Alan Baxter's Blog
November 10, 2025
The Gulp and The Fall special offer
THE RISE: Tales From The Gulp 3 is coming in February 2026, so now is a great time to catch up on volumes 1 and 2. Especially with Xmas coming up, we all know what a fantastic present signed books make. So here’s a SPECIAL OFFER:
Get signed paperback copies of THE GULP and THE FALL, posted anywhere in Australia, for only $50 shipping included.
Click right here to grab yours while stocks last. Only in Australia, I’m afraid, as overseas shipping is just ridiculously expensive. And please do spread the word. Cheers!
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November 3, 2025
Newsletter – 4th November 2025
Hello fiends
How the fuck are ya? I hope this finds you well. First of all, I need to stop apologising about these newsletters being infrequent and promising to do better. I mean, I am sorry theyâre so infrequent, but I clearly canât do better, so I need to accept the truth of the situation. I will send out a newsletter as frequently as possible, with no guarantee of regularity.
Honestly, accepting how things are rather than how we wish they were is a powerful and valuable life skill. We absolutely should strive to make things better, to make the world we inhabit more into the kind of world we want to inhabit â from personal relationships, to careers, to politics and beyond â but recognising something for what it is rather than what we wish it was is the best place to start all of that.
It’s an important lesson in this writing life too. Iâve talked before about how the only thing we control is the writing, so thatâs what we have to focus on. We can wish all we like that things were different, that we had that guyâs career, or whatever, but recognising how things actually are is important. Then we figure out what we can do, however seemingly insignificant, to move us towards something better.
I do have one more excuse than usual this time when it comes to the newsletter being late, which is that I went away with my family for a little while. It was a great recharge, but now Iâm back and working towards firing on all cylinders again. What does that mean?
Weeellll, not all that much right at this moment. Thereâs a lot of stuff going on in the background, but nothing coming to fruition yet. And thereâs a few things that didnât work out at all, which is normal in this job. I saw a bunch of people lamenting recently, and some of it got a little bitter, so I ended up writing this. âhttps://www.patreon.com/posts/141918761â It reiterates a bit what Iâve said above, but goes into a lot more about the dangers of jealousy.
It also finishes with the reminder that all we control is the writing and that we have to do the fucking work. So, on that front, while all these other things tick away in the background, Iâve been doing the fucking work. Iâll always much prefer working with publishers, but youâll also be aware that I put out some books independently too, and theyâve been some of my most successful stuff. Among those things are the Tales From The Gulp. The Gulp and The Fall are already out there, of course, and now a third book is coming. I recently shared the cover for The Rise. Five more novellas set in the creepy harbour town of Gulpepper, with some returning characters and some new ones. Iâm really excited about this book and Iâm getting it organised for a February 2026 release. Itâs with the editor now and I should have early ARCs before too long. Hereâs the cover:

Horror author of The Cursed Among Us and The Envelope, John Durgin, kindly read an early draft and had this to say:
âAt the center of Gulpepper is a blackened heart that pumps fear into each of these new stories. With The Rise, Baxter proves there is far more lore to uncover, and while Iâd never spend a minute in this town myself, I sure as hell love reading about the poor souls who do.â
Thanks, John!
In other release news, Iâve mentioned before that 2025 has been a little lean on new releases, but two short stories Iâm really proud of are both out now. âWatch the Skiesâ in Fever Dreams and âEighty-five Per Cent, Give or Takeâ in This Way Lies Madness are both out in the world.

I also had a story fall by the wayside when an anthology project failed to come together, so Iâve now shared that story on Patreon instead. Itâs right here: âhttps://www.patreon.com/posts/142073015â If youâre not a patron, you can pay the once-off fee of AU$5 (thatâs about US$3) to read it. I wanted to price it more cheaply than that, but AU$5 was the lowest available. I guess because thatâs the cheapest tier option on my Patreon? No idea, I donât know how these things work. But hopefully itâs worth your bucks if you give it a go. If you do sign up to Patreon for AU$5 a month, thereâs loads of free and exclusive fiction to be found there.
