Coming soon from New Legend! Jukebox Thrillers: Solid Hits of the 80's is a totally awesome anthology of short stories by top talents inspired by top tunes from the 1980's. You may be familiar with the songs and even the videos, but you've never seen them like this! Check out this wickedly epic playlist:
Friday, August 29, 2025
Jukebox Thrillers! Look for my newest story, "Sugar Walls"!
Coming soon from New Legend! Jukebox Thrillers: Solid Hits of the 80's is a totally awesome anthology of short stories by top talents inspired by top tunes from the 1980's. You may be familiar with the songs and even the videos, but you've never seen them like this! Check out this wickedly epic playlist:
Saturday, July 22, 2023
BLACKENED ROOTS IS LIVE!
Blackened Roots: An Anthology Of The Undead is finally out!
Mocha Memoirs Press and Nightlight Podcast are proud to present Blackened Roots: An Anthology of the Undead – a groundbreaking anthology celebrating nontraditional zombie stories from the African diaspora. The anthology is co-edited by Stoker-nominated and award-winning editor and writer Nicole Givens Kurtz and 2022 World Fantasy Award® Winner and 2022 Ignyte® Winner, producer, and editor Tonia Ransom at NIGHTLIGHT.Blackened Roots is a unique collection and will be a must-have for zombie lovers. Blackened Roots takes the zombie mythos back to its roots. Drawing from a variety of cultural backgrounds, Blackened Roots imagines a world of horror and wonder where Black protagonists take center stage – as zombies, as hunters, as heroes. From a haunting recipe to sibling rivalry, a singing zombie cowboy, a slave ship, and disobedient gods stories, Blackened Roots is a groundbreaking Afrocentric zombie anthology celebrating the rich cultural heritage of the African Diaspora.
Featuring stories by award-winning authors Eden Royce, Craig L. Gidney, Milton Davis, Sumiko Saulson, Marc Abbott, Moustapha Mbacké Diop, Steven Van Patten, Brandon Massey, and Errick Nunnally.
Friday, April 8, 2022
MOONSTONE DOUBLE SHOT -- Kochak Stalks the Night!
Cover Art: John K. Snyder
62pgs, prose, b/w, 6” x 9”, $5.49
Two brand new stories!
Kolchak teams up with Bennu as what we have known about our universe may need to be amended.
And the first appearance of Pythias the oracle! Her origins are shrouded in mystery, but her power is highly sought after. You may want guidance, but be careful what you wish for.
Friday, April 16, 2021
SNOW SHORTS #3: A STRANGER CALLS BY NICOLE GIVENS KURTZ
Press Release:
BEN Books is pleased to announce that SNOW SHORTS #3 is now on sale as a $0.99 ebook. You can grab your copy now at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B091SCYWYS.
Meet Laura Snow, Abraham Snow's mother, in Snow Shorts #3: A Stranger Calls by author Nicole Givens Kurtz.
Laura Snow (mother of Abraham, Douglas, and Samantha) is enjoying her life. A free spirit, Laura follows her bliss. The journey leads her to Taos, New Mexico where she has created a life for herself away from the dangers her family often finds themselves facing. Or so she thought. Laura is concerned when she starts receiving threatening phone calls and texts. A mysterious someone is stalking her and the threats are escalating. When official channels fail, Laura falls back on old skills she learned years ago from her father-in-law, Archer Snow to protect herself against a dangerous foe who wants her dead.
A Stranger Calls is the 3rd book in the Snow Shorts series. Cover by Jeffrey Hayes of Plasmafire Graphics. Published by BEN Books.
ALSO STILL AVAILABLE:
SNOW SHORTS #1: Snow Flies written by award-winning author Bobby Nash!
SNOW SHORTS #2: Thieves' Alley written by award-winning author Gary Phillips!
All Snow Shorts are $.99 ebooks and all are available to read for FREE to Kindle Unlimited subscribers.
In #TheSummerOfSnow every day is a #SnowDay!
- Learn more about Nicole Givens Kurtz
- Learn more about Bobby Nash
- Learn more about Jeffrey Hayes and Plasmafire Graphics
- Learn more about BEN Books
- Learn more about Snow
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Why Do You Write... Horror?
