JONATHAN MABERRY is a multiple Bram Stoker Award-winning author.
His novels includes GHOST ROAD BLUES (winner of the Stoker Award for Best First Novel in 2006), DEAD MAN’S SONG (2007), BAD MOON RISING (2008), and PATIENT ZERO (2009). Upcoming novels include THE DRAGON FACTORY and THE KING OF PLAGUES (St Martins Press) and THE WOLFMAN (Universal Pictures).
His nonfiction works include VAMPIRE UNIVERSE (Citadel Press, 2006), and THE CRYPTOPEDIA (Citadel, 2007 –winner of the Bram Stoker Award for Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction); and ZOMBIE CSU: The Forensics of the Living Dead (2008). Upcoming books include THEY BITE! (2009) and VAMPIRE HUNTERS AND OTHER ENEMIES OF EVIL (2010).
His first two comics for Marvel –PUNISHER: NAKED KILL and WOLVERINE: GHOSTS will be released in April.
Jonathan is the co-creator (with Laura Schrock) of ON THE SLAB, an entertainment news show for ABC Disney / Stage 9, to be released on the Internet in 2009.
Jonathan is a Contributing Editor for The Big Thrill (the newsletter of the International Thriller Writers), and is a member of SFWA, MWA and HWA. He is a frequent guest at genre cons and writers conferences.
Jonathan is a founding member of The Liars Club, a group of networking publishing professionals that includes bestsellers William Lashner, L. A. Banks, Merry Jones, Gregory Frost, Jon McGoran, Ed Pettit, Dennis Tafoya, Keith Strunk, Don Lafferty, Kelly Simmons, Laura Schrock and Marie Lamba.
Visit his website at www.jonathanmaberry.com or on Facebook, Twitter, Plaxo, GoodReads, Shelfari, Crimspace, Bookplace and MySpace.
Yep, I'm looking forward to launching Cryptopedia Magazine. We're going to have Ramsey Campbell, Tim Lebbon and maybe even a dark mystery tale by Ken Bruen. Great art, too.
What a busy man you must be with so much going on in your life, Jonathan. Long ago I practiced Goju Kai karate. Thanks so much for inviting me to be your friend. And good luck with your new magazine.
I was just in Philly for my husband's prep school reunion! We had a reading and signing for our new thriller, LADYKILLER, at Port Richmond Books. Do you know it? It's a great place for mysteries. We met the owners, Greg and Meg Gillespie at Bouchercon two years ago.
Jonathan, Do you know my friend Lee Pletzers (New Zealand)? We have the same publisher. Glad to see your prolific activitiy! You may write death, but your are a LiveWire!
I'm delighted to join your group of friends. Congrats on the Bram Stoker Award. Ghost Road Blues sounds like an interesting series. Having lived a decade in Pennsylvania, I know there are lots of ghost tales there. I even experienced a few myself. Best of luck!
Jonathan, You asked about movies. I've decided to be one of those authors who says my characters are much too special to be ruined by Hollywood hacks, until, of course, Hollywood calls.
Hey guys....I see you've found out about Cryptopedia. Actually there's two different entities under that name. The first will be a nonfiction book from Citadel Press, co-authored by my good friend David F. Kramer. That version is The Cryptopedia: A Dictionary of the Weird, Strange, and Downright Bizarre by Jonathan Maberry and David F. Kramer (ISBN-10: 0806528192 - Aug 28, 2007).
The second is Cryptopedia Magazine, a quarterly downloadable pdf literary horror mag.
If those play out, heck maybe I'll name one of my kids 'Cryptopedia'
Hi from a newbie (hope I'm doing this right). Thanks for the request Jonathan. Ghost Road Blues sounds right up my alley. Looking forward to checking it out.
I read your interview with Lawrence Block on wild river review this morning. I guess it's been up for a while, but I'm always running behind schedule. Anyway, I just stopped by to tell you I enjoyed the interview.
