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John Shirley

John Shirley (born February 10, 1953) is an American writer, primarily of horror, fantasy, science fiction, dark street fiction, westerns, and songwriting. He has also written one historical novel, a western about Wyatt Earp, Wyatt in Wichita, and one non-fiction book, Gurdjieff: An Introduction to His Life and Ideas. Shirley has written novels, short stories, TV scripts and screenplays—including The Crow—and has published over 84 books including 10 short-story collections. As a musician, Shirley has fronted his own bands and written lyrics for Blue Öyster Cult and others. His newest novels are Stormland and Axle Bust Creek.

John Shirley
Born (1953-02-10) February 10, 1953 (age 71)
Houston, Texas, U.S.
Occupations
Notable workThe Crow, The Eclipse Trilogy, Wetbones
Spouse
Michelina Shirley
(m. 1992)
Children3

Biography edit

John Shirley was born in Houston, Texas and grew up largely in the vicinity of Portland, Oregon. His earliest novels were Transmaniacon and Dracula in Love for Zebra Books, and City Come A-Walkin, a proto-cyberpunk novel, for Delacorte. He also wrote the A Song Called Youth cyberpunk trilogy for Warner Books, re-released as an omnibus in 2012 by Prime Books. 2012 saw his noir-flavored novel of apocalypse, Everything Is Broken released by Prime Books. In 2013 PM Press released Shirley's New Taboos. In October 2013 HarperCollins/Witness released his novel about Conan Doyle in the afterlife, Doyle After Death; Skyhorse Publications brought out his historical novel about Wyatt Earp, Wyatt in Wichita, in August 2014. Shirley's collaboration with rock musician Mark Tremonti, an adaptation of Tremonti's rock opera A DYING MACHINE, was completed in June 2018.

Besides having written numerous books Shirley was lead singer of the punk band Sado-Nation, in 1978-79; he was lead singer of the post-punk funk-rock band Obsession, on Celluloid Records, while living in New York City and Paris, France, in the 1980s, and was later in the band the Panther Moderns. He is currently performing with The Screaming Geezers. Shirley has also written 23 song lyrics recorded by Blue Öyster Cult.

Shirley's one nonfiction book is Gurdjieff: An Introduction to His Life and Ideas (Penguin/Tarcher). He currently lives in the Vancouver Washington area with his wife, Micky Shirley. Shirley has three adult sons, twins Byron and Perry and their younger brother Julian, who also goes by "Juji". Byron is a yacht captain and yacht broker; Perry is a teacher and artist. Julian is a Bay Area-based underground rapper and producer of hip-hop, trap, chiptune and various other electronic music genres, as well as a computer security professional under the alias "DonJuji".

Career edit

Shirley is known for his cyberpunk science fiction novels, such as the A Song Called Youth trilogy, City Come A-Walkin' and Black Glass, as well as his suspense (as in his novels Spider Moon and The Brigade), horror novels and stories (e.g., Demons and Crawlers and the story collection Black Butterflies) and horror film work. The A Song Called Youth cyberpunk trilogy, Eclipse, Eclipse Penumbra, and Eclipse Corona, has been slated for a new edition by Dover Books in 2017. His tie-in novels include the best-seller BioShock: Rapture. His best known script work is the film The Crow, for which he was the initial writer, before David Schow reworked the script. He also wrote scripts for Deep Space Nine and Poltergeist: The Legacy. He was nominated for an Emmy in the Prime Time Animation category for an episode of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Authors David Agranoff and Nancy Collins and editor/critic Paula Guran cite his intense, expressionistic early horror novels, such as Dracula in Love and Cellars as an influence on the splatterpunk movement in horror, and the subsequent "bizarro" movement.[1] Appreciation of John Shirley as an author of dark fiction was amplified by a January 2008 The New York Times review,[2] by critic Terrence Rafferty, of Shirley's story-collection Living Shadows which said in part:

It's a greatest-hits album spanning a few decades of astonishingly consistent and rigorously horrifying work. . . Shirley's great subject is the terrible ease with which we modern Americans have learned to look away from pain and suffering. The opening line of his novel "Demons" states the theme succinctly: “It’s amazing what you can get used to.” . . .Maybe the best story in this superb collection is a rapt little piece called “Skeeter Junkie,” in which a young heroin addict first begins to enjoy the feeling of the mosquito feeding on his arm, then starts to identify with it and then, as the drugs ooze through his veins, somehow becomes it and finally uses the “exquisite” flying bloodsucker to transport him to the apartment of his comely but standoffish downstairs neighbor. It’s a horror story, I guess, but it’s also funny, weirdly erotic and, in a way that horror almost never is, tragic.[2]

