Looking forward to chairing this panel the 2023 Speculative Fiction Festival at @writingNSW next month! Can’t wait to get stuck in to the knotty subject of horror’s great renaissance in these strange, dark times, with @jsbreukelaar @kaaron_warren and @antknee242
Come join us on 24 June. You can book tickets at writingnsw.org.au #SpecFic23
Shadows shortlist for The Tub
Excited to learn my short story The Tub has been shortlisted in this year’s Australian Shadows Awards. This is an oddly personal story that was a lot of fun to write, so I’m chuffed to see it getting some love.
Double excited to see so many friends fine stories and books on the list. Kudos to Geneve Flynn, Rebecca Fraser, Lee Murray, Greg Chapman, Kirstyn McDermott, Tabatha Wood, and Angela Slatter.
And a supermassive high five to fellow Cat and all-round legend, Aaron Dries for scoring the trifecta in short, long and collected fiction. Cut To Care is a brilliant collection and if you’ve not read it already go, out and rectify that immediately.
Check out the announcement here.
Pre-order The Measure of Sorrow
Pre-orders are live for #TheMeasureOfSorrow and include this freaking amazing SWAG!
Order now to get this gorgeous bookmark, moth sticker, and flyer for an eldritch rave that previously existed only in my head.
Sign up for my newsletter – get a free story!
I’m excited to share that I’ve set up a newsletter over on Substack. If you want to receive a steady(ish) stream of insights, inspirations, obsessions, updates, recommendations and fascinations, as well as the occasional giveaway or free story, right into your inbox, then I’d love you to subscribe!
And to give you the incentive to hand over your precious contact details, I’m sweetening the deal with a free story. Just stick your email in the box below and you’ll receive a link and password to access a free copy of my Aurealis-award nominated short story Duplicity.
Subscribe now to join these amazing experiments in electronic communication with the dead…
Publishers Weekly starred review
Holy fricken moley! The Measure of Sorrow just got a Publishers Weekly starred review!
The debut collection from Ashley-Smith (Ariadne, I Love You) proves that he can pack just as much of a punch in short horror fiction as in his Shirley Jackson Award–winning longer work. Throughout these 10 stories, his talent for scene-setting especially shines; the inherent alienation of the rural Australian settings of “The Family Madness” and “The Measure of Sorrow” do as much to enhance their protagonists’ breaks with reality as the teeming, humid rainforest lends to the collapsing rot of one man’s life in “Our Last Meal.” The bushfire-charred moonscape of once-familiar picnic grounds exists in deeply uncanny parallel to a mostly destroyed family trying to survive however they can in “Old Growth,” and a flood-rotted dream house falls out from under a mother-to-be in “The Moth Tapes.” Perhaps best of all is “The Black Massive,” set in England, in the gray edge between the city and the fens, where two teenage ravers fall in with a man offering them chemical escape, a beat they can dance to, and an introduction to the darkness of the void beyond death. For lovers of voicey, elegant prose that lingers for days in the corners of the mind, this is highly recommended.
You can check out the review at Publishers Weekly.