Glad you liked the Lawrence Block interview. It's part of a series called ThrillRide that has been running Wild River Review (www.wildriverreview.com). Along with my collaborator, Janice Bashman, we interviewed Steve Hamilton, David Housewright, Bill Kent, Barry Eisler and a few others.
OK Mr. Maberry, please consider me properly chagrined.
While I thoroughly enjoyed GHOST ROAD BLUES & very much look forward to the second installment in your Pine Deep trilogy ( as does my wife, but more on THAT later ... ), I must now admit to finding the martial arts abilities of your protagonist Malcolm Crow the one part of the novel that just struck me as being , oh, I don't know, maybe just a bit "too convenient". A facet of the character that I assumed was perhaps an indulgence. A nod toward the ever increasing popularity of MMA & Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.
Not that it took away from my enjoyment of GRB at all, mind you, I just thought of the element as a sort of homage to it's "pulpy" influences. I mean, I LOVE a hero that can seriously kick ass! LOL
And, the descriptions of Crow's fighting abilities were fun & spot on, something that I attributed to some damn good research on your part.
Well, I got that right anyhow. I just didn't stop to think that it might have been what has obviously been decades of intense, devoted, hands on research into Jiu Jitsu!
So, as a fellow lifelong martial arts enthusiast & practitioner, I apologize for my initial assumption of your simply using Crow's abilities as a convenient, fun way to make him more formidable when the "bad stuff" comes down. Not that having him be a JJBB wouldn't have been just as much fun were you NOT a legitimate JJBB yourself, but the plot element has ( I must admit ) been raised to a new level of esteem in my eyes.
Hopefully, that makes some sort of sense to you. Maybe it's somewhat predjudiced on my part for doing so, but I've just always found that I've enjoyed an author's scenes of physical confrontation & combat a lot more if I know that he's actually had some real experience at what he's writing about.
Like Joe Lansdale for example.
Myself, at 45, I'd just hit 13 when the whole Bruce Lee & Kung Fu craze of the '70s hit. And, like so many other skinny, oft-bullied kids of the time, I begged my parents for Karate lessons. Believing, of course, that they would transform me into an instant lethal fighting machine. LOL
Which, much to my disappointment, didn't happen ...
So, disillusioned with my first choice of Wado Ryu Karate, I spent the following couple of years "shopping around", trying out Isshin Ryu, Tae Kwon Do & even Judo. Advancing to various colored belts along the way. You know, a yellow here, a purple there, another yellow somewhere else. This time with a STRIPE! LOL
But, I never actually found my niche, until I discovered boxing at 17. That became my absolute passion & was actually the first thing that ever gave me any real confidence & self esteem. It was only after a long, off & on amateur career of 27 fights over the next few years that I began cross training, which led me back toward the traditional martial arts again.
In 1985, I began training at one of the first hybrid boxing/kickboxing gyms ( VERY common now, of course, but back then, the two rarely shared space ). Which led me to training daily with a gentleman very well versed in Hawaiian Kempo. Who eventually promoted me to BB.
Since that time I've gone onto "dabble" in straight forward combative systems like Krav Maga & Mike Karanak's Haganah. Which, I really believe is where the martial arts are headed. Toward two hybrid schools. One geared toward MMA competetion ( or at least it's diversified skills & conditioning elements ) & the other geared toward totally practical, "real world" combatives.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this whenever you get the chance.
Anyhow, back to GRB.
Loved it.
As a lifelong horror film & fiction fanatic, as well as an October baby ( 10/10/61 ) whose b-day is always exactly three weeks before Halloween, making that holiday my personal Christmas, Easter & Independence Day all rolled into one, I just TOTALLY geeked over your book.
As did my wife ( we're seperated, but I still let her borrow my books ... LOL ), only she wasn't prepared for the novel's abrupt endpoint with it's story unresolved. I'd neglected to inform her that it the first installment in a trilogy, so she was initially livid at having to wait until June to get her hands on the next part of the Pine Deep saga. She was even going to write you an angry letter expressing her dismay, but, she eventually calmed down & is now patiently awaiting the follow up.