Shirley's cyberpunk novels are City Come A-Walkin, the A Song Called Youth trilogy and Stormland. Avant-slipstream critic Larry McCaffery called him "a postmodern Edgar Allan Poe."[3] Bruce Sterling has cited Shirley's early story collection Heatseeker as being a seminal cyberpunk work in itself. Several stories in Heatseeker were particularly seminal, including Sleepwalkers, which, in just one example, probably provided the inspiration for William Gibson's "meat puppets" in Neuromancer. Gibson acknowledged Shirley's influence in an introduction to Shirley's City Come A-Walkin. Shirley's story collection, made up of increasingly bizarre stories, the whimsically titled Really, Really, Really, Really Weird Stories has developed a cult status.

William Gibson, the author of Neuromancer, collaborated with Shirley on short stories—as did fellow cyberpunks Bruce Sterling and Rudy Rucker. Shirley's lyricism, wealth of ideas and imagination, crossover pioneering, and street-level honesty have been praised by other writers including Clive Barker, Peter Straub, Roger Zelazny, Marc Laidlaw, and A. A. Attanasio. His more surreal work, as in A Splendid Chaos, showed how it was possible to describe the indescribable with a paradoxical believability and impeccable internal logic no matter how bizarre the subject matter. Shirley's personal experiences as a recovering drug addict and punk rocker brought verisimilitude to his darker, urban-tinctured writing.

In recent years Shirley has written a number of "tie-in novels" and novelizations, including Constantine, based on the Keanu Reaves movie, the best-seller BioShock: Rapture (Tor, 2011), a novel providing a prequel to the BioShock video game story, and Halo: Broken Circle. He also wrote the apocalyptic, politically charged novel, The Other End which, according to the author's website, takes the apocalypse away from the Christian Right and gives Judgment Day to Liberals to do with as they please. This reflects Shirley's tendency to create fantasy entertainment which is also political satire, or spiritual allegory. E.g., Demons, in which it is discovered that industry has deliberately caused deaths by cancer as part of a vast secret program of human sacrifice.

2007 saw the release of a new story collection, Living Shadows, from Prime Books. His novel of dark urban fantasy set in a slightly futuristic New York, Bleak History, was published by Simon & Schuster/Pocket Books in 2009. In August 2011 Underland Press published In Extremis: The Most Extreme Stories of John Shirley and in January 2012 Prime Books published his near future apocalyptic political allegory, the novel Everything Is Broken. His novel about Arthur Conan Doyle in the afterlife, Doyle After Death, was released by HarperCollins/Witness in October 2013. Shirley's apocalyptic and surreal novel High, based on his early novel Three-Ring Psychus, has been re-released by Start Books as an e-book; His newest story collection is Feverish Stars (March 2020). In June 2020 his fantasy novel Sorcerer of Atlantis will be released by Hippocampus.[needs update]

Shirley's work ranges in tone from the surreal to the grittily naturalistic to the nightmarish. He is also a songwriter and singer, having fronted numerous punk bands, including the New York City band Obsession, who were recorded by Celluloid Records. He has written lyrics for Blue Öyster Cult, such as several songs on the album Heaven Forbid.

In 2013 Black October Records released a two-CD compilation of John Shirley's own recordings, Broken Mirror Glass: The John Shirley Anthology – 1978–2012 ...In 2020 Reprehensible Records released the rock albumThe Screaming Geezers; vocals and lyrics by John Shirley. Shirley performs regularly in the Portland, Oregon rock scene.

2014 saw the release of Shirley's first historical novel, Wyatt in Wichita, a novel of the young Wyatt Earp.

Other recent novels are Halo: Broken Circle, Doyle After Death and a novelization of Mark Tremonti's science-fiction rock opera, A Dying Machine.

Shirley is a member of the satirical "religion" Church of the SubGenius.

Awards edit

John Shirley received several nominations and won the following awards.

