Douglas Clegg

Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Krampus Night

Tuesday, December 24th, 2019

 

Song of Krampus by Douglas Clegg, poem copyright 2019

Song of Krampus Night

by Douglas Clegg

Copyright 2019 Douglas Clegg. All rights reserved.

Winter oh Winter

What beast are you sending

Whose eyes shine like moonlight,

Whose hunger, unending?

In those dreadful dark hours of nights in December

When the last of the fireplace logs turned to ember,

When the world slept, innocent, each house full of snores,

With locks on the windows and bolts on the doors,

A dangerous creature, in those distant antique times,

Set his sight on bad children from various peaked climes.

 

His strange name was Krampus and goat-like was he,

With horns long and twisted and all brambly

His face so disturbing it could stop a fast train

(If trains there might be) but let me explain:

This occurred long before your birth, unaware,

In an age when dim candles lit up the dark stair.

Before the before, far beyond “long ago,”

When half the known world lay smothered in snow,

When night fell like a hanged-man to the arms of the Reaper

And the blanket of winter grew thicker and deeper,

When starlight might shiver, when moonlight would shatter,

When nothing that — now — really matters, did matter;

When your great-great-great-grandpa had never been spoke-of

When trains trailed dresses (which you dared not make joke-of).

In this wintry darkness, the Krampus went feral,

Hunting horrible children — and schnapps by the barrel.

 

(Yes, this creep called Krampus, who could be so malicious,

Loved peppermint schnapps, which — in truth — is delicious.

I myself might drink one — maybe two at the most —

Just to raise glass to Krampus and offer a toast.)

 

But the one thing that Krampus loved more than his drinkage

Was stuffing his baskets with brats full of finkage

Naughty and thievin’, these children were legion

You could find several hundred in the Frost Forest region.

 

In one such tiny village, ‘neath a mountain of ice,

Lived a bad little girl who was not very nice.

That’s what the town’s fathers and mothers opined,

And even her sisters said she was unkind.

Ask any wise cousin, they’d all sing the refrain

Of how Gerda was awful, a lost cause, a pain.

And pity her parents, poor souls, saints preserve us,

For Gerda made all of her neighbors quite nervous.

 

Yes, Gerda von Tremble was naughty, they said,

‘Cause she didn’t play girl games — she stood on her head.

She ignored all the rules, had no manners to speak of,

And perfume was the last thing our Gerda would reek-of.

She preferred to climb rooftops, race braggarts by sled,

Find homes for stray cats or read books — on her head.

(By the time this began, she’d read most books in town)

She wore rough lederhosen, but never a gown.

 

A thief among thieves — what, did I not mention?

But stealing itself was not the intention.

She wanted to read all the books that she’d heard-a;

When bookshelves went empty, folks all knew that Gerda

Had been sneaking around through window or attic

Or sometimes by front door (to be less dramatic)

Lifting latch, pushing window, or stealing the keys

To tiptoe ‘cross floorboards to find libraries.

She’d pick through each bookcase (a felonious act!)

And crack open bindings none before her had cracked.

 

She felt a book couldn’t breathe till someone had read it

And no one else read much in town (there, I said it.)

Though each would pretend they’d fondly perused ‘em,

And truly, truth was that these tales just confused ‘em.

But they loved placing books, like gems, behind glass

In locked-up old chambers where no one might pass.

And those in the village who should’ve been smarter

Would hoard all their books (sometimes in the larder)

And use them as doorstops or else for their kindling

When winter grew darkest and fuel was dwindling.

 

They loved blaming Gerda if she wasn’t around,

That awfully rude girl, famous all over town,

This subversive wild child who should go play in traffic —

Though her memory for books was quite photographic —

She could recite Beowulfand Wagner’s Götterdämmerung;

Why she could sing all the parts from Ring of the Nibelung.

Yet…there was one thing that Gerda could never remember:

That Krampus grabbed children on nights in December.

 

Townsfolk figured Gerda was that devil’s main choice,

She couldn’t sit still, wouldn’t lower her voice,

Plus she had the bad habit of speaking her heart

But beyond the pale, what set her apart,

Was she gave not a fig for others’ opinions,

They were sure she’d be captured by one of his minions.