Just one question this week, folks. And it's for the horror writers.
Why Do You Write... Horror?
Nikki Nelson-Hicks:
Nicole Givens Kurtz:
Selah Janel:
Bill Craig:
For me, turning to the horror genre was a natural extension from writing mysteries. There are many ways to explore the supernatural and the various forms of race/species available in those things that go bump in the night.
Sean Taylor:
I write horror for the same reasons I write super heroes. I write horror for the same reasons I write new pulp. It's all about finding the right story to put my characters through hell. Horror has always been, at least for me, a way of pushing my characters. I believe that the best way to create a compelling story is to make your characters face the worst thing that can happen to them -- whether romantically, philosophically, emotionally, or physically. That's why for me the best horror has always had more at stake than mere death or dismemberment or gore. It operates on a deeper level at a higher kind of loss. Losing to the spirit, zombie, creature, etc. must always mean losing something of the character's self -- a chance to make things right with someone, the opportunity to finally become someone important, that one last break to talk to your parents before you die. If the only thing they have to lose is their lives, then ultimately (at least for horror stories) there's not enough at stake.
Ralph Wheat:
I enjoy writing horror for the simple fact I like to scare myself and others. Creating characters is fun and intriguing. Breathing life into beings that came from my demented mind, a story from stray thoughts, interesting stories I happen to click to on tv, cable, or an article in the paper ( and yes, I still read those) and a germ of a idea germinated into a spark for a short story. As a matter of fact, an idea I was ruminating about lately, brightened to a fiery glow of creative fire as I riding in a car by a cemetery. Suddenly, I had the framework for a terrifying horror story. I wanted to do for my character, Malcolm Hellbourne, Occult Detective. I've written a few short stories with him. First time I introduced him to a select few, is when in my technology school for computer programming had a school paper. They wanted the students to submit a story and I did. The students and faculty loved it. That's when I knew I could write. Then when I worked at the World Trade Center, before its tragic end, I put a couple of his shorts together and sold them on the Commodities Exchange's Floor for $2. I made $50 bucks! Also, I found myself elated, full of pride and respected. Here were grown men and women reading my stories, some of them acting out some of Malcolm's hand gestures to perform spells doing them in real-life. Brought a smile to my face. And many, saying they enjoyed very much, wanted more stories. Later, I found out since I sold my work, I was a published author. I finally, brought all the stories of Malcolm in one series and hopefully soon to get it published. So horror stories are good for the heart rate and keep you up late at night.
Robert Freese:
Why do I write horror? I write more than just horror, but with horror I feel a real connection. Horror movies were huge when I was a kid and I just gravitated toward them. Fangoria magazine opened a world of horror movies as well as horror novels. At the time, Stephen King was insanely popular, but I read guys like John Russo, Richard Laymon, Gary Brandner, Guy Smith, James Herbert. Horror is like the coolest club to belong to. I am currently writing a new horror novel and I'm having a ball. I get to revisit a wonderful world where anything can happen. I don't want to explore man's heart of darkness or any of that jazz. I enjoy writing what I call "drive-in horror," horror stories that works like a Roger Corman drive-in horror movie. You can use a horror story to tell a bigger story, give the characters real depth. I also see it as a challenge to use words like magic tricks. Robert Bloch did that with his twist endings. How can you seem to show something to your reader and then flip it and give them a little jolt? I love that. When I write other stuff I tend to always write one character who is a fan of horror movies and novels, just so I can still play in that world a bit. I think at this point it's in my blood.
I like to do the spooky from time to time. It's fun writing scares.
In my case, it's to follow the advice of my idol of G.K. Chesterton, who said the purpose of fairy tales was not to tell people that dragons exist, but that they could be killed.
I tend to write a lot about outcasts - which I don't suppose is particularly unique - and the choices they make in light of their hardships. So, someone is bullied as a child - does that make them more likely to become a hero, because they know what it's like to be victimized and they want to save others from the same fate, or do they become a villain, because they want the world to suffer as they did? Really, it could go either way, depending on a variety of other factors. We each have choices to make in life and it is fascinating just how quickly our entire situation can change based solely on our reaction to it. Plus, there is the splendid duplicity of man - the fact that most humans are basically good but also carry within them the potential for the gravest forms of evil. I'm not saying we're just a bad day away from becoming homicidal maniacs ... but I think we would be shocked to discover what we would be able to do given the right set of unfortunate circumstances.Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Nicole Givens Kurtz' Curse and Cure
Tell us a bit about your latest work.