  • Bram Stoker Awards – for horror works, voted by Horror Writers Association professional membership (2 nominations; 1 win)
    • 1999: "What Would You Do For Love?" (Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side) – long fiction – nomination
    • 1999: Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side (Mark V. Ziesing) – collection – winner
  • Locus Awards – for science fiction, fantasy and horror works, polled by readers of Locus Magazine (5 nominations)
    • 1990: Heatseeker (Scream/Press) – collection – 10th place
    • 2000: Really, Really, Really, Weird Stories (Night Shade Books) – collection – 17th place
  • International Horror Guild Awards – for horror works, juried (6 nominations; 2 wins)
  • 1998: "Cram" (Wetbones #2) – short story – winner[4]
  • 1999: Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side (Mark V. Ziesing) – collection —winner[5]
    • 1999: "What Would You Do For Love?" (Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side) – long fiction – nomination[5]
    • 2001: Demons (Cemetery Dance) – long story – nomination[6]
    • 2002: "Her Hunger" (Night Visions 10) – long fiction – nomination[7]
    • 2004: Crawlers (Del Rey) – novel – nomination[8]
  • Interzone Readers Poll – for stories published in Interzone magazine, polled by readers (1 nomination)
    • 2014: "The Kindest Man in Stormland" (Interzone #249) – story – 8th place

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

  • Transmaniacon (1979)
  • Dracula in Love (1979)
  • City Come A-Walkin' (1980)
  • Three-Ring Psychus (1980)
  • The Brigade (1981)
  • Cellars (1982)
  • Several books in the Traveler series of post-apocalyptic men's adventure novels (as D. B. Drumm)[a]
  • Several books in the Specialist series of mercenary/adventure men's adventure novels (as John Cutter)
  • A Song Called Youth Series (also known as Eclipse Trilogy):
    • Eclipse (1985)
    • Eclipse Penumbra (1988)
    • Eclipse Corona (1990)
  • In Darkness Waiting (1988)
  • Kamus of Kadizar: The Black Hole of Carcosa (1988)
  • A Splendid Chaos (1988)
  • Wetbones (1991). A supernatural serial killer novel featuring creatures called the Akishra who take over human minds and bodies.
  • Silicon Embrace (1996)
  • Demons (2000, novella)
  • "...And the Angel with Television Eyes" (2001, novella)
  • The View From Hell (2001, novella)
  • Her Hunger (2001, novella)
  • Spider Moon (2002)
  • Demons, a new version with sequel novel Undercurrents (2002)
  • Crawlers (2003)
  • Doom (2005, novelization of the film version of the Id Software computer game)
  • Constantine (2005, novelisation of the film featuring the DC/Vertigo comicbook character)
  • John Constantine, Hellblazer: War Lord (2006, based on the comic book character, not the movie version)
  • Predator: Forever Midnight (2006, Predator series tie-in)
  • Batman: Dead White (2006)
  • John Constantine, Hellblazer: Subterranean (2006)
  • The Other End (2007)
  • Alien: Steel Egg (2007)
  • Black Glass (2008)
  • Bleak History (2009)
  • BioShock: Rapture (2011)
  • Borderlands: The Fallen (2011)
  • Everything Is Broken (2011)
  • Borderlands: Unconquered (2012)
  • Resident Evil: Retribution (2012, novelisation of the film version of the Capcom video game)
  • Doyle After Death (2013)
  • Borderlands: Gunsight (2013)
  • Wyatt in Wichita (2014)
  • Grimm: The Icy Touch (2013)
  • Watch Dogs //n/Dark Clouds (2013)
  • Halo: Broken Circle[b] (2014)
  • A Dying Machine (2018, a collaboration with Mark Tremonti of the Tremonti, incorporating ideas found in album of the same name. The novel is co-written by Mark Tremonti)
  • Stormland (2021), a science fiction climate-change thriller.
  • A Sorcerer of Atlantis (2021), a heroic fantasy novel.
  • Broken rider : a Ralph Compton novel. The Gunfighter series (Large print ed.). Thorndike Press. 2021.

Short fiction edit

Collections
  • Heatseeker (1989)
  • New Noir (1993)
  • The Exploded Heart (1996)
  • Black Butterflies (1998)
  • Really, Really, Really, Really Weird Stories (1999)
  • Darkness Divided (2001)
  • Living Shadows (2007)
  • In Extremis: The Most Extreme Short Stories of John Shirley (2011)
  • The Feverish Stars (2021)

Nonfiction edit

———————

Bibliography notes
  1. ^ Pat Hawk, Hawk's Authors' Pseudonyms III, Hawk Enterprise's, 1999, ISBN 0-9643185-2-0
  2. ^ Halo Waypoint – Halo: Broken Circle Coming in November. Retrieved 6/23/14

Screenwriting credits edit

Television edit

Films edit

Music edit

John Shirley wrote most of the lyrics for Blue Öyster Cult albums Heaven Forbid and Curse of the Hidden Mirror as well as the songs "Demon's Kiss" and "The Horsemen Arrive" from their soundtrack Bad Channels, and five songs from their 2020 album The Symbol Remains. Their 1972 song "Transmaniacon MC" was the inspiration for Shirley's first novel, Transmaniacon.