OK, I've obviously gone on for FAR too long now.
Quick & concise have never been my strong points.
It's ingteresting, too, that you thought (at first) that the martial arts usage was just a literary device. No one's suggested that before.
In interviews I've been asked about the use of martial arts, etc., and also about the subplot of abuse. The two are linked. I got involved in martial arts as a kid because I was in an intensely abusive situation. The character of Mike Sweeney draws heavily on my own childhood experiences, and Crow's backstory (except for his struggles with alcholism) are based quite a bit on my own experiences. Jujutsu, in real point of fact, saved my life.
Perhaps if I'd been in a normal family I would have chosen a sport martial art (if I'd even gone into martial arts at all). Luckily a friend's dad saw the writing on the wall and arranged for me to meet his own sensei. When I was fourteen I was big enough and tough enough to take a stand. And thereby hangs a tale.
Jujutsu teachings actually play a significant role in the second book as Crow begins teaching Mike how to defend himself.
So...you're certainly forgiven for the assumption and I certainly hope you enjoy Dead Man's Song when it debuts in July!
Hey. I just got back from the Romantic Times BookLovers Convention in Houston. You would have really liked it. Heather Thomas threw the Wild West Vampire Ball complete with dance hall girls and cowboys with leather dusters all donning vampire teeth. Now the fairie party, that was a liitle strange seeing all these ethereal creatures getting on the elevator wearing gossamer wings!
I presented a program (I was the whole panel--sheesh) on the difference between TV crime drama and reality, one of my specialities.
I drove down with Charlaine Harris, whom, you can imagine is having great success with her Sookie Stackhouse character as she will be on HBO next winter I think.
Anyway, it's nice to see your page and of course I will be your friend.
Gush Alert!
I finished Ghost Road Blues two days ago. I could not put it down.
Can't wait for the next installment. Do you have a specific release date? I'll mark it on my calendar.
So cool!
Didn't get to sleep on time several nights in a row because I was reading it.
Great Job.
cmr
Sorry to have taken so long to respond to your invite to join your circle. I was swamped with work, rehearsals for a play, and a children's drama workshop. Didn't have time to breathe, let alone catch up with lists. I really want to be a more social person, time just seems to be againt me. :-)
I will put July 3 Dead Man's Song on my calendar.
I loved stuff set in Pennsy and I'm not too far from where your books are set.
The book I'm revising now is set in Philly.
The rest are set in NJ.
Can't wait to read the next one!
Just did my first signing for DEAD MAN'S SONG. It was at BEA today and the whole tableful of books went in less than half an hour. And it was the first time I got to see the book, which is the sequel to GHOST ROAD BLUES.
Hey Jonathan,
Yes I was at BEA. A lot of fun. Sorry I missed you. I was signing Body Trace and a few advance copies of Blood Poison at MWA. It was great. Very busy.
I'll talk to you soon. Delete Comment
Dave...nice to meet a fellow writer in the Harvey Klinger stable. I hope they can do as much for you as they have for me. Sara's sold eight books for me in the last two and a half years. Gotta love that kind of energy!
Hey, it's only a few days away at this point!
I'll pick it up this week. Cannot wait!
Of course this isn't as exciting as waiting for my actual book to come out.
Check out my latest blog entry on crimespace. I wrote about rejection.
And I'm kicking off my signing tour with a signing & launch party Friday July 6th.
I'm doing a signing at Doylestown Bookshop (Main Street in Doylestown, PA 18901) at 7pm. Afterward we're having a launch party at the Writers Corner USA, 4 West Oakland Avenue, Doylestown PA 18901.
Here's the Publishers Marketplace posting from late last week:
Bram Stoker Award-winner Jonathan Maberry’s PATIENT ZERO, in which a Baltimore police detective is recruited by a secret government organization to help stop a group of terrorists from launching a weaponized plague against America that turns its citizens into zombies, to Jason Pinter at St. Martin’s, in a three-book deal, by Sara Crowe of Harvey Klinger, Inc.