I mentioned before as well that Blood Covenant was eligible for the Best Novel in the Ditmar Awards. Well, it didnât win but it was shortlisted, which is wonderful. The Ditmars are becoming my white whale among Aussie awards â Iâve been nominated 16 times now, but have yet to win one. Maybe one day!
What Iâve Been Enjoying
Iâve been catching up recently on the TV show Vikings. I really enjoyed the first few seasons, then kinda fell out of watching it for some reason. So Iâve just finished rectifying that and binged all the rest. Itâs enormous fun. I have no idea how accurate to history it is, but it makes for brilliant TV regardless. I also watched Life of Chuck, based on the Stephen King story. I get it, I understand the central conceit, and the performances are fantastic, but the film as a whole fell a bit flat for me. Iâm keen to read the book though. And I watched Tenet. I think I followed about 10 to 20 % of it⦠Interestingly, if youâve seen Tenet and you read the story over on Patreon that I mentioned above, you might spot a weird overlap!
As for reading, Iâve finally caught up on The Jade Setter of Janloon and Jade Shards by Fonda Lee, which are stories set in her Green Bone Saga world. I absolutely love that trilogy (Jade City, Jade War, Jade Legacy) â I think itâs one of the best fantasies Iâve ever read â and these stories are a great addition. I also read Strange Eons by Robert Bloch, in its new Valancourt edition. While itâs essentially an homage from Bloch to his friend, HP Lovecraft, itâs actually a lot more than that and a great yarn in its own right. Finally, I had an early read of It Came From The Flower Shop Down Under by Chris Heinicke and Kate Reedwood. Itâs set in the 1970s and is a great Aussie creature feature romp. I really enjoyed it.
Right, thatâs all from me for now. More news when I get around to the next one and when I have something cool to share. Hopefully soon, as I really would like to have some good news before long!
Be kind to yourself and others. All the best.
Al
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October 23, 2025
On the Writing Life and Envy
Envy is a natural human reaction, so of course, itâs natural in the writing life. To suggest people just ânot be jealousâ is like saying to a depressed person, âWhy donât you just cheer up?â You see someone get the deals youâd love, the awards you want to win, the opportunities you strive for and you think, âWhy them? Why not me?â This is normal. You canât control how you feel about something and envy is an entirely normal feeling.
You can, however, control how you react to that feeling. You choose what to do with it.
If your first course of action is to bitch and moan publicly, to deride the person youâre envying, deride the publisher, editor, award system or whatever else is involved, well, thatâs a really bad choice. For one, itâs bitter, and bitterness will eat you up inside. But itâs also career suicide. If you ever want to see the kind of opportunities youâre envying, being a whiner now, being bitter and unpleasant, is a pretty sure way to ensure you never will.
People notice, editors and publishers notice. They remember. They donât want to work with people who are difficult or unpleasant. And folks who would publicly badmouth their colleagues and their industry out of jealousy are difficult and unpleasant people. We need to lift each other up, not put each other down.
Of course you can feel aggrieved about something. Remember, feeling envy is entirely natural. You might even be right if you think something isnât entirely fair or open. But unless thereâs obvious and unequivocal corruption going on, keep that shit to yourself. People are free to run their careers and their businesses however they like. Your bitching about it will only make you look bad, not them. (This isnât to say you canât discuss things or raise concerns. Healthy discourse is just that: healthy. But if youâre feeling personally aggrieved and about to kick off with that, check yourself.)
If you want to have a rant about somethingâand who doesnât, from time to time?âsave that shit for your offline friends group, your spouse, your private group WhatsApp. If you donât have a group of some kind where you can engage in a good moan about stuff or question stuff without doing it publicly like a bunch of dicks, then start one. This is the healthy and professional way to deal with feelings of envy or grievance in the first instance.
Now, back to the bitterness thing. This is important, because itâs about your mental health. This business is fucked, fam. No lie, this business hollows you out. Itâs a series of seemingly endless rejections and dead ends and frustrations with the occasional success that keeps you going. Youâre only still in it because youâre as bloody-minded as the rest of us and determined to keep going, no matter what. Thatâs how you succeed anyway.
We control literally no part of this entire industry except one thing: the writing.
