It was published hardbound in September, 1996. The book club later combined it with
Though small presses are usually eager to publish collections of short fiction, most major publishing companies have a strong aversion to collections.
Apparently, the things don’t sell as well as novels.
For years, Headline resisted the idea of publishing a collection by me. They even rejected my Stoker-nominated collection,
Eventually, however, Bob Tanner convinced them to do one so long as it would be anchored by a novella.
I anchored it with a piece of fiction called “Fiends.”
I’d started writing “Fiends” at my parents’ house in Tiburon, California during Christmas vacation, 1971. I finished that version of the book in the summer of 1972, but it came in at a meager 50,000 words. Despite its brevity, I sent it out to a few agents under the title,
And had some interesting responses. In a letter dated November 10, 1972, agent Julian Bach wrote to me, “The story certainly moves, and there is a lot of tension in it. I suspect you will find an interested agent and that he or she will find a publisher. Our vote finally went not to take it on. We found it just too sadistic in subject matter but good luck with it elsewhere.”
On March 12, 1973, agent Max Gartenberg wrote, “It’s a gripping enough story. The problem for me was that the characters seem flat, without dimensions, and therefore hard to get caught up with. Good luck with it elsewhere.”
Soon afterward, I wrote a couple of new versions of the book. One, called
(A precursor of
I believe that, in 1975, I did a major rewrite of
But nothing came of my efforts.
I finally put all the drafts into a box. It must’ve been quite a large box, because at present count I seem to have seven different versions of
Having put the book behind me, I went on to other things.
When moving all my stuff in preparation for the demolition of our old garage, I took another look at some of my old, nearly-forgotten material. And I reread a few of the unpublished novels.
I liked
Also, at 275 manuscript pages, it was too short to be a novel (by current standards) and too long to be a novella.
When I needed a good-sized piece of fiction to anchor my Headline story collection, I realized that
I read the manuscript again, this time trimming it drastically eliminating every word, sentence, paragraph and page that didn’t seem right.
Then I typed the revised version into my computer, fixing it more as I went along. I kept working on the story until it seemed as good as my current stuff.
During the revisions, I reduced the manuscript from 275 pages to 170 pages which seemed like a good, solid length for the lead story of my collection.
I changed the title from
With 170 pages of original material, I felt fine about filling the rest of the collection with reprints. Besides,
I began the selection process by printing up
For
I separated my stories into piles. One pile would be for material I would include in
The decisions weren’t easy. Stories made a lot of trips back and forth from pile to pile.
For