Jonathan, we were both keeping Sara busy a few weeks ago. Congrats on your deal--it sounds like a good one. I was looking at your bio on the side and saw you're an 8th degree black belty in jujutsu. I am massively impressed. While I'm far far below that in martial arts experience, after 6 years of training I'm going to be testing for my black belt in Kung fu (Hung Gar 5-animal form) this October.
Great to meet up with another paranormal thriller writer. I read Ghost Road Blue...super - can't wait for Dead Mna's Song. My book, The Beatitudes, is a paranormal thriller set in New Orleans. It will be out in the fall and I am donating all royalties directly to the New Orleans Public Library Foundation. Libraries support the infrastructure of a great city, so I have started The Beatitudes Network to promote awareness of the importance of public libraries in NOLA.
The blogsite www.beatitudesinneworleans.blogspot.com describes the Network, has excerpts from The Beatitudes, recipes, and more. Merci mille fois. Lyn Lejeune.
Writers, please pass the word…..it’s for a good cause….don’t let the libraries of New Orleans or the US go the way of The Great Library of Alexandria. P.S. just posted an excerpt on my Crimespace page.
Hey Jonathan,
Sorry to hear about that. I hope everything works out for the best. I missed you in Doylestown. It was phenomenal. Sold about 65 books (luckily I had brought some books with me, but I had to park miles away and run back to my car halfway through to get more).
Anyway, hope your holidays are as good as they can be. Give a yell if there's anything I can do, and hopefully I'll see you soon.
Jonathan Maberry
May 7, 2007
CT
May 7, 2007
Meredith Anthony
May 8, 2007
Newt Love
May 8, 2007
Penny Rudolph
May 8, 2007
Dianne Day
May 8, 2007
Alafair Burke
May 8, 2007
Robert K. Foster
May 8, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
The second is Cryptopedia Magazine, a quarterly downloadable pdf literary horror mag.
If those play out, heck maybe I'll name one of my kids 'Cryptopedia'
May 8, 2007
Morgan Mandel
We travel in the same circles,
Morgan Mandel
May 8, 2007
Amanda Stevens
May 9, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
May 9, 2007
Bobbi A. Chukran
bobbi c.
May 10, 2007
Dave Bara
db
May 10, 2007
Jane Hill
May 10, 2007
Tiffany Leigh
May 11, 2007
Jeff Markowitz
May 12, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
May 12, 2007
Debbie Behrens
May 12, 2007
bluerosekiller
While I thoroughly enjoyed GHOST ROAD BLUES & very much look forward to the second installment in your Pine Deep trilogy ( as does my wife, but more on THAT later ... ), I must now admit to finding the martial arts abilities of your protagonist Malcolm Crow the one part of the novel that just struck me as being , oh, I don't know, maybe just a bit "too convenient". A facet of the character that I assumed was perhaps an indulgence. A nod toward the ever increasing popularity of MMA & Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.
Not that it took away from my enjoyment of GRB at all, mind you, I just thought of the element as a sort of homage to it's "pulpy" influences. I mean, I LOVE a hero that can seriously kick ass! LOL
And, the descriptions of Crow's fighting abilities were fun & spot on, something that I attributed to some damn good research on your part.
Well, I got that right anyhow. I just didn't stop to think that it might have been what has obviously been decades of intense, devoted, hands on research into Jiu Jitsu!
So, as a fellow lifelong martial arts enthusiast & practitioner, I apologize for my initial assumption of your simply using Crow's abilities as a convenient, fun way to make him more formidable when the "bad stuff" comes down. Not that having him be a JJBB wouldn't have been just as much fun were you NOT a legitimate JJBB yourself, but the plot element has ( I must admit ) been raised to a new level of esteem in my eyes.
Hopefully, that makes some sort of sense to you. Maybe it's somewhat predjudiced on my part for doing so, but I've just always found that I've enjoyed an author's scenes of physical confrontation & combat a lot more if I know that he's actually had some real experience at what he's writing about.