Thatâs us. Thatâs ours. We can do that however we want. Itâs the expression of ourselves and itâs no one elseâs to fuck with. That all comes later when you take the writing into the publishing arena. And what a brutal colosseum that is.
So we come back around to what we do with those entirely normal feelings of jealousy. Theyâre going to happen. But if you think youâre somehow special, somehow missing out unfairly, step back. Go sit in the corner and have a quiet word with yourself. That kind of thinking will eat you up.
Something to remember is that people share their wins, but rarely publicise their failures. For every success you see them celebrating, I guarantee you theyâve suffered through numerous fails to get there. If someone seems to be celebrating a lot of wins, theyâre surely also nursing a lot of wounds from along the way.
So every time you see someone achieve something you strive for, celebrate it. You can still wish it happened to you, but instead of stewing on it and hating them, say to yourself, âIt happened to them, so it could happen to me too!â
Remind yourself that if those opportunities exist, they exist for everyone.
All you control is the writing, so keep doing that. Every time you feel like you missed out on something, write. The more you write, the better you get and the more stuff you have out there. Then itâs more likely opportunities are going to come your way. Then youâll be ready to grab those opportunities when they do.
The one thing that is always true is that you will only succeed if you write. So do the fucking work. Do the one thing you can control.
The excellent Tim Waggoner wrote:
âEnvy is the writerâs disease… Admire other writersâ work, learn from it, learn from their accomplishments and their setbacks, but never compare yourself to them… You canât have anyone elseâs career. You can only have yours.â
This is powerful and positive advice.
Christopher Golden recently talked a bit on this subject and he shared a fantastic quote from the late, great Rick Huatala: “I wish it happened to me, but if it can’t happen to me, I hope it happens to you.”
Thatâs good and healthy thinking. Rick knew good stuff happening to anyone is good for everyone. A rising tide lifts all boats. If there are opportunities out there, thatâs great. Celebrate them, strive for them, compare yourself to no one, but be inspired, be motivated by everyone.
And always, always, do the fucking work.
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July 27, 2025
Newsletter 28th July 2025
Hello fiends!
How the hell are you? I hope this finds you as well as possible, despite everything. Remember, finding joy and chasing your dreams is punk as fuck in times like these, so never apologise for looking for the good in the world.
There’s been a lot of talk lately about this stuff. Numerous times I’ve seen people saying something like, “Look, sorry, I know it’s all too much right now, but I have a book coming out” or something similar. And to that I say, fuck that noise. Never apologise for singing out about something you’ve done. Especially in times like these. Otherwise, what’s the point in fighting at all? Art and expression and freedom of thought and freedom of action—literally the freedom to exist as exactly who you are—are what it’s all about.
The more people try to crush the arts, the more arseholes try to destroy anyone deemed “different”, the more we stand up. The more we stand together. Remember that line from that movie, “We are the weirdoes , mister”? That’s us. And the beauty is, we don’t have to be all the same kind of weirdo. The fact that there’s a huge variety of weirdo out there is our strength. When it comes to these cookie-cutter white supremacist fascist shitstains, our individual weirdness is our strength and our vastly superior numbers is why we’ll win. Weirdoes together!
So never apologise for promoting something you’ve made, never think there’s no point. Every voice adds to the cacophony that, in the long run, will drown out hate. It always has and it always will. It pisses me off that we have to suffer again in the meantime, but we never quit.
Anyway, I didn’t actually intend to start this newsletter with a rant, but seeing someone apologise for mentioning their new book is what reminded me it’s been a while since I sent one of these. So there you have it!
Let’s talk about what I’ve got going on. First of all, the anthology of horror stories inspired by great action movies of the 80s, I’ll Kill You Last, edited by Cullen Bunn, is in the last few days of its Kickstarter campaign. Honestly, things aren’t looking good. Cash is tight right now and anthologies are expensive bastards, but if you can find a way to back this one and get it over the line, that would be great. Look at that line-up!
I’ll Kill You Last promo graphic listing contributing authors.My story in this is inspired by the heist movies I love so much with a bit of historical archaeology repurposed into horror to spice things up. I had great fun writing it, so I hope the book goes ahead. You can find all the details and back it right here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1330509990/ill-kill-you-last-an-80s-inspired-action-horror-anthology
Another thing I dropped hints about recently was this.
