Derek Austin Johnson's Blog

November 12, 2025

The Devilfish Have Their Day

Out now. My story "Day of the Devilfish" is in Cthulhu Dreams edited by A. Balsamo and released by Inkd Publishing. It is my attempt to answer the question of what John Steinbeck's fiction would have looked like if it had been published by Weird Tales. The book also includes stories by Rachel Roth, Armand Rosamilia, A. M. Sutter, Ross Baxter, and Kelli Dianne Rule, among many others. You can pick up physical copies here, here, and here. Cthulhu Dreams
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Published on November 12, 2025 13:03

July 11, 2025

"Jellies" Just in Time for Summer

Out now. My story “Jellies” is in the latest issue of Midnight Tales, along with stories by Terry Alexander, Maxwell Shepherd, John Monsees, Stetson Ray, and others, with gorgeous art by Allen Koszowski, Gerrod General, and Steve Bejma. You can pick up your copy here. Picture
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Published on July 11, 2025 11:30

July 5, 2025

Con-Tinual Panel Room: Lovecraftian Horror

Recently I attended the Con-Tinual Panel Room with Gini Koch, Marx Pyle, Fraser Sherman, Carole M Stokes/Ellis Colton, and host James P. Nettles III as we looked at Lovecraft stories, adaptations, inspired works, and the themes driving cosmic horror.  You can find the discussion on the Book of Faces as well as YouTube.
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Published on July 05, 2025 13:33

June 28, 2025

Midnight Tales #9

Via Mr. Midnight Eric Wright's Facebook page.
Midnight Tales #9 is now at the printers. Once we review the proof copy and approve it, the presses will be rolling! This issue will be the best yet.

Here is the cover reveal, and you can't go wrong with the legendary Allen K.!
I can guarantee you'll want a copy. Picture
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Published on June 28, 2025 11:01

Meeting Joyce Carol Oates

StokerCon 2025 is now two weeks behind me, and I now feel comfortable writing about what was, for me, my personal high point.

I was at the Joyce Carol Oates signing table, where she sat with writer and editor Rebecca Rowland (who is president of the Boston HWA chapter, and edited my story “Movie Call” for the anthology Generation X-Ed ). As she signed my copies of Night-Side and Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque, she spotted my nametag and said, “Oh, are you a writer?”

My mind blanked.

Look, part of the reason I became interested in horror fiction was reading her story “The Bingo Master.” I picked up a copy of Night-Side almost immediately, and continued to read her work steadily. I’ve learned much by studying her work, though I’m hardly a completist. This was one of the great women of American letters acknowledging me as an actual writer.

“Oh, are you a writer?” My mind was bereft of a single thought. And then suddenly, my mouth made sounds, even as my brain waved at it and shouted, “Dude, don’t do that!”

“Uh,” I uhhed, “not a good one.”

And Rebecca Rowland proffered a kindness I can never repay.

She leaned to Ms. Oates’s ear and said, “He’s being extremely modest. He’s an outstanding writer.”

I managed to mouth a thank-you to her, then collected my books.

I was paid a compliment by an amazing writer and editor to Joyce Carol Oates. I’m going to live with that for a long time. Picture
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Published on June 28, 2025 10:55

June 24, 2025

Story Sale

I received an email response to a query stating that I've sold a story to one of my favorite venues. Details to follow.
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Published on June 24, 2025 13:57

The Abject

On CrimeReads, Laura Elliott talks about monsters and how they are created in horror fiction. 

I like her view of monsters being an offshoot of the Uncanny that branches into what she calls "the abject".
This construction of monstrosity relies on the notion of the abject, which literary scholar Julie Kristeva defines as something that moves beyond the simply uncanny, into something which disrupts the established order and so threatens a sense of identity and meaning. The abject is the thing that jeopardises the borders of self and society. It challenges the boundary between what is Us and Not Us, forcing who we are into battle against something that we are not.

The building of a monster operates at the border, and it is, above all else, revealing. The monster asks not just what are you afraid of, but who and why?
It's a rich article that also includes insights into how the abject is incorporated in Bram Stoker's Dracula , Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper", and River Solomon's Model Home .  It's worth your time.
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Published on June 24, 2025 08:21

June 22, 2025

"The Babysitter" at Crystal Lake

My story "The Babysitter" is Story 14 of 16 in Crystal Lake Publishing's Flash Fiction Contest. This theme focuses on the Satanic Panic and appeared on June 17, 2025. You'll need to be a Patreon member to read it, but if you enjoyed it, consider giving it your vote. Picture
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Published on June 22, 2025 12:25

April 15, 2025

Body Horror: Abusing the Human Body for a Reason

Found on Medium today, a short essay on body horror and its appeal
Horror offers the unique opportunity to experience and feel, in a controlled setting, all the things you would definitely want to avoid in real life — fear, violence, and death. It is like a simulation. It allows us to take a deep plunge into the darkest depths of our existence, while being assured that no real harm can come of it.
I post this paragraph because the real-world seems passive in the unfolding never-ending horror show. It’s part of the reason people gravitate toward horror. We can make sense of it when it’s confined to a controlled environment. 
The subtitle of the article reads “On twisting the human form to make a point” and discusses Shelley’s Frankenstein, Dali’s “Surreal Drawers of Psychoanalysis”, Munch’s “The Scream”, Caos Diz’s “Story Twist”, as well as the works of David Cronenberg, Julia Ducournau, and Coralie Fargeat.

At its best, body horror confronts our fears of change, especially through age, and challenges us by suggesting we aren’t much more than mobile meat. Body horror also is one of the subgenres willing to “go there.”
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Published on April 15, 2025 07:06

April 14, 2025

Is Science Fiction Destroying the World?

Sam Freedman in the Guardian seems to think so.
If sci-fi’s influence was simply on product design, it wouldn’t be a problem. If Zuckerberg wants to burn his own cash in pursuit of a personal fantasy, or Musk wants to build hideous cars, that’s their call. It may even inspire something genuinely useful from time to time.

​The real issue is that sci-fi hasn’t just infused the tech moguls’ commercial ideas but also their warped understanding of society and politics. The dominant genre of sci-fi in the 80s and 90s, when today’s Silicon Valley overlords were growing up, was Cyberpunk – as exemplified in the novels of William Gibson (who invented the term “cyberspace”) and Stephenson, as well as any number of films and video games. The grandfather of the genre was Philip K Dick, whose novels and short stories spawned films including Blade Runner, Total Recall and Minority Report.

As a kid, I really wanted the future offered by Star Trek. I thought we might achieve something far more grand than the PDKian world we're stuck in now...and that we may never get out of.
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Published on April 14, 2025 13:44