Like Joe Lansdale for example.
Myself, at 45, I'd just hit 13 when the whole Bruce Lee & Kung Fu craze of the '70s hit. And, like so many other skinny, oft-bullied kids of the time, I begged my parents for Karate lessons. Believing, of course, that they would transform me into an instant lethal fighting machine. LOL
Which, much to my disappointment, didn't happen ...
So, disillusioned with my first choice of Wado Ryu Karate, I spent the following couple of years "shopping around", trying out Isshin Ryu, Tae Kwon Do & even Judo. Advancing to various colored belts along the way. You know, a yellow here, a purple there, another yellow somewhere else. This time with a STRIPE! LOL
But, I never actually found my niche, until I discovered boxing at 17. That became my absolute passion & was actually the first thing that ever gave me any real confidence & self esteem. It was only after a long, off & on amateur career of 27 fights over the next few years that I began cross training, which led me back toward the traditional martial arts again.
In 1985, I began training at one of the first hybrid boxing/kickboxing gyms ( VERY common now, of course, but back then, the two rarely shared space ). Which led me to training daily with a gentleman very well versed in Hawaiian Kempo. Who eventually promoted me to BB.
Since that time I've gone onto "dabble" in straight forward combative systems like Krav Maga & Mike Karanak's Haganah. Which, I really believe is where the martial arts are headed. Toward two hybrid schools. One geared toward MMA competetion ( or at least it's diversified skills & conditioning elements ) & the other geared toward totally practical, "real world" combatives.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this whenever you get the chance.
Anyhow, back to GRB.
Loved it.
As a lifelong horror film & fiction fanatic, as well as an October baby ( 10/10/61 ) whose b-day is always exactly three weeks before Halloween, making that holiday my personal Christmas, Easter & Independence Day all rolled into one, I just TOTALLY geeked over your book.
As did my wife ( we're seperated, but I still let her borrow my books ... LOL ), only she wasn't prepared for the novel's abrupt endpoint with it's story unresolved. I'd neglected to inform her that it the first installment in a trilogy, so she was initially livid at having to wait until June to get her hands on the next part of the Pine Deep saga. She was even going to write you an angry letter expressing her dismay, but, she eventually calmed down & is now patiently awaiting the follow up.
OK, I've obviously gone on for FAR too long now.
Quick & concise have never been my strong points.
Take care & peace.
May 14, 2007
Lynette Hall Hampton
May 14, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
It's ingteresting, too, that you thought (at first) that the martial arts usage was just a literary device. No one's suggested that before.
In interviews I've been asked about the use of martial arts, etc., and also about the subplot of abuse. The two are linked. I got involved in martial arts as a kid because I was in an intensely abusive situation. The character of Mike Sweeney draws heavily on my own childhood experiences, and Crow's backstory (except for his struggles with alcholism) are based quite a bit on my own experiences. Jujutsu, in real point of fact, saved my life.
Perhaps if I'd been in a normal family I would have chosen a sport martial art (if I'd even gone into martial arts at all). Luckily a friend's dad saw the writing on the wall and arranged for me to meet his own sensei. When I was fourteen I was big enough and tough enough to take a stand. And thereby hangs a tale.
Jujutsu teachings actually play a significant role in the second book as Crow begins teaching Mike how to defend himself.
So...you're certainly forgiven for the assumption and I certainly hope you enjoy Dead Man's Song when it debuts in July!
May 15, 2007
Andrea Campbell
Hey. I just got back from the Romantic Times BookLovers Convention in Houston. You would have really liked it. Heather Thomas threw the Wild West Vampire Ball complete with dance hall girls and cowboys with leather dusters all donning vampire teeth. Now the fairie party, that was a liitle strange seeing all these ethereal creatures getting on the elevator wearing gossamer wings!
I presented a program (I was the whole panel--sheesh) on the difference between TV crime drama and reality, one of my specialities.