Promo showing The Gulp and The Fall and a third book blurred out with a ? on it.I’ve written another official volume in the Tales From The Gulp series. The title and cover have already been revealed to patrons, but I’ll share those things publicly once I get a better idea of a release date. I’m hoping it’ll come out this year, but it might be early 2026. We’ll see how things go.
I’m super nervous about it if I’m honest. The Gulp and The Fall got such a great reception and I always thought about whether or not I’d go ahead with this third instalment. I had good ideas for the stories, but was nervous about rising to the standards of the previous two. In the end I decided to dive in and see what happened. I’m really happy with how it came together. It’s five novellas again, including the two longest stories so far in the series. And it includes one of the darkest things I’ve ever written. Funny how that goes!
More news on this as I get it through beta readers, editors, and so on.
One more thing. The 2025 Ditmar Awards are open for nominations, for work first published in the 2024 calendar year. (That includes my novel, Blood Covenant, if you thought that worthy of a nom.) This is a fan/reader voted award, which means the more people who get involved, the better a representation of good work we’re likely to see on the shortlists. Official wording says:
Nominations will be accepted from natural persons active in fandom, and from full or supporting members of Conflux 19 or Swancon 49 (no official Natcon took place this year due to circumstances beyond control). You may nominate as many times in as many categories as you like, although you may only nominate a particular person or work once.
Nominations close 11:59pm Eastern Standard Time Thursday 21 August. And you can nominate very easily with an online form. Click to submit a 2025 Ditmar Awards nomination: https://form.jotform.com/252001685025851
There’s also an unofficial eligibility list, so you can remind yourself of all the good stuff published last year: https://scifi.fandom.com/wiki/2025_Ditmar_Award_Eligibility_List?veaction=edit
If you feel so inclined, please get nominating! And Blood Covenant is eligible in the Best Novel category, did I mention that?
What I’ve Been Enjoying
I’ve been consuming heaps of TV and stuff lately. I won’t go into huge detail, but here’s a bunch of stuff I really recommend. I watched the rest of Andor, which is one of the best Star Wars spinoffs out there. It leads directly to events in Rogue One, which is both one of the best Star Wars films there is and a brilliant war movie in its own right. I highly recommend watching Andor, then going right away into Rogue One (again, if you’ve already seen it, like I did). Another great show is Secret Level, based on video games, from the people behind Love, Death + Robots. Some crackers in that series. The TV adaptation of The Three-Body Problem is also outstanding TV with some truly great performances.
Squid Game finally wrapped up. It hits a pretty satisfying conclusion. And you know that I loved finally catching Sons Of Anarchy a while back? There’s a five season spin off called Mayans that I’m watching now and really enjoying. I’m only just at the start of season 2, but it’s good stuff.
Lastly, for watching stuff, the people who made that amazing horror film, Talk To Me, are at it again with a movie called Bring Her Back. It’s genuinely superb and really intense in places. Hard-hitting, but well worth it. And Australian!
With reading, I’ve loved recently Road of Bones and House of Last Resort by Christopher Golden and Among the Living by Tim Lebbon. A couple of masters at work, and showing no signs of slowing down. Both these guys never miss for me, and these books are great.
Okay, that’ll do from me for now. Remember to back I’ll Kill You Last if you’re able to, and please do drop some nominations in the Ditmar Awards. Meanwhile, take care of each other and especially yourself. Kindness and empathy will get us through.
Big love to you all
Al
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July 25, 2025
The 2025 Ditmar Awards are open for nominations
The 2025 Ditmar Awards are open for nominations, for work first published in the 2024 calendar year. (That includes my novel, Blood Covenant, if you thought that worthy of a nom!)
This is a fan/reader voted award, which means that the more people who get involved, the better a representation of good work we’re likely to see on the shortlists. Official wording says:
Nominations will be accepted from natural persons active in fandom, and from full or supporting members of Conflux 19 or Swancon 49 (no official Natcon took place this year due to circumstances beyond control). You may nominate as many times in as many categories as you like, although you may only nominate a particular person or work once.