My latest work is included in the anthology, Athena’s Daughters, Volume II. The story is called, “Reanimated,” and it tells the story of detective Tanisha Moore. She lives in the dusty town of Truth or Consequences, New Mexico. Burnt out, bored, and brimming with apathy, Tanisha covers the basics of her job, while dying a little bit each day. Everything changes when murdered victim, Sherri Cross, is reanimated. More than one of the women will become alive.
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
One of the themes I revisit often in my work, particularly in my science fiction pulp stories are those of dehumanization and how technology is more curse than cure. In other works, I delve into themes of the other and how we define humanity evolves or has evolved. I tend to favor cyberpunk stories and those where women are kickass and smart—definitely smart because brilliance is what is truly attractive.
What would be your dream project?
My dream project would be to write a series of novels like Stephen King’s The Dark Tower. One epic all-encompassing universe that not only has great depth, but also far-reaching and lasting effect on others. I have a list of authors I would love to write with or be included in an anthology with, but I will not embarrass them by having a fan-girl meltdown on your blog.
If you have any former project to do over to make it better, which one would it be, and what would you do?
If I could go back to a former project and make it better, it would be my Candidate series of books. My writing has matured so much in the last 17 years since Browne Candidate was written that I know it would be a much more rich series now. With e-books and the rights of that series being returned to me, I have the option to revisit that world and revised, expand, and re-release to the reading public. That’s the beauty of modern technology; however, I am so excited about my new pulp worlds, I’m not sure I ever will. I may keep that series as a marker for where I was as an author. Besides, the series is still quite good.
What inspires you to write?
I’m inspired by life, really. I’m in education, and the events I have witnessed in the last 13 years ended up becoming the bases for “Smoke People,” my L. Ron Hubbard’s Writers of the Future Honorable Mention story. My short story, “Sweet Tooth,” which will be included in Dark Oak Press’s The Big Bad, Volume II anthology is a direct results of my childhood growing up in a housing projects in Tennessee. So, my stories are fueled by my past, by my present, and by how I want the future to be.
Of course, it totally helps to have an active imagination. Writing is a necessary process. I'm an insomniac and what else would I be doing at 3 in the morning?
What writers have influenced your style and technique?
I love pulp and mysteries, so a lot of my style is influenced by Robert B. Parker, Philip K. Dick, Octavia Butler, Sue Grafton, Kim Harrison, and classic writers, such as Shakespeare, Faulkner, and Zora Neale Hurston.
My science fiction pulp series, Cybil Lewis, is set in the near-future and involves a private inspector, who incorporate so many of those other writers’ techniques and styles. Cybil is one hell of a character, and most people who read her, never forget her. That’s because she comes from such a diverse stock of authors’ influences.
I teach literature, so my writing style tends to blend all of these very diverse storytellers into my own method and style of writing.
Where would you rank writing on the "Is it an art or it is a science continuum?" Why?
Writing is an art most of the time. It’s creativity despite the fact that some authors mesh styles together like a literary Frankenstein’s monster. It’s still an act of creating something new, something different, or something familiar.
There is a method to writing, but what I have found in the last 17 years of doing this is that the method varies as much as the authors. I’m sure my opinion here flies in the face of more successful authors.
Any other upcoming projects you would like to plug?
Yes, please! I am involved in two different anthologies in the upcoming year. To stay in the know, stay connected to me the following ways:
Twitter: @nicolegkurtz
Facebook: http://facebook.com/nlkurtz
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/nlkurtz/
Other Worlds Pulp: http://www.nicolegivenskurtz
The anthologies are:
- The Big Bad, Volume II from Dark Oak Press. My horror short story, “Sweet Tooth,” will be included.
- Athena’s Daughters, Volume II from Silence in the Library. My horror short story, “Reanimated,” will be included.















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