I drove down with Charlaine Harris, whom, you can imagine is having great success with her Sookie Stackhouse character as she will be on HBO next winter I think.
Anyway, it's nice to see your page and of course I will be your friend.
May 15, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
May 17, 2007
Chris Redding
I finished Ghost Road Blues two days ago. I could not put it down.
Can't wait for the next installment. Do you have a specific release date? I'll mark it on my calendar.
So cool!
Didn't get to sleep on time several nights in a row because I was reading it.
Great Job.
cmr
May 18, 2007
Novel Gobbler
May 18, 2007
JANE PADRUTT
May 18, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
Dead Man's Song hits stores July 3, Hope it creeps you out just as much!
May 18, 2007
Maryann Miller
May 22, 2007
Chris Redding
I loved stuff set in Pennsy and I'm not too far from where your books are set.
The book I'm revising now is set in Philly.
The rest are set in NJ.
Can't wait to read the next one!
May 22, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
May 24, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
Jun 3, 2007
Jon McGoran as D. H. Dublin
Yes I was at BEA. A lot of fun. Sorry I missed you. I was signing Body Trace and a few advance copies of Blood Poison at MWA. It was great. Very busy.
I'll talk to you soon. Delete Comment
Jun 6, 2007
Dave Zeltserman
Jun 14, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
Jun 15, 2007
Chris Redding
It isn't far away!
You should put the cover up here.
cmr
Jun 22, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
Actually, even though the official release date is July 3rd, the book is already out in Borders and many independent stores.
So....I'm already celebrating!
-Jonathan
Jun 24, 2007
TJ Perkins
Jun 26, 2007
Chris Redding
I'll pick it up this week. Cannot wait!
Of course this isn't as exciting as waiting for my actual book to come out.
Check out my latest blog entry on crimespace. I wrote about rejection.
Jul 1, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
And I'm kicking off my signing tour with a signing & launch party Friday July 6th.
I'm doing a signing at Doylestown Bookshop (Main Street in Doylestown, PA 18901) at 7pm. Afterward we're having a launch party at the Writers Corner USA, 4 West Oakland Avenue, Doylestown PA 18901.
Everyone is welcome!
Jul 6, 2007
Brian Kavanagh
Cheers,
Brian
Jul 20, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
Bram Stoker Award-winner Jonathan Maberry’s PATIENT ZERO, in which a Baltimore police detective is recruited by a secret government organization to help stop a group of terrorists from launching a weaponized plague against America that turns its citizens into zombies, to Jason Pinter at St. Martin’s, in a three-book deal, by Sara Crowe of Harvey Klinger, Inc.
Jul 27, 2007
Chip DePew
Aug 2, 2007
Chris Redding
cmr
Aug 2, 2007
Dave Zeltserman
Aug 8, 2007
Lyn LeJeune
The blogsite www.beatitudesinneworleans.blogspot.com describes the Network, has excerpts from The Beatitudes, recipes, and more. Merci mille fois. Lyn Lejeune.
Writers, please pass the word…..it’s for a good cause….don’t let the libraries of New Orleans or the US go the way of The Great Library of Alexandria. P.S. just posted an excerpt on my Crimespace page.
Aug 11, 2007
Chris Redding
cmr
Aug 26, 2007
Chris Redding
I'm so bummed I cannot be there.
Good luck on your signing.
cmr
Oct 25, 2007
Jonathan Maberry
http://jonathanmaberry.blogspot.com/
http://jonathanmaberry.livejournal.com/
http://jonathanmaberry.wordpress.com/
Nov 22, 2007
Jon McGoran as D. H. Dublin
Sorry to hear about that. I hope everything works out for the best. I missed you in Doylestown. It was phenomenal. Sold about 65 books (luckily I had brought some books with me, but I had to park miles away and run back to my car halfway through to get more).
Anyway, hope your holidays are as good as they can be. Give a yell if there's anything I can do, and hopefully I'll see you soon.
Dec 23, 2007