Sharkpunk - edited by Jonathan Green

Monday, 16 March 2015

Sharkpunk at Edge-Lit 4

An essential day out for any writer or reader of science-fiction, fantasy or horror, Edge-Lit 4 brings together a superb range of UK writing talent for a heady blend of panels, readings, workshops and booksales.

Edge-Lit 4 is your chance to get an insight into the worlds of writing and publishing, hear from some of the biggest and most talented names in the field, gain inspiration and ideas in workshop sessions, and get yourself an incredible book haul to take home with our freebies, bookstalls and phenomenal prizes!

And SHARKPUNK will be there, at the Snowbooks table, and sponsoring a panel all about short stories, appropriately enough.

To find out more, follow this link.

Saturday, 14 March 2015

The Sharkpunk Interview - David Lee Stone

In what has to be said was a bit of a coup, creator of the Illmoor Chronicles, Davey Swag, Gladiator Boy and Undead Ed, David Lee Stone agreed to write a story for SHARKPUNK. Here he reflects on the experience:


Sharkpunk: What, do you think, is the reason for people's enduring fascination with sharks? 
DLS: I think it's the sheer undiluted horror of something that is basically, as Billy Connolly once said, 'a row of teeth and an ar*ehole'. Sharks are plainly terrifying.

SP: What was the inspiration behind your story 'The Lickspittle Leviathan'? 
DLS: I hadn't written an Illmoor story for nearly a decade, and I loved the idea of doing something really horrific and yet trying to keep a trace element of humour. Hopefully, I succeeded in doing that.

SP: What challenges, or surprises, did you encounter in writing your story? 
DLS: I think the biggest surprise was that I vaguely appalled myself. I'm not a natural horror writer, and I assumed that dashing through the more gruesome scenes quickly would enable me to cope with them better on re-reading. I was wrong.

SP: If you had to pick a favourite shark, which would it be? 
DLS: The Hammerhead, because nothing that ugly should be able to come at you quite literally out of the blue... and because it's proof that there have to be at least five different gods who all loved to have a laugh at the creation table.

SP: Do you have a favourite fictional shark (in books, comics, films, or video games)? 
DLS: Jaws is the one I most remember, because I still have trouble watching that film. Richard Dreyfus always did a great job of making you believe he was terrified of losing a leg, when he really should have been more worried about losing his hair.

SP: Apart from your story in Sharkpunk, what's coming next from David Lee Stone? 
I'm writing a series provisionally called The Underdogs: Heroes of Destiny for Hodder. It's about a group of D&D players who find Pandora's Box and start to take on the powers of their characters. They will publish the first two books in 2016, and the third in 2017. I'm also putting together a new Illmoor collection.

Thanks, David!


David Lee Stone was born ‘David Cooke’ on 25th January, 1978 in Margate, Kent. He has produced series fiction (writing variously as David Lee Stone, David Grimstone and Rotterly Ghoulstone) for many publishers worldwide, including Disney, Hodder and Penguin. 

The Illmoor Chronicles, which have been translated into many different languages, are currently published in six volumes by Hodder in the UK and Open Road Integrated Media in the USA. They comprise three stand alone novels and a linked trilogy. Short stories from the series are currently published on Amazon by Dead Guys Shoe Ltd, including the original Illmoor short ‘Dullitch Assassins’, which first appeared alongside stories from Terry Pratchett and Tom Sharpe in Peter Haining’s comic fantasy anthology Knights of Madness, published by Orbit, Penguin and Souvenir Press. 

David lives in Ramsgate with his wife and two children. He writes a daily blog at www.blokecalleddave.co.uk.

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

SHARKPUNK - The Stories

Here's what you've all been waiting for, the table of contents for the forthcoming anthology of killer shark stories - SHARKPUNK! Feast your eyes on this little lot. It won't be long before you'll be able to read these fantastic fishy tales for yourself.


Peter and the Invisible Shark, Jonathan Oliver 
Blood in the Water, Den Patrick 
The Lickspittle Leviathan, David Lee Stone 
Sharkadelic, Ian Whates
Shirley, Amy & Andy Taylor 
Deep Black Space, Toby Frost 
The Shark in the Heart, David Tallerman 
Deep Red Bells, Josh Reynolds 
Sharkcop 2: Feeding Frenzy, Alec Worley 
Sharkbait, Richard Salter 
Goblin, Kim Lakin-Smith 
Blood Relations, Andrew Lane 
Feast of the Shark God, C L Werner 
Le Shark, Laurel Sills 
The Serial Killer Who Thought She Was a Shark, Jenni Hill 
Rise of the Übershark, Robert Spalding 
Swimming with the Fishes, Steven Savile 
Ambergris, Kit Cox 
Silent Waters, Running Deep, Gary McMahon 
YOU ARE THE SHARK, Al Ewing & Sarah Peploe


Sunday, 8 March 2015

Happy International Women's Day!

I am pleased to say, in a genre still dominated my male writers, SHARKPUNK features a number of women writers. Here's who's contributed what to the anthology.

Amy Taylor has collaborated with husband Andy to craft a future war story with heart called Shirley.

Science Fiction and Dark Fantasy author Kim Lakin-Smith has written a bona fide SF tale called Goblin.