 

Of course, Krampus had minions — how else could he creep in

The thousands of homes with bad children asleep in?

He had little goblins, quite disgusting and gnarly,

Some were called Smites, others just “Charlie,”

And they all had their baskets and maps and their orders

To steal awful offspring across several borders.

 

Off they’d fly after midnight, through a long winter’s eve,

Grabbing Slothbert, Grizzelda and Mean Little Steve,

And Chair-Kicking Hannah and that rude boy named Horace,

And Rupert who sang out of tune in the chorus,

And Gretel the foul-tongued while her weird brother Hap

Couldn’t find his way home ‘less you drew him a map,

And let’s not forget sloppy-dressed young Alouicious,

Who’d spent half of his life breaking fine china dishes,

Or Dreadful Diane who, no saint, liked to wheedle,

Or Gaspar the Cruel, killing bugs with a needle,

And what of Wild Matthew with soul disagreeable,

Or Devious Ginny with crimes unforeseeable,

And then there was Violet who looked sweet as pie,

But whose stink was enough to make angels cry,

And her brother, Mad Willy, who beheaded each doll,

Or their friend, Spitting Alice, whose name said it all.

But that’s only in one  town ‘neath tall cliffs of ice.

In the Frost Forest region, few children were nice.

 

There were thousands of baskets and sacks at the ready,

For Sally and Susie and Jerry and Freddy,

And Pierre and Marie, Rafael and Lavinia,

And several bad tots on a trip to Sardinia,

And those in Bavaria, or in Italy’s boot,

To the east, to the west, north and south, what a hoot!

As nasty old elves raced town, city, and campus

Representing their notorious chieftan called Krampus.

 

They’d hunt all those children lurking late on the stairs,

Or those up till all hours who liked to split hairs;

Those who drew things they shouldn’t across just-cleaned walls,

Or cheated at marbles, ran amok in the stalls,

Or lied to keep secrets — which could be just as bad

As making up stories to bring cheer to the sad,

When they should’ve been doing things good children do

Like nodding to grown-ups or tying a shoe,

Or repeating their lessons — it goes without saying —

Or going to bed when they wished to be playing,

Or hushing when hushed when all grown-ups were shouting,

Or believing in nonsense when they should’ve been doubting.

 

On coldest of nights, well you’d guess who’d go searchin’:

That infamous Krampus, to capture each urchin.

Yes, Krampus and minions flew, bats from a mine,

Their sleds drawn by beasts of horrific design,

And they’d park at the peak of each roof — or below —

Trailing nightmares in their wake, in the snow.

They’d jimmy the side doors or draw back the sashes,

Or creep down the chimneys past ember and ashes.

 

In the darkest of hours, they snatched children and fled

To the terrible snow-covered Mountains of Dread

Which rise high in the Alps where no birds even fly

No trees grow in snow there (they don’t even try),

Where the sun will not offer a warm glance of noon light

And even the moon regrets casting her moonlight.

 

Now I must interrupt, please excuse this digression,

There’s one little thing; I should make a confession

Although this is a secret that only the Good have,

I doubt that you’d know it — though, clearly, you should have.

 

There’s a method for keeping our Krampus at bay

Every good child’s aware that the only safe way

Is to whisper a strange rhyme and gaze in a mirror,

And then turn it around to the wall, out of fear,

And what was the rhyme you might ask? Well, I’ve said it

More than a few times, myself, though I dread it.

 

It goes: Winter oh Winter

What beast are you sending

Whose eyes shine like moonlight,

Whose hunger, unending?

 

Winter oh Winter

May this mirror imprison

All Krampus’s servants

From darkness arisen.

 

You say it three times, you repeat it precisely.

If you’ve behaved very badly or not-very-nicely,

You stare at your reflection while you keep repeating,

Until you see shadows — behind you — retreating,

You turn the wide mirror to wall, straight around,

Or by long icy fingers, in the night, you’ll be found;

While left in your bed, in your place, a strange doll

Made of twigs, but it won’t look like you, not at all.

 

Now most awful children never hear of this rhyme,

Or how to perform it at precisely what time,

Or they leave out the part about turning the mirror

And soon after, the goblins of Krampus creep nearer,

But I’m sure that you know it; of course, yes you do,

Because it’s only the naughty who haven’t a clue.

