![]() ![]() ![]() Short stories force me to concentrate on making a single impression. Novels are more intuitive for me, because they are capacious and varied. Do you approach writing novels and short stories differently? Does one format feel more natural for the tales you want to tell? You have nine published novels and dozens of short stories. The idea of necessity entered the story by way of some philosophical reading I’d been doing about free will at the time. You knew they were out there, not particularly scary, but wild animals. I grew up in a small canyon and we would hear the coyotes caroling at night sometimes. The story swam together out of a collection of impressions and memories. With that anthology as motivation for writing a Lovecraft pastiche, what else inspired this story? How did it develop from there? This lurking idea was simply a propitious jumping off point for the story. I wouldn’t say any one feature attracts me significantly more than any other. My favorite Lovecraft stories change with time. In your afterword in that volume, you explained that you “wrote this piece to try out a variation on his theme of a lurking power or divinity.” Are those your favorite types of Lovecraft stories? ![]() “Machines of Concrete Light and Dark” originally appeared in Lovecraft Unbound, edited by Ellen Datlow. ![]()
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