Laurel Sills, co-editor of Holdfast Magazine, has contributed the Faustian Le Shark to the anthology.

Editor and author Jenni Hill has penned a tale murder and control called The Serial Killer Who Thought She Was a Shark.

And comics creator Sarah Peploe has collaborated with comics writer Al Ewing to create the chilling YOU ARE THE SHARK.

SHARKPUNK is published by Snowbooks (under the auspices of publisher Emma Barnes) and is out this May.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

The Sharkpunk Interview - Kit Cox

I know, I know... First Zombie Zunday and now Sharkpunk Saturday... Whatever next?

Well, the thing is (in case you haven't already heard), in May SHARKPUNK, an anthology of killer shark stories, will be published by Snowbooks.


Sharks – the ultimate predators, masters of their watery domain, a world that is entirely alien and inhospitable to man. So many aspects of the shark are associated with humankind’s most primal fears. The tell-tale dorsal fin slicing through the water, the dead eyed-stare, the gaping jaws full to unforgiving teeth, the remorseless drive to kill and feed… 

Inspired by such classic pulp movies as Jaws and Deep Blue Sea – as well as such ludicrous delights as Sharknado and Mega Shark vs Giant Octopus – the stories contained within are rip-roaring page-turners and slow-build chillers that celebrate all things savage, pulp and selachian. 

Covering the whole range of speculative fiction genres, from horror and Steampunk, through to SF and WTF, these are stories with bite!


As part of the build-up to the book's release, I am going to be posting interviews with some of those authors who have contributed to SHARKPUNK and I'm going to start today with, appropriately enough, the author who completed his short story first - Mr Kit Cox!


Sharkpunk: What, do you think, is the reason for people's enduring fascination with sharks? 
Kit Cox: A perceived fear keeps fascination levels up. Until you realise the shark is actually quite unlikely to attack you think about them in every strange stretch of water. If however you go beyond that fear of the fantasy killer shark you find possibly one of the most interesting fish in the sea.

SP: What was the inspiration behind your story 'Ambergris'?
KC: Ambergris comes from the continuing adventures of my character Major Jack Union. A monster hunter for Queen Victoria who keeps the fact monsters exist out of the public attention. I always wanted to do a Moby Dick kind of story for Jack but the original is so good it's hard to top, then I saw a programme about Victorian whaling and the problems they faced with sharks feeding off the carcasses and I realised that was my angle. I couldn't just have a shark I had to have a monster and the easiest way to do that was to take the shark back to its primeval heritage.

SP: What challenges, or surprises, did you encounter in writing your story?
KC: I always want to get a historical message across in my stories, something factual that will make people want to look up the real history of something or someone. In a short tale like Ambergris I didn't have a lot of space to get a fact in. The boat that Jack hunts from is therefore a real vessel of the British Navy of the Victoria era and although it appears fully factual under the correct name in my story it has been featured in a story before as the ill fated Iron clad "Thunderchild" that brings down a Martian War machine. I even have a connection as my great great grandfather was one of the riveters that put her together.

SP: If you had to pick a favourite shark, which would it be?
KC: My favourite shark is the Great White, for all the cliché reasons. I ate in a restaurant next to a shark aquarium, in the states and the Great White was by the glass the entire time and it is a beautiful fish.

SP: Do you have a favourite fictional shark (in books, comics, films, or video games)?
KC: I have many. In movies it has to be Jaws but in comics it is HookJaw, a rip-off of Jaws but with a harpoon through his lower jaw, it came from Action Comics and I loved it. However, honourable mentions have to go to the rubber shark that attacks Adam West's Batman and gets hit with shark repellent spray and the many sharks of James Bond villains, over the years.

SP: Apart from your story in SHARKPUNK , what's coming next from Kit Cox? 
KC: Well I currently have a trilogy on the go "The Adventures of Benjamin Gaul". With only one part out "The Monster Hunter" and the rest coming out over the next couple of years, I am very proud of it. The story of a young mixed race boy, growing up in a Victorian world, and discovering monsters are real and prey on the unwary. This will be followed by my Cold War story - 1965 spies dealing with the encroaching world of dark Celtic faeries.

Thanks, Kit!


Kit Cox, and his alter ego Major Jack Union, create stories in an alternate history where monsters really do hide in the shadows. Kit writes in his Victorian-inspired study, surrounded by monster relics and jet packs. 

An illustrator who wanted more than a thousand words, his pictures supposedly spoke, to tell his stories, Kit turned to the stage, acting and writing. 

He owns a retro space suit, Le Matt Revolver and is fully prepared for the Zombie apocalypse. Umbrellas are his natural enemy.

Monday, 2 March 2015

Happy Birthday, Simon Coleby!

Today - Monday 2 March - is SHARKPUNK cover artist Simon Coleby's birthday. So why not check out some of Simon's acclaimed artwork here?


Sunday, 8 February 2015

SHARKPUNK - Just when you thought it was safe to go online...

Word of SHARKPUNK continues to spread - like blood through water - thanks to the blogging efforts of its various contributors*. Click the links below to read their blog posts for yourself - and don't forget to tell all your friends about the book and ask for it in your local bookshop.

Jonathan Oliver

Alec Worley

David Grimstone

David Tallerman

Josh Reynolds

*As well as a social media blitz. Like the Facebook page here and follow us on Twitter here.