Those despicable brats were lulled into a trance

With a wink, and a nod, and that cold Krampus glance,

Into suitcases, baskets, sacks, and some trunkage,

The boys and the girls were tossed with a clunkage.

They woke up to darkness and shoved at each other,

Didn’t matter if friend, cousin, sister, or brother,

This one blamed that one and that one whined loudly,

And one or two brats wept profusely – and proudly.

 

With baskets all brimming, in one special sack

Lay Head-Standing Gerda way at the back,

While others shoved wildly and carried on weeping,

She felt her energy was best saved for sleeping.

When she awoke to the shouts and the rages

Of all of the children, beside her in cages,

Why, the tantrums they threw! The words that were flung!

Who would’ve thought they’d have known such language, so young?

 

But far from the entrance to Krampus’s lair

Were strung thousands of cages, hanging, mid-air

And each overstuffed with the children dispatched,

All of whom were surprised they’d been easily snatched…

Except Gerda, who had a good trick to beat this:

She’d read about Krampus in a scholarly treatise.

This strange, obscure theory had once caused quite a scandal

It proposed singing music written chiefly by Handel,

While other operas and arias likely would charm him,

One needed a choir to completely disarm him.

So, as Gerda listened to the howling conniptions

She distinguished an A sharp with glottal transitions,

Spitting Alice could carry a tune most unique

And Mad Little Willy hit notes like a freak.

Our Devious Ginny gave a three-octave range

While Wild Matthew, who wept, sounded notes very strange.

Dreadful Di shattered glass with the notes that she hit;

Cruel Gaspar proved basso profundo, a bit.

Gerda knew if she could get all to listen ‘fore long

They could put dreaded Krampus to sleep with a song.

A natural leader, Gerda grabbed the attention

Of those terrible children so used to detention

Who annoyed their elders but this time were wiser

They knew Head-Standing Gerda was a good organizer.

So she conducted their cries into notes soaring higher

From what she remembered of Handel’s Messiah

And from there onto Wagner, from him to Rossini,

On Mozart, on Bizet, on Verdi, Puccini,

They belted the notes Gerda’d assigned ‘em,

And soon Krampus, on ice throne, turned ‘round to find ‘em.

He said, “Such lovely voices! Haven’t heard this in years.

These whiny brats’ music brings peace to my ears.

It reminds me of centuries past with my mother

Who lullabied me and my annoying twin brother.”
(For yes, Krampus has a sibling, quite famous, it’s true.
He’s named Claus Von Der Sinter – or Santa, to you.)

And soon, this mellifluous off-key chorale

Lulled Krampus to dreamland (boosting Gerda’s morale).

Then the minions, they melted, all these Charlies and Smites,

Into little ice sculptures and sharp stalagtites.

With Krampus, asleep, on a soft pillow, a-snore,

While his captives sang Lucia de Lamermoor.

 

Then, Rafael and Lavinia, strong for their ages,

Managed to break all the locks on all of the cages.
Stealing toboggans and skis from the old creature’s hoard,

They raced to the slopes, overlooking a fjord.

Thousands of feet down, it seemed such a risk…

But they all reached their homes in time for some sweet lutefisk.

 

You’d think our smart Gerda would demand some reward

Or a key or maybe a ceremonial sword.

The grown ups tried to thank her for saving their kinder

Before Gerda’s hearth fire had burned down to a cinder.

They said, “What kind of gift would your heart most desire?”

Gerda thought for a second as she stood by the fire.

“Well, I’d like a good book that I haven’t yet read

With a quiet, warm place

To stand on my head.”

 

Now, you may wonder:

Did Krampus awaken?

Would some terrible vengeance on Gerda be taken?

But no, my friends, Krampus slept for nights right on through,

Perhaps for a year — or a century or two.

Only now, he’s awake, and there’s nothing left for us

But to learn that strange rhyme (or else Handel’s fine chorus).

So repeat after me if you’re bratty or rotten

Stare in a big mirror, this must not be forgotten:

“Winter oh Winter

What beast are you sending

Whose eyes shine like moonlight,

Whose hunger, unending?”