John Shirley's current band, which performs in and around Portland, Oregon, is called The Screaming Geezers.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tom Winstead, "Shirley, John" in David Pringle (ed), St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost and Gothic Writers. London : St. James Press, 1998, ISBN 1558622063 (p. 531-2).
  2. ^ a b Rafferty, Terrence (January 27, 2008). "Doesn't Scare Easily". The New York Times. Retrieved January 27, 2014. In the title of Shirley's collection, there's a faint, happy echo of the passage from "Biographia Literaria" in which Coleridge coined his famous phrase. Speaking of his contributions to the seminal 1798 volume "Lyrical Ballads," which included "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," the poet wrote: "My endeavours should be directed to persons and characters supernatural, or at least romantic; yet so as to transfer from our inward nature a human interest and a semblance of truth sufficient to procure for these shadows of imagination that willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith." That's exactly what good horror writers like Joe Hill and John Shirley do with the shadows of their imagination. And there's an explanation here, too, of the hope that can keep even the most skeptical, fed-up reader coming back to horror fiction. Watching vampires having sex may not strike you as an adequate reward for suspending disbelief. But the poetry of fear and mortality is worth all the belief you can muster.
  3. ^ Avant-Pop: Fiction for a Daydream Nation. Boulder: Black Ice Books (1993) p253. (ISBN 978-0932511720)
  4. ^ Horroraward.org October 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Horroraward.org October 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Horroraward.org October 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Horroraward.org October 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Horroraward.org October 31, 2014, at the Wayback Machine

Further reading edit

  • BioShock: Rapture, by John Shirley (2011) ISBN 0-7653-2484-9
  • R.F. Paul. "The Head Underneath: An Interview with John Shirley". Esoterra: The Journal of Extreme Culture No 4 (Winter/Spring 1994), 3–6.

