Metaphors from Science
Published January 17, 2020 by Philip IvoryI’ve been reading Philip Pullman’s excellent volume of essays on writing and creativity, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling.
I’ve decided to post some provocative and resonant quotes from it, and here’s one to start with:
31 Days of Classic Horror Master List
Published November 4, 2019 by Philip IvoryAudio Story: Miss Brompton Falls 1938
Published November 2, 2019 by Philip Ivory
A small town beauty pageant, a general store and a simmering potential for violence are the ingredients of my story, “Miss Brompton Falls 1938,” published a while back at Menacing Hedge.
Please feel free to check out the AUDIO VERSION, read by yours truly. Any comments are welcome. Thanks!
Good Egg Indeed
Published October 22, 2019 by Philip IvoryBecause things are absurd, it’s good to relish an absurd passage from P.G. Wodehouse, from the story Jeeves in the Springtime:
“But I am thankful to say the worst has not happened. The matter has been adjusted. Jane is not leaving me.”
“Good egg!”
“Good egg, indeed—though the expression is not familiar to me.”
UNREAL event at Antigone: Thanks for Support
Published October 21, 2019 by Philip IvoryThanks to our students and friends who came out to support our special event last Friday, Oct. 18!
Our teachers at The Writers Studio Tucson had a chance to read from their creative work at a public reading held at Antigone Books on Fourth Avenue here in Tucson.
It was called UNREAL, and gave our teachers, Lela Scott MacNeil, Richard Leis, Donna Aversa, Reneé Bibby and myself a chance to read selections of poetry and prose that focus on the unusual, the dark, and the unreal.
This was the program:
Lela Scott MacNeil / reading novel excerpt, Long Night’s Journey Into Day
Phil Ivory / reading flash fiction, Probably Last Meeting of Bluebell Ridge II Homeowners Association
Richard Leis / reading poems, [Aliens are here], Phantom Taste of Apricot on My Tongue, Cities Through Telescopes, City as Fairy Tale, and Burning Baby
Donna Aversa / reading flash fiction, A Little Bit Of Sausage
Reneé Bibby / reading short story excerpt, That Boy
We had a great turnout who came to hear our work and browse at Tucson’s most celebrated independent bookstore.
Many thanks to Antigone Books for being such a gracious and enthusiastic host, and making us and our guests feel at home. We’re looking forward to more events like it.
The Yellow Man at Bewildering Stories
Published October 15, 2019 by Philip Ivory“There’s a part of the brain tells us you can’t
be dead and alive at the same time,” said
the Yellow Man. “It doesn’t work in you.“
October’s here, time for tales that send shivers along the spine, that whisper “What if?” to the part of you that thrills to the dread and unspeakable.
If you want a cerebral, eerie but ultimately humanistic read, check out my novelette, “The Yellow Man,” winner of the 2016 Mariner Awards, available at Bewildering Stories.
It’s an unsettling tale about Allan, who’s 11 and sits alone in a basement, fitting puzzle pieces together as visitors come and go, people from the town who sit quietly with Allan, saying nothing before fading again into nothingness.
One of his visitors is his best friend, Sheri. But something has gone wrong in their friendship. And she is only a shadow of what he remembers.
Allan knows his visitor have something to do with what is on the other side of the basement wall.
He knows they are not alive.
And then there is the one who is something worse than that, and the key to all of Allan’s problems and why he has been in the basement so long …
The Yellow Man.
UNREAL: Writers Studio Teachers Read Their Work
Published October 4, 2019 by Philip IvoryJoin us on Oct. 18 for a public reading event, cohosted by Antigone Books and The Writers Studio. Teachers from the Tucson branch of The Writers Studio — Lela Scott MacNeil, Richard Leis, Donna Aversa, Reneé Bibby and myself — will read selections of poetry and prose that focus on the unusual, the dark, and the unreal.
WHERE: Antigone Books, 411 N 4th Ave, Tucson, Arizona 85705
WHEN: October 18, 2019 at 6:00 PM
No RSVP or admission fee is required.
At The Writers Studio Tucson, we pride ourselves on being active participants in Tucson’s thriving literary community. Please join us, and patronize Antigone Books, one of the finest independent bookstores in the country. Visit their web site and sign up for their newsletter.
The Writers Studio, founded by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Philip Schultz in 1987, offers writing workshops designed to help students discover and nurture their own voices. The Writers Studio Tucson offers four levels of classes to help students achieve their writing goals.
For more information on The Writers Studio, click here.
When Reality Doesn’t Cut It, UNREAL Is Our Best Friend!
See you on Oct. 18!
During October: 31 Days of Classic Horror
Published September 30, 2019 by Philip IvoryFrom my earliest years, horror films have had a profound influence on my creativity and my writing, and it’s time I paid them proper tribute for their artistry and lingering cultural impact.
Starting tomorrow and continuing each day for the entire month of October, I’ll highlight a favorite horror film, one that’s particularly influential in the field, or that impacted me in a profound way. The choices are subjective and entirely mine. The list will proceed chronologically from the dawn of sound films to the present day.
Please check in and help me celebrate the cinema of the macabre all this month. Like Dr. Septimus Pretorius in BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935), let’s hoist our glasses and toast the infernal, unholy, misbegotten and malign:
“To a new world of gods and monsters!”
