Copyright 2019 Douglas Clegg. All rights reserved.

Preorder The Faces Now

Sunday, October 27th, 2019

I invite you to find out more about my upcoming novella The Faces and preorder it if you’re so inclined.

 Go here to learn more.

Get The Faces Now

Signed Short Story Chapbook Offer

Thursday, October 17th, 2019

Want to get the short story chapbook of “Belinda in the Pool” exclusively signed or signed & inscribed to you?

➡ Order two or more print books from the Signed Books area.

➡ Let me know at the time of your order if you’d like your books flat-signed by me or signed and inscribed to you (or to someone else). You can make note of this when you buy your books.

➡ I’ll include a signed (and inscribed to you, if you wish) bonus short story chapbook of “Belinda in the Pool” when your order goes out to you.

➡ This is in print only and U.S. only. The reason for that is here.

➡ Offer ends soon.

➡ Want to resell it on eBay someday? Ask for it flat-signed in that case.

There you go! Hope you take advantage of this offer. The unsigned chapbooks sells for about $13 right now.

Have a great autumn!

Douglas Clegg - DClegg@DouglasClegg.com

 

 

 

Douglas Clegg is creating fiction and would love you as a patron on Patreon.

Where Stories Are Born

Sunday, August 25th, 2019

Stories are often born in the places where your mind lives in contradiction or even open rebellion to the world in which you interact. This may be escapism for some, anger at injustice to others, a deep well of imagination for others. They can take many forms.

All my stories are based in some ways on something I’ve experienced in life — or something that’s befallen me or someone close enough to me that it elicited an emotional response from me.

But the writing itself begins when a face, a person, and then a character or two somehow arrive.

The Faces - coming from Douglas Clegg. Sometimes, stories come from dreams, also, or noticing something during the day that brings with it a sudden sense of absurdity in the realm of social interaction, perhaps the artifice of how we all get along.

Having said that, none of my stories are “autobiographical,” by any means, at least in the strictest sense. I delve into the deep well of dreams and fears with a reimagining of reality along those lines, with regards to story.

My goal is to erase most of the kernel on which a story is based so that it becomes something more important than “what happened,” or “how it felt,” and becomes meaningful beyond a day or a moment or a glance.

I’m finishing a novelette (or short novella, depending on your hair-splitting) called The Faces which begins with an anonymous stranger eavesdropping on the conversation of a young man in his late twenties with a woman of similar age as they mention an upcoming party that this young man named Harold doesn’t wish to attend.

The story came from the edge of dreams for me, speaking of that street corner.

Not quite dreams; just the point where you’re about to plunge into the depths of sleep — the part of falling asleep when your eyes have only recently closed and your lids are darkened shades upon which upcoming dreams might be projected even while you’re still aware of an itch on your skin or a sound elsewhere in the bedroom.

I stood on a busy street corner waiting for the light to change when I glanced over in the crowd of people now walking with me at the crosswalk to the other side of this wide boulevard.

I zeroed in on one particular person in the crowd as if he (or she) was more interesting than any of the others, perhaps even someone familiar. Almost immediately this person stopped as the crowd moved on. The person turned and looked at me and  froze in place while her or his face (depending on the night) began to melt and twist into a grotesquerie.

This has happened more than five times, let’s say, although I didn’t count up the nights. Not consecutive nights, either. A man or a woman, young or old.

Each night I opened my eyes within seconds as if I couldn’t take the transformed face any longer. Was I scared? Unnerved?

Why? Was I afraid I was losing my mind a little? Why that face? Why that strange feeling of familiarity when the person stopped and stared at me?

Why did I  not continue following the crowd across the street? Why wait with this newly-born gargoyle in the dream? It was nearly cartoonish, that magma flow of face that continued to twist and transform as if there’d be an end-face, a visage finale, of a monstrous sharp-toothed fish from the deepest trench of the ocean?

Nearly around the same time I saw a photo of someone wearing a costume of an old time cartoon character. This made me think of something that was both hilarious and deeply disturbing.

The story’s first 10 pages raced out of me after that. I knew the meaning in the horror of that briefly recurring pre-dream.