External links edit

john, shirley, other, people, named, disambiguation, born, february, 1953, american, writer, primarily, horror, fantasy, science, fiction, dark, street, fiction, westerns, songwriting, also, written, historical, novel, western, about, wyatt, earp, wyatt, wichi. For other people named John Shirley see John Shirley disambiguation John Shirley born February 10 1953 is an American writer primarily of horror fantasy science fiction dark street fiction westerns and songwriting He has also written one historical novel a western about Wyatt Earp Wyatt in Wichita and one non fiction book Gurdjieff An Introduction to His Life and Ideas Shirley has written novels short stories TV scripts and screenplays including The Crow and has published over 84 books including 10 short story collections As a musician Shirley has fronted his own bands and written lyrics for Blue Oyster Cult and others His newest novels are Stormland and Axle Bust Creek John ShirleyBorn 1953 02 10 February 10 1953 age 71 Houston Texas U S OccupationsNovelist short story writer screenwriter songwriterNotable workThe Crow The Eclipse Trilogy WetbonesSpouseMichelina Shirley m 1992 wbr Children3 Contents 1 Biography 2 Career 3 Awards 4 Bibliography 4 1 Novels 4 2 Short fiction 4 3 Nonfiction 5 Screenwriting credits 5 1 Television 5 2 Films 6 Music 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editJohn Shirley was born in Houston Texas and grew up largely in the vicinity of Portland Oregon His earliest novels were Transmaniacon and Dracula in Love for Zebra Books and City Come A Walkin a proto cyberpunk novel for Delacorte He also wrote the A Song Called Youth cyberpunk trilogy for Warner Books re released as an omnibus in 2012 by Prime Books 2012 saw his noir flavored novel of apocalypse Everything Is Broken released by Prime Books In 2013 PM Press released Shirley sNew Taboos In October 2013 HarperCollins Witness released his novel about Conan Doyle in the afterlife Doyle After Death Skyhorse Publications brought out his historical novel about Wyatt Earp Wyatt in Wichita in August 2014 Shirley s collaboration with rock musician Mark Tremonti an adaptation of Tremonti s rock opera A DYING MACHINE was completed in June 2018 Besides having written numerous books Shirley was lead singer of the punk band Sado Nation in 1978 79 he was lead singer of the post punk funk rock band Obsession on Celluloid Records while living in New York City and Paris France in the 1980s and was later in the band the Panther Moderns He is currently performing with The Screaming Geezers Shirley has also written 23 song lyrics recorded by Blue Oyster Cult Shirley s one nonfiction book is Gurdjieff An Introduction to His Life and Ideas Penguin Tarcher He currently lives in the Vancouver Washington area with his wife Micky Shirley Shirley has three adult sons twins Byron and Perry and their younger brother Julian who also goes by Juji Byron is a yacht captain and yacht broker Perry is a teacher and artist Julian is a Bay Area based underground rapper and producer of hip hop trap chiptune and various other electronic music genres as well as a computer security professional under the alias DonJuji Career editShirley is known for his cyberpunk science fiction novels such as the A Song Called Youth trilogy City Come A Walkin and Black Glass as well as his suspense as in his novels Spider Moon and The Brigade horror novels and stories e g Demons and Crawlers and the story collection Black Butterflies and horror film work The A Song Called Youth cyberpunk trilogy Eclipse Eclipse Penumbra and Eclipse Corona has been slated for a new edition by Dover Books in 2017 His tie in novels include the best seller BioShock Rapture His best known script work is the film The Crow for which he was the initial writer before David Schow reworked the script He also wrote scripts for Deep Space Nine and Poltergeist The Legacy He was nominated for an Emmy in the Prime Time Animation category for an episode of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Authors David Agranoff and Nancy Collins and editor critic Paula Guran cite his intense expressionistic early horror novels such as Dracula in Love and Cellars as an influence on the splatterpunk movement in horror and the subsequent bizarro movement 1 Appreciation of John Shirley as an author of dark fiction was amplified by a January 2008 The New York Times review 2 by critic Terrence Rafferty of Shirley s story collection Living Shadows which said in part It s a greatest hits album spanning a few decades of astonishingly consistent and rigorously horrifying work Shirley s great subject is the terrible ease with which we modern Americans have learned to look away from pain and suffering The opening line of his novel Demons states the theme succinctly It s amazing what you can get used to Maybe the best story in this superb collection is a rapt little piece called Skeeter Junkie in which a young heroin addict first begins to enjoy the feeling of the mosquito feeding on his arm then starts to identify with it and then as the drugs ooze through his veins somehow becomes it and finally uses the exquisite flying bloodsucker to transport him to the apartment of his comely but standoffish downstairs neighbor It s a horror story I guess but it s also funny weirdly erotic and in a way that horror almost never is tragic 2 Shirley s cyberpunk novels are City Come A Walkin the A Song Called Youth trilogy and Stormland Avant slipstream