkness, co-authored with Ian Faulkner, which, to my delight, has recently been re-printed in The Years Best Mysteries IV, edited by Maxim Jakubowski.

Here's a selection of the books and magazines I've been published in:

Best British Mysteries Vol IV

featuring a co-authored story with Ian Faulkner,

Lost in Darkness

best

"Lost in Darkness" by Simon Avery and Ian R. Faulkner is a psychological tale of revenge. Charleton's girlfriend, Aimee, has been badly beaten and lies broken in the hospital. Charleton feels it is because he is black, and his rage at the people who did it manifests violently. Although the split personality/memory loss plot has been done before, Avery and Faulkner put it to good use here. What they came up with is a well-wrought crime tale that is thrilling to read. Tangent Online

Leaving Seven Sisters

Nominated for the CRIME WRITER'S ASSOCIATION 2001 Macallan Short Story Dagger

Featured in Crimewave 4: Mood Indigo

MOOD INDIGO

Leaving Seven Sisters, by Simon Avery, from Crimewave 4: A story rich in London argot and a vivid sense of place. An ex-con investigates the murder of a Tory Minister's daughter in a tongue-in-cheek tale which cunningly avoids expected clichés. The judges admired the 'getting rid of the body' episode, one of the finest expositions of this vital ingredient that they had read.

The Art of Leaving Completely

featured in:

Birmingham Noir

: Stories from major crime writers – John Harvey, Nicholas Royle and Judith Cutler – plus a gang of dazzling noir talents The best of "New Noir": tough, dirty realism from a tough, dirty city. Stylish, subtle tales that tackle the complex realities of betrayal, redemption, ambition and love.

The landscape of British crime fiction has long been ruled by London. But Birmingham Noir is set to challenge that dominance with these dark urban thrillers that will unsettle and unnerve.

bhamnoir



‘Dreams, as one of the contributors observes, are dangerous things – and danger lurks within these pages in an impressive kaleidoscope of settings. These are stories of betrayal, of communication breakdown and obsession. Some show the human cost of losing our ethics, while others reveal how madness can lurk in the supposed safety of a shopping mall or cathedral. But there is humour here too, and an awareness that we can make our lives better. Simon Avery’s perfectly observed narrative about moving on from a broken marriage is worth the cover price alone. Birmingham’s criminal underworld and sex industry are laid bare in these entertaining, saddening and shocking pages. Lock up your daughters, sons and the family cat until you’ve learned from these stories of crime in the city.’ Carol Anne Davis

...Simon Avery's equally well-observed narrative delivers shocks from the start when a Romanian teenager finds herself forced into a life of prostitution. Her experiences are entwined with the actions of a middle-aged man whose marriage is failing. 'Once you begin to pick at a frayed thread, you find that everything unravels at a frightening speed.' alchemypress.com

...The book ends on a high note, with the brutal and emotive 'The Art of Leaving Completely' by Simon Avery... here outstanding with the picture of a marriage on the way out and a man who tries to save somebody else even though he can't save himself... Peter Tennant

Lost and Found

featured in:

Beneath The Ground

beneathground

'Simon Avery's 'Lost and Found', I'm glad to say, is another matter. By now, halfway into the book, I was still waiting for a story to really knock my socks off; in the centre of the collection, appropriately enough, is where I believe I found its centrepiece. This finely crafted tale of loss... shows Lovecraftian tendencies without ever unveiling the eldritch horrors at its heart, but it's wonderfully suggestive of the form those horrors might take.' Infinity Plus.co.uk

Leon is Dead

featured in

The Third Alternative # 33

thridalt33

...the highlight of the issue is Simon Avery's "Leon is Dead", an enthralling and bizarre tale surrounding the mystery of the eponymous graffito. Locus magazine

The Remains of the Richest Man in the World

featured in

Crimewave 6:Breaking Point ed:Andy Cox

crimewave6

...I wonder if anyone else reading "Remains of the Richest Man in the World" will be reminded of the powerful film The Limey? Avery's prose reads like the bleak, brutal script, but with its own dark vision. It is a lose-lose situation, but you can't tear yourself away even after the last word; you'll find yourself thinking about it later and at the oddest times. Combine Avery's brilliant piece with Conrad Williams' harrowing "Crappy Rubsniff" and you have a pair that are worth the cost of Breaking Point all on their own. The SF site

'...highlights include Simon Avery's grim 'Remains of the Richest Man in the World' (try getting the taste of it out of your mouth)...'Time Out

 
 

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