Gerard Houarner

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About Gerard Houarner
Gerard Houarner is a native New Yorker, born to Breton immigrants, a product of the New York City school system, the City College of New York, and Columbia University.
In grade school, he enjoyed writing and illustrating 1-2 page "novelizations" of sf and monster movies he watched on black and white TV. He picked up 50's and 60's sf books at the library and used book stores, graduated to digest sf magazines, and on the day of the first moon landing started reading Lord of the Rings. He started sending out stories as a teenager in the early 70's. In high school, he took his first writing course (Frank McCourt also taught writing at this school, but alas, his class was filled, though second hand advice from friends in his class were valuable).
His first published story appeared in Space and Time magazine in 1974.
At CCNY, he attended writing classes taught by Joseph Heller (Catch-22), Joel Oppenheimer (Black Mountain poet and Village Voice staple), and Irwin Stark (a teacher to many writers, including Norman Spinrad). Heller thought he could write, but didn't know how anyone would make money from the things he wrote. Joel was amused by his attempts at poetry. Stark took an interest in a short, experimental sf story, but also questioned publishing possibilities. He also crashed, along with many others, a writing class for graduate students taught by William Burroughs.
Tempted by the writing life, and a few sales to the small press, he took a year to work before going to graduage school to explore career choices. He applied to and was accepted to the Columbia University graduate writing program, the NYU fim school, and, because he discovered a talent for listening to people, the Rehabilitation Counselor program at Teachers College at Columbia. During this time, through friends he was able to visit editors' offices, book stores, film sets, and of course bars to get a feel for various careers and how he might earn a living working in those fields.
He chose counseling. It promised a stable living, and listening along with an ability to write were advantages in the profession. And though making a living as a writer seemed remote, he would be free to continue writing evenings and weekends.
The school provided full-time employment and course credits. He worked and rose through office administrative ranks at the Title IX Sex Desegregation Assistance Center (DIrector Effie Bynum), while attending classes, researched and wrote papers, and worked on a novel. He spent very little time at home. Though he did not deliver training, he does say "you're welcome" when people praise the many medals,victories and awards earned by women in the Olympics and other women's sports events
For his internship, he interviewed at the Postgraduate Center, a coveted placement in the city. When asked about the box he had carried into the interview, he replied that he was delivering a fantasy novel manuscript to an editor later in the day. The Director immediately questioned his ability to help people if he was also prepoccupied with imaginary beings and events. He replied that writing fiction for public readership demanded an acute awareness of real people and events to make an imaginary story believable.
He secured the internship, and was hired as a counselor upon graduation. The novel eventually sold to Lester Del Rey at Ballantine, and after editing, was published in 1986.
Later, he also attended workshops led by Shawna McCarthy, Nancy Kress and Terry Bisson.
Through the 80's and into the 90's, his fiction moved from fantasy and science fiction to horror, and eventually dark humor. Initiating the change of perspective on his writing was the time spent working at the Postgraduate clinic, located near Hell's Kitchen across the street from a Blarney Stone bar, next to an SRO for individuals released from the Riker's Island jail complex.
Experience at a methadone clinic on Delancey Street deepened his interest in darker stories.
The lower east side neighborhood was rich in events and experiences -- a building collapse,with the roar and dust cloud to be recalled years later when the Twin Towers fell; truckers speedballing in their cabs while parked under the clinic supervisor's second floor office; being chased by drug dealers on Essex street; police locking down McDonalds for drug searches; visiting and talking to local store owners the clinic supervisor had robbed before his recovery; assignment as the first counselor in the clinic to work with identified AIDS patients...
...the clients' stories -- some unable to step down to lower doses; others substituting alcohol, placidyl, etc. for their need; a cadre of Chinese men whose mothers gave them opium in China to keep them home, which didn't stop them from immigrating but crippled their ability to function once they arrived; once promising young people struggling to function...
...discussions with vets about their experiences, fears, trauma and actions, that evolved into a personal question and a dramatic story question - can those who have committed terrible acts ever find redemption?
As a mental health professional, he found these and many other questions, the why, when, how of pain, trauma, death, the dance between predator and prey, in everyday work, which sometimes found their way into the kinds of stories that asked to be written.
Over the decades, he has drawn inspiration from life, shadows, the absurd, and from the experiences working in the mental health field throughout NYC from the 80's through 2019, including a West Side counseling center, a lower east-side methadone clinic at the dawn of the AIDS era, a Bronx clinc in the crack era, a children's psychiatric facility, Bronx and Manhattan state psychiatric facilities, a forensic psychiatric hospital (the real-life Arkham).
He retired after serving as Rehab Director at Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center, and at Manhattan Psychiatric Center.
As a writer, he's had over 300 short stories, as well as novels and collections, published in the past 40 years. Genres include horror, fantasy, science fiction, and humor. He has also edited or co-edited anthologies and serves as Fiction Editor for Space and Time magazine (also available through Amazon.com).