Nominations close 11:59pm Eastern Standard Time Thursday 21 August. And you can nominate very easily with this online form:
Click to submit a 2025 Ditmar Awards nomination: https://form.jotform.com/252001685025851
There’s also an unofficial eligibility list, so you can remind yourself of all the good stuff published last year: https://scifi.fandom.com/wiki/2025_Ditmar_Award_Eligibility_List?veaction=edit
Get nominating!
The post The 2025 Ditmar Awards are open for nominations appeared first on Alan Baxter.
July 1, 2025
I’LL KILL YOU LAST is coming!
I’LL KILL YOU LAST has had a few delays along the way, but it’s finally coming. This anthology will be an absolute banger, packed with stories by amazing authors that celebrate everything great in the high-octane action movies of the 80s. Larger than life heroes! One liners! Car chases! Big guns! Bigger muscles! Muscle car chases with even bigger guns!
Do you love bloodcurdling terror? Vampires! Demons! Werewolves! Demonic vampires who turn into werewolves by the light of the full moon!
Do you bleed Cannon films? Do you bleed horror?
If so, this is the anthology for you! Edited by the amazing Cullen Bunn and featuring 22 stories, including one from me.
But it needs to be Kickstarted, which is essentially pre-orders. Sign up for your copy here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1330509990/ill-kill-you-last-an-80s-inspired-action-horror-anthology
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May 27, 2025
Newsletter 28th May 2025
Hello, fiends. How the fuck are ya?
Let me start by reassuring folks. Last newsletter was perceived by many as a bit doom and gloom and several people checked in to make sure I was really okay. I really am! Honest. This business sucks balls sometimes, but taking the big picture into account, I’m really okay.
I will always be honest with you in missives like this because I believe you deserve truth, not some plastic façade, and I think it’s important to point out that it’s not all unicorns and roses. Most of the time people only say stuff when it’s good stuff, which gives a skewed perspective of how much good stuff there is. Even if there is a lot of good stuff – and I’m well aware of how fortunate I’ve been – there is at least as much, if not more, shitty shit too.
There is still a lot of inertia for me right now. I’m still waiting on any good calls from my agent. I’m still struggling to get things done and I don’t cope well without solid projects on the horizon. But right now, there aren’t any, so I simply have to fortify my pants and get on with things. Because getting the work done is how this works.
And there are some positives. One thing that was really getting me down last time was the looming general election. I was terrified of Trumpism infecting Australia. I’m very pleased to say that the idea of Trumpism was so soundly rejected by the Australian electorate that our conservative party saw their biggest defeat in the history of their existence and their leader lost not only the election but his seat in parliament too. Fuck off, you fascist. That’s just brilliant.
While I’m still waiting to hear about any of the work that I have out there (either with my agent or actually on submission) I’m working on something new which is quite exciting and I have a possible indie project coming up, which will be something good to focus on.
Also, the hardcover of Recall is available now, as well as the paperback and ebook. So if you’ve been hanging out for that, you can get it anywhere you buy books. Ideally, grab it from me or directly from the publisher, as that’s always the best way to support authors and publishers.
I’m also getting out into the world again soon, and that can only be a good thing. I’m very excited to have been invited back as a guest at the awesome Supanova Pop Culture Expo, this time in Sydney and Perth. Along with a plethora of movie, TV, comics, voiceover and gaming guests, I’ll be at the QBD Literary Legends booth along with excellent fellow scribes like Luke Arnold, Lauren Roberts, Lynette Noni, Juliet Marillier and a bunch more I can’t even remember right now. Check the guests on the Supanova page. It’s amazing! If you’re near those cities, please do come along.
Meanwhile, I’ll just keep scribing away and hoping for news. Cross your fingers for me, sacrifice a chicken maybe, exhort the will of Elder Gods, whatever else you might consider worthwhile. I’m sure it helps, and even if it doesn’t, it’s all a bit of fun, right?