critic Larry McCaffery called him a postmodern Edgar Allan Poe 3 Bruce Sterling has cited Shirley s early story collection Heatseeker as being a seminal cyberpunk work in itself Several stories in Heatseeker were particularly seminal including Sleepwalkers which in just one example probably provided the inspiration for William Gibson s meat puppets in Neuromancer Gibson acknowledged Shirley s influence in an introduction to Shirley s City Come A Walkin Shirley s story collection made up of increasingly bizarre stories the whimsically titled Really Really Really Really Weird Stories has developed a cult status William Gibson the author of Neuromancer collaborated with Shirley on short stories as did fellow cyberpunks Bruce Sterling and Rudy Rucker Shirley s lyricism wealth of ideas and imagination crossover pioneering and street level honesty have been praised by other writers including Clive Barker Peter Straub Roger Zelazny Marc Laidlaw and A A Attanasio His more surreal work as in A Splendid Chaos showed how it was possible to describe the indescribable with a paradoxical believability and impeccable internal logic no matter how bizarre the subject matter Shirley s personal experiences as a recovering drug addict and punk rocker brought verisimilitude to his darker urban tinctured writing In recent years Shirley has written a number of tie in novels and novelizations including Constantine based on the Keanu Reaves movie the best seller BioShock Rapture Tor 2011 a novel providing a prequel to the BioShock video game story and Halo Broken Circle He also wrote the apocalyptic politically charged novel The Other End which according to the author s website takes the apocalypse away from the Christian Right and gives Judgment Day to Liberals to do with as they please This reflects Shirley s tendency to create fantasy entertainment which is also political satire or spiritual allegory E g Demons in which it is discovered that industry has deliberately caused deaths by cancer as part of a vast secret program of human sacrifice 2007 saw the release of a new story collection Living Shadows from Prime Books His novel of dark urban fantasy set in a slightly futuristic New York Bleak History was published by Simon amp Schuster Pocket Books in 2009 In August 2011 Underland Press published In Extremis The Most Extreme Stories of John Shirley and in January 2012 Prime Books published his near future apocalyptic political allegory the novel Everything Is Broken His novel about Arthur Conan Doyle in the afterlife Doyle After Death was released by HarperCollins Witness in October 2013 Shirley s apocalyptic and surreal novel High based on his early novel Three Ring Psychus has been re released by Start Books as an e book His newest story collection is Feverish Stars March 2020 In June 2020 his fantasy novel Sorcerer of Atlantis will be released by Hippocampus needs update Shirley s work ranges in tone from the surreal to the grittily naturalistic to the nightmarish He is also a songwriter and singer having fronted numerous punk bands including the New York City band Obsession who were recorded by Celluloid Records He has written lyrics for Blue Oyster Cult such as several songs on the album Heaven Forbid In 2013 Black October Records released a two CD compilation of John Shirley s own recordings Broken Mirror Glass The John Shirley Anthology 1978 2012 In 2020 Reprehensible Records released the rock albumThe Screaming Geezers vocals and lyrics by John Shirley Shirley performs regularly in the Portland Oregon rock scene 2014 saw the release of Shirley s first historical novel Wyatt in Wichita a novel of the young Wyatt Earp Other recent novels are Halo Broken Circle Doyle After Death and a novelization of Mark Tremonti s science fiction rock opera A Dying Machine Shirley is a member of the satirical religion Church of the SubGenius Awards editJohn Shirley received several nominations and won the following awards Bram Stoker Awards for horror works voted by Horror Writers Association professional membership 2 nominations 1 win 1999 What Would You Do For Love Black Butterflies A Flock on the Dark Side long fiction nomination 1999 Black Butterflies A Flock on the Dark Side Mark V Ziesing collection winner Locus Awards for science fiction fantasy and horror works polled by readers of Locus Magazine 5 nominations 1990 Heatseeker Scream Press collection 10th place 2000 Really Really Really Weird Stories Night Shade Books collection 17th place International Horror Guild Awards for horror works juried 6 nominations 2 wins 1998 Cram Wetbones 2 short story winner 4 1999 Black Butterflies A Flock on the Dark Side Mark V Ziesing collection winner 5 1999 What Would You Do For Love Black Butterflies A Flock on the Dark Side long fiction nomination 5 2001 Demons Cemetery Dance long story nomination 6 2002 Her Hunger Night Visions 10 long fiction nomination 7 2004 Crawlers Del Rey novel nomination 8 Interzone Readers Poll for stories published in Interzone magazine polled by readers 1 nomination 2014 The Kindest Man in Stormland Interzone 249 story 8th placeBibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items April 2024 Novels edit Transmaniacon 1979 Dracula in Love 1979 City Come A Walkin 1980 Three Ring Psychus 1980 The Brigade 1981 Cellars 1982 Several books in the Traveler series of post apocalyptic men s adventure novels as D B Drumm a Several books in the Specialist series of mercenary adventure men s adventure novels as John