He continues to write, at night, mostly about the dark.
For more, check out www.gerardhouarner.net, or http://www.facebook.com/gerard.houarner
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Author Updates
Titles By Gerard Houarner
FEATURING ALL NEW STORIES BY:
- Edward Lee & Roman Neznayu
- Stephen Kozeniewski
- Gerard Houarner
- Armand Rosamilia
- Christine Morton
- Robert Essig
- Lucas Milliron
- Dustin LaValley & Daniel J. Volpe
- Jeremy Megargee
- Sarah Budd
- Bridgett Nelson
- Richard Dansky
- Josh Davis
- Mike James Davis
- Trevor Newton
33 Years in the making, The Ultimate Edition of PAINFREAK includes the entire Painfreak Universe written by Horror Author, Gerard Houarner.
INCLUDES:
- Original Painfreak story
- 24 shorts stories spanning back to 1989
- New Painfreak Primer
- New Mister Fuckit story
- New Novella (Max & Rex in Painfreak) co-written with Tony Tremblay and including 3 original GAK illustrations
==============
Come for the pain, yours or someone else's...
Stay for the pleasure, yours or someone else's...
Come once, come often,
Come as many times as you can.
Do whatcha wanna.
What it gonna cost ya.
A life, a love,
A soul for something to keep.
Do watcha wanna.
Whatcha gonna find.
What doesn't die
What doesn't rest
What only feels
Forever more.
WELCOME TO PAINFREAK
EDITORIAL REVIEWS
"Necro Files is practically perfect. Every story is an absolute hit…and why not? We’re talking John Everson, Bentley Little, Edward Lee, Joe Lansdale and George R.R. Martin, to name a few. All of the stories are dark and disturbing in their own ways, and, well, extreme. This is one anthology that horror fans, not just of the extreme variety, should have in their collections. Highly recommended." --Monster Librarian
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
George R.R. Martin - Meathouse Man
Joe R. Lansdale - Night They Missed the Horror Show
Ronald Kelly - Diary
Elizabeth Massie - Abed
Randy Chandler & t. Winter-Damon - I am He that Liveth and was Dead ... & Have the Keys of Hell & Death
Edward Lee - Xipe
Ray Garton - Bait
Gerard Houarner - Painfreak
Wayne Allen Sallee - Lover Doll
Charlee Jacob - The Spirit Wolves
Brian Hodge - Godflesh
John Everson - Every Last Drop
Mehitobel Wilson - Blind in the House of the Headsman
Monica J. O'Rourke - An Experiment in Human Nature
Graham Masterton - The Burgers of Calais
Nancy Kilpatrick - Ecstasy
Bentley Little - Pop Star in the Ugly Bar
Wrath James White - The Sooner They Learn
J.F. Gonzalez - Addict
Step into Indian Country—which comprises the entire North American continent, from the uppermost reaches of Canada to the island of Puerto Rico. Enter the dark welter of troubled history throughout the Americas, where the heritage of violence meets the ferocity of intent. An integral part of Native American culture, storytelling now takes a bleak turn to showcase the scope of indigenous peoples’ experiences.
Indian Country Noir features brand-new stories by Mistina Bates, Jean Rae Baxter, Lawrence Block, Joseph Bruchac, David Cole, Reed Farrel Coleman, O’Neil De Noux, A.A. HedgeCoke, Gerard Houarner, Liz Martínez, R. Narvaez, Kimberly Roppolo, Leonard Schonberg, and Melissa Yi.
“Whatever the case, each situation is built around individuals doomed by their heritage. Ultimately, each story gives readers a disturbingly insightful and relatively unknown view of the lives of thousands of fellow citizens all but invisible to mainstream America.” —The Denver Post
“Written by both Native American and non-Native authors, the 14 stories in this worthy volume in Akashic’s noir series range geographically from northern Canada to Puerto Rico and from New York’s Adirondacks to Los Angeles.” —Publishers Weekly
15 authors dive deep in the subconscious where the demons swim, blinding our judgment and guiding us to make horrific decisions.
ALL NEW STORIES BY:
- Dustin LaValley & Edward Lee
- Jeff Strand
- Ryan Harding
- Gerard Houarner
- Armand Rosamilia
- Christine Morgan
- Jeremy Thompson
- Stephen Kozeniewski
- John Wayne Comunale
- Robert Essig
- Dev Jarrett
- C.M. Saunders
- Rachel Nussbaum
- Bob Macumber
The +Horror Library+ anthologies are internationally praised as a groundbreaking source of contemporary horror short fiction stories--relevant to the moment and stunning in impact--from leading authors of the macabre and darkly imaginative.
Filled with Fears and Fantasy. Death and Dark Dreams. Monsters and Mayhem. Literary Vision and Wonder. Each volume of the +Horror Library+ series is packed with heart-pounding thrills and creepy contemplations as to what truly lurks among the shadows of the world(s) we live in.