What I’ve Been Enjoying
Talking of fun, I’ve had loads recently with TV and movies. Thirty years too late, I finished watching all of Babylon 5. It still holds up, almost too well with the current rise of the right. About the only anachronistic element is they still read newspapers, which was pretty funny. I was solidly disappointed with how they resolved the Shadow War – I felt like that was weak as hell – but then the continued exploration of the alliance was really well done. The final episode made me cry, it was truly powerful stuff.
I’ve caught a couple of movies in the cinema recently too. For my mental health, I’ve been giving myself an occasional afternoon off where I head up to Hobart and catch a film. I saw Sinners, which is a superb blend of historical, musical and horror. I mean, blues and vampires, you can’t go wrong. In some respects, it was a fairly trope-following idea, but it was presented from a wonderful perspective that we just don’t see enough of. I loved it.
Then just last week I went up and saw Final Destination: Bloodlines, which is just bonkers fun. A while back I binged all the movies to date and thoroughly enjoyed them. I can’t remember the order I rated them now, but the Final Destination conceit is a stroke of genius, really. People escape death, so death comes for them in increasingly wild ways. Trying to predict the ridiculous Rube Goldberg death sequences is enormous fun. Then you leave the theatre and spot at least a hundred ways to die walking back to the car.
With reading, I loved the new Chuck Wendig novel, Staircase in the Woods. I wasn’t sure where he was going with it and it turned out to be a really cool exploration of friendship and flawed people. And I absolutely loved Christopher Golden’s novel, Road of Bones. That’s a genuinely scary book that will make you feel the cold of Siberia. I highly recommend both of those.
Righto, I think that’s all from me for now. Back to work, back to waiting on that email from my agent. Such is this business! If you’re keen to know a bit more about what I’m working on, I share a lot more of that stuff along with excerpts and other exclusive fiction at my Patreon. I’ve only got a small following, but it helps towards at least one grocery bill a month and that really makes a difference, I’m so grateful for everyone who hangs out with me there. If you’re keen, go check it out. You can try it for free.
Meanwhile, be kind to each other, fight fascism, stand up for what you believe and I’ll see you next time.
Al
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April 21, 2025
Latest newsletter – 22nd April 2025
Hello fiends
I hope this finds you well. Or at least surviving. It’s a wild time out there, and most of us are just swimming along, trying to keep our heads above water. Every day is a new shitshow in the news, it seems, and here in Australia we’re heading into a general election, so it’s not going to get any better any time soon.
And honestly, things are not much different on the writing front just now. There’s a certain inertia that kicks in when nothing seems to be gaining traction. It makes the motivation to keep going hard to maintain. We’re in the middle of school holidays, so that certainly makes things tricky. I’m a creature of routine and I value time alone, both things that get blown out of the water during holidays. Of course, I make the most of that disruption and enjoy it for what it is, but it’s hell on the writing life.
I’ve also had a couple of projects collapse out from underneath me recently, which is always galling. It’s par for the course with his gig, but it still sucks when it happens. And other things that are out there are just… out there. Nothing happening right now. The waiting is the hardest part of a writer’s life, I think.
But, we persevere. Because that’s the job. There’s no point in expecting anything to come to you, no one owes you anything, you have to go out and get it. Sitting there waiting and not doing more work will just result in waiting forever, in my experience.
The above is not how to make things happen. Arse in chair, fingers on keyboard, do the fucking work. That’s how you get ahead. Despite times like this when it feels like there’s no more ahead to get, or that a peak has been reached and now it’s all diminishing returns. It’s important to acknowledge those feelings, which is why I’m writing about them now, but it’s more important to not give in to those feelings. Fuck that kind of evil brain worm. I’ve always said that if I fail at this gig it won’t ever be because I didn’t work hard enough. And the work is the literal only thing we control. Everything else is in the laps of the gods and those fuckers are capricious and mischievous.
But there is stuff happening. RECALL is out in the world now, so please do help me spread the word about that and grab your copy if you haven’t already. Signed copies available through my website now too.
There are still a few things out there on submission that I will hopefully hear about before too long, and with any luck the things I hear will be positive. In the meantime, I’m working on a new project. It wasn’t what I thought I’d be working on next, but it would appear its time has come. Watch this space for more news (or join my Patreon, where people always get advance notice of stuff like this, plus exclusive fiction and other stuff.)