Cutter A Song Called Youth Series also known as Eclipse Trilogy Eclipse 1985 Eclipse Penumbra 1988 Eclipse Corona 1990 In Darkness Waiting 1988 Kamus of Kadizar The Black Hole of Carcosa 1988 A Splendid Chaos 1988 Wetbones 1991 A supernatural serial killer novel featuring creatures called the Akishra who take over human minds and bodies Silicon Embrace 1996 Demons 2000 novella And the Angel with Television Eyes 2001 novella The View From Hell 2001 novella Her Hunger 2001 novella Spider Moon 2002 Demons a new version with sequel novel Undercurrents 2002 Crawlers 2003 Doom 2005 novelization of the film version of the Id Software computer game Constantine 2005 novelisation of the film featuring the DC Vertigo comicbook character John Constantine Hellblazer War Lord 2006 based on the comic book character not the movie version Predator Forever Midnight 2006 Predator series tie in Batman Dead White 2006 John Constantine Hellblazer Subterranean 2006 The Other End 2007 Alien Steel Egg 2007 Black Glass 2008 Bleak History 2009 BioShock Rapture 2011 Borderlands The Fallen 2011 Everything Is Broken 2011 Borderlands Unconquered 2012 Resident Evil Retribution 2012 novelisation of the film version of the Capcom video game Doyle After Death 2013 Borderlands Gunsight 2013 Wyatt in Wichita 2014 Grimm The Icy Touch 2013 Watch Dogs n Dark Clouds 2013 Halo Broken Circle b 2014 A Dying Machine 2018 a collaboration with Mark Tremonti of the Tremonti incorporating ideas found in album of the same name The novel is co written by Mark Tremonti Stormland 2021 a science fiction climate change thriller A Sorcerer of Atlantis 2021 a heroic fantasy novel Broken rider a Ralph Compton novel The Gunfighter series Large print ed Thorndike Press 2021 Short fiction edit Collections Heatseeker 1989 New Noir 1993 The Exploded Heart 1996 Black Butterflies 1998 Really Really Really Really Weird Stories 1999 Darkness Divided 2001 Living Shadows 2007 In Extremis The Most Extreme Short Stories of John Shirley 2011 The Feverish Stars 2021 Nonfiction edit Gurdjieff An Introduction to his Life and Ideas 2004 ISBN 1 58542 287 8 Bibliography notes Pat Hawk Hawk s Authors Pseudonyms III Hawk Enterprise s 1999 ISBN 0 9643185 2 0 Halo Waypoint Halo Broken Circle Coming in November Retrieved 6 23 14Screenwriting credits editTelevision edit Defenders of the Earth 1986 The Real Ghostbusters 1987 BraveStarr 1987 1988 RoboCop 1988 Star Trek Deep Space Nine 1995 VR 5 1995 Poltergeist The Legacy 1996 The Adventures of Sinbad 1996 Todd McFarlane s Spawn 1998 The Night of the Headless Horseman 1999 Batman Beyond 2000 Profit 2002 Iron Man Armored Adventures 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2014 2016 Films edit The Crow 1994 Twists of Terror 1997 Music editJohn Shirley wrote most of the lyrics for Blue Oyster Cult albums Heaven Forbid and Curse of the Hidden Mirror as well as the songs Demon s Kiss and The Horsemen Arrive from their soundtrack Bad Channels and five songs from their 2020 album The Symbol Remains Their 1972 song Transmaniacon MC was the inspiration for Shirley s first novel Transmaniacon John Shirley s current band which performs in and around Portland Oregon is called The Screaming Geezers See also editList of horror fiction authors SplatterpunkReferences edit Tom Winstead Shirley John in David Pringle ed St James Guide to Horror Ghost and Gothic Writers London St James Press 1998 ISBN 1558622063 p 531 2 a b Rafferty Terrence January 27 2008 Doesn t Scare Easily The New York Times Retrieved January 27 2014 In the title of Shirley s collection there s a faint happy echo of the passage from Biographia Literaria in which Coleridge coined his famous phrase Speaking of his contributions to the seminal 1798 volume Lyrical Ballads which included The Rime of the Ancient Mariner the poet wrote My endeavours should be directed to persons and characters supernatural or at least romantic yet so as to transfer from our inward nature a human interest and a semblance of truth sufficient to procure for these shadows of imagination that willing suspension of disbelief for the moment which constitutes poetic faith That s exactly what good horror writers like Joe Hill and John Shirley do with the shadows of their imagination And there s an explanation here too of the hope that can keep even the most skeptical fed up reader coming back to horror fiction Watching vampires having sex may not strike you as an adequate reward for suspending disbelief But the poetry of fear and mortality is worth all the belief you can muster Avant Pop Fiction for a Daydream Nation Boulder Black Ice Books 1993 p253 ISBN 978 0932511720 Horroraward org Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b Horroraward org Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine Horroraward org Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine Horroraward org Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine Horroraward org Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editBioShock Rapture by John Shirley 2011 ISBN 0 7653 2484 9 R F Paul The Head Underneath An Interview with John Shirley Esoterra The Journal of Extreme Culture No 4 Winter Spring 1994 3 6 External links editJohn Shirley at IMDb Piper at the Gates of Hell An Interview with Cyberpunk Legend John Shirley John Shirley at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Shirley amp oldid 1218467265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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