Containing 28 all-original stories, read Volume 4 in this ongoing anthology series, and then continue with the other volumes.
Shamble no longer through the banal humdrum of normalcy, but ENTER THE HORROR LIBRARY!
Included within Volume 4:
- In "Jammers," a helicopter reporter is determined to uncover the real reason for what causes freeway traffic jams.
- In "Testaville, Ohio," a young man is forced to return to the town he escaped from in youth, to confront a strange curse and rescue the ailing girlfriend he left behind.
- In "Ash Wednesday," a firefighter must battle his way into a burning mental asylum in order to rescue a trapped and insane serial murderer.
- . . . and more!
Cellars of place. Cellars of time. Cellars of circumstance. They can all hold dark, horrifying, and unseemly secrets.
From the Introduction by Elizabeth Massie
But the Beast inside Max is very real and very much alive. He is all of Max's dark desires, his murderous impulses, and he won't ever let Max forget that he exists. The Beast is Max. So it won't be easy for Max to silence the Beast, though he knows that is what he must do to reclaim his humanity. But without the protection of the Beast, Max the assassin will soon find himself the prey, the target of the spirits of his past victims.
ALSO INCLUDED – a never before published Max novelette : Tree of Shadows – only available in this Crossroad Press digital edition.
--Houarner's work is great, and I recommend you acquaint yourself with it – Fangoria
--The raw power and depth of Houarner's imagination combine to give him the ability to truly transform the reader – Dark Echo
--Houarner blends a compelling combination of elements from Clive Barker and Andrew Vacchs – Brian Hodge – Hellnotes.
Excerpt:
"Their cloud of babble couldn’t veil the multiple worlds from Michael's eyes.
But the simple, single, shallow world they clung to ground on, crushing visions and dreams of what else was real around them.
Michael felt the weight of their ignorance, choked on their lies, lived in the flesh of the terror[n1] buried in their bones and in the depths of their inherited memories.
He felt it all, and yet, that weight passed through him. He’d awakened, and could never return to the sweet peace of ignorance.
Just like he never belonged to the realities beyond the one the Awakened like him had constructed and worked so diligently to maintain.
The Dolls, they danced and fought and distracted themselves with the illusion that they were all invited to the party. They were important, in the way cheap tools and flawed materials were crucial in making a house that might stand just long enough to be sold. They were a part of the action, made the little things happen as the Awakened programmed them to do to keep the world grinding on.
And at the periphery of the illusion of life the Dolls sustained, Sleepers still stumbled from one task to another, covering up reality’s holes with their meaningless existences, staring at the screens[n2] surrounding them with eyes reflecting electronic light, too dull to experience real desires or glimpse realities lurking beyond curtains of light and lies. Immune to the comforting caress of electronic tendrils so eager to bless them.
The rest, the ones who crumbled at an Awakened’s touch or under the onslaught of pain, suffering, death and loss, became the mortar holding meaning in place, the fuel for the grand show of history.
And then, there was the Monster of Pain, and the Angel of Mercy, to contend with..."
Praise for Gerard Houarner:
“Houarner is a smart, intelligent talent who has a gift for writ- ing with serene beauty about the most atrocious things.”
—Ed Bryant, Locus
Gerard Houarner is a master storyteller, able to guide the read- er beyond the boundaries of the ordinary and into a world textured with what lurks beneath -- the shadows, the raw and terrible beauty, the variety of human and otherworldly frailty.
—Douglas Clegg
“...real writing ability...is what separates the wheat from the chaff. It is what will enable Gerard Houarner to write horror, soft horror or even a goddam romance novel and make people read it and believe it and follow it to the end.”
—Bentley Little,
author of The Ignored, The Mailman, Evil Deeds, and the Bram Stoker award winning author of The Revelation
Caught between two even greater evils, Max and his companions Lee and the twins, Kueur and Alioune, are drawn into a war that will feed terrible human and supernatural appetites.
Blending the everyday world and the supernatural in an atmosphere of mystery and violence, Waiting for Mister Cool is an apocalyptic meeting of the X-Files and Tarrantino with Max satisfying his appetites while thrust into a champion’s role.
Contents:
Simple & All Souls Day by AL Sarrantonio
This, and That's the End of It & Woman in the Dark by Tom Piccirilli
The Three Srangers & NOK (previously unpublished) by Gerard Houarner
The Unmasking & How to Survive a Fire at the Greenmark by Steve Rasnic Tem
Jeaves & The Deteriorating Relations & "And So Will I Remember You" by Chet Williamson.
Exerpts from The Boy With Penny Eyes by Al Sarrantonio, Nightjack by Tom Piccirilli, The Beast That Was Max by Gerard Houarner, The Book of Days by Steve Rasnic Tem and REIGN by Chet Williamson.
Walk out onto the Crossroad...take that eBook reader in hand...enter, and read.
Look for future volumes of Tales From the Crossroad available soon.
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