Otherwise, this newsletter is simply to let you know I’m still beavering away in the word mines, as it’s been a while since my last missive.
What I’ve Been Enjoying
In terms of TV and movies, I got a boxed set Blu-Ray of all 5 seasons of Babylon 5 for Xmas. I watched the first season and a half when it aired in the mid-90s, then I went travelling around the world for two years, and subsequently moved to Australia. So I never got around to seeing the rest. I recently started watching those Blu-Rays from the beginning and now I’m into season 4 and really enjoying it. It’s great to finally catch up with it after all these decades. Although, it’s also a bit depressing how fucking relevant it is to the political climate today. Written off the back of Reagan, Thatcher and so on, here we are again.
My kid and I went to the the Minecraft movie and I enjoyed it a lot. So much fan service, so you’ll get a lot more if you know the game. And the hectic nature of the audience was something to behold. Like a modern Rocky Horror Picture Show only more teenage aggression. Very weird!
With reading, I’ve finally caught up on all the Charlie Parker thrillers by John Connolly. There’s 21 of them now and I finished the 21st last week. It’s a great series of books, but I hope he wraps it up soon, as there’s starting to be less payoff and the big arc he’s been hinting at all along is getting a little stale. A huge finale would be awesome sometime soon.
I also read and enjoyed recently Kosa by John Durgin and On A Clear Day You Can See Block Island by Gage Greenwood.
Okay, that’s all from me for now. Stay well, fiends, look after yourself and each other. Always happy to hear from folks, you know where to find me.
Al
(To get my email directly to your inbox, sign up here.)
The post Latest newsletter – 22nd April 2025 appeared first on Alan Baxter.
April 15, 2025
A special offer to celebrate my birthday!
Recall, Blood Covenant and Sallow Bend paperbacks, all signed, only AU$69.95 for all three, including shipping*!
You know that old chestnut, “It’s my birthday, but you get the presents”? This is that exactly. It’s my birthday this week and the best present I can get is a continued career as an author. Which, let’s be honest, is getting harder instead of easier. But we persevere! So I’ve come up with a special offer here, to help me celebrate. *Please note: This is only available to Australian readers! I could potentially fulfill the same offer to anyone outside Australia, but the shipping would be extravagant and I’d need to add that on. If you are outside Australia and you want these three signed books, send me an email and I’ll figure out how much extra it would be to ship to you.
Meanwhile, Australians! If you’re keen for these three books, all signed and dedicated to you (or anyone else) just click below!
Recall, Blood Covenant and Sallow Bend signed paperbacks!
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February 25, 2025
RECALL is out now!
Hi friends! I’m excited to share with you that RECALL is out now!
Originally published as three novellas – Manifest Recall, Recall Night and Ghost Recall – now collected together for the first time. Here’s what it’s about:
Following a psychotic break, Eli Carver finds himself on the run in the company of a terrified woman he doesn’t know. As he slowly rebuilds his memories, layers of ugly truth are peeled back and dark secrets are revealed. Before long, the duo find themselves on the wrong side of Eli’s old criminal syndicate, in a struggle for survival against the most dangerous forces in their lives. They have to go back into the underbelly of humanity, laid bare and ready for the bullet or the knife. And all the way, Eli is haunted by the ghosts of people he’s killed in the past, haranguing him, a supernatural peanut gallery of mockery and hate. Recall follows Eli Carver’s downward spiral of psychosis, through the darker aspects of lost memories, human guilt, and the insurmountable quest for personal redemption.
“a fast, gritty, mind-f*ck” – Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts
“brutal, gritty fun” — Brian Keene, author of The Complex
“bottles the essence of impending doom that drives the most powerful noir. Vintage Baxter: fast, sleek, and bloody-minded.” – Laird Barron, author of Swift to Chase
Available directly from Sobelo Books (paperback or discounted ebook!) or wherever you usually buy books. Paperback and ebook out now, hardcover coming soon. This book is ultraviolent and intense, I really hope you’ll give it a go. And please do help me spread the word, thank you!
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