Hoping to get the story out soon to my Patreon.com/DouglasClegg group. You’re invited to sign up over there if you think you might enjoy some pre-publication stories over the next 12 months.

Hope to see you there,

Douglas Clegg

Read a new excerpt…

Thursday, July 25th, 2019

So I was up at 4 this morning and began finger-stomping on the Underwood Champion. Working on two different projects today, one of them being a novelette (which may become a novella) called The Faces, to be released via Patreon’s membership well-before it’s published.

I wrote or edited between 4 to 9 a.m., then hit the sack in my polyphasic sleep lifestyle, up again just after noon. Mostly tackling some business issues since then. Writing fiction ain’t all fun and games — there’s the publishing side, too.

Here’s some of the rough draft opening of The Faces. Want to read the whole thing in its pre-publication period? Be sure and become a member of my Patreon group. For all the  details, click here. And yes, I’d love to see you over there.

The Face - coming from Douglas Clegg.

“Fills me with dread,” came a voice in the midst of the sudden quiet of the coffee shop.

If you sat nearby you might glance to the next table over and notice the man who said this —late twenties, well-dressed in the forgettable office attire of the moment, hair smoothed back from ears, clean shaven.

From the outside, he looked anything but dread-filled.

This was Harold, allegedly full of dread yet looking perfectly normal, generally happy, possibly in his prime of life but with a smudge of despair around the eyes.

Beside him, Margaret, white streak through her thick black hair, ivory cable-knit sweater with her mother’s pearls hanging down, just enough make-up to look as if she had none, a nearly-drained mug  cupped in her hands.

“Don’t look. Seriously, don’t.  I think we’re being watched,” he said.

“Here we go,” she said.

“What?”

“If I had a dime for every time you said that…”

Someone did in fact glance over at the two of them, but who it was Harold couldn’t say. The stranger seemed familiar yet not at all. Harold wondered if this might be a forgotten classmate from college or someone noticed for no particular reason in a crowd downtown or from the bus or at his barber shop.

He rarely forgot a name or face, but couldn’t place this one at all. Perhaps someone of note? Politician? Local celebrity? Someone from a morning news show?

Harold would’ve examined the stranger’s face a bit longer but Margaret tugged him back to their purpose.

“It’s a Halloween party, which means costumes and masks,” she said. “We have forty minutes before the junk shops close. Shall we allez?”

◊ ◊ ◊

Excerpt copyright 2019©Douglas Clegg. All rights reserved.

From the Cenote of Dreams

Thursday, May 23rd, 2019

First lines


From a handful of poems in The Poisoner’s Garden & Others.

Want to read more?

Get the book at this link.

 

From “The Poisoner’s Garden”:

Among the thorny grasp of roses
Near aconite and pale foxglove
Far past the red anemone
‘Neath fruiting manzanilla tree
At temple of Persephone…

From “Why My Doll is Evil”:

She came from Japan
In 1963;
My father, on business,
Saw her in a shop window…

From “Swimming in Underwear”:

When I turned nineteen I fell in bed
With a boy my age.
Should I call us young men?
Did not feel like it.
We were naive
And living underwater
Swimming in underwear
With the world above our heads…

From “The Salt of Undone Collars”:

There are points in time
When specific people come together
To vandalize chitinous shells
With ancient vulgar graffiti…

From “On All Hallow’s Eve”:

In villages dark
When spies the night moon
On All Hallows’ Eve
The witches festoon
Dim trees with bright lanterns
And with artful resolve
Beat drums to a mystery
No one can solve…

From “For St.Valentine’s Day”:

For St.Valentine’s Day
I rip out my heart
And beg young bully Eros
The use of a dart…

 

 

Upcoming Stories? What? Where? When? How?

Sunday, May 12th, 2019

Dear Friend, Newsletter Subscriber, Reader,

Ready for some new dark fiction?

My new Patreon.com/DouglasClegg offers you an inexpensive magazine-like subscription for my fiction before anyone else sees it.

Each month (or less*) I’ll deliver to you one NEW story of varying length in digital download that is among my best.

Scroll down to look at some of the titles and covers:

Love Life, an upcoming story to debut via Patreon.com/DouglasClegg Be sure to join the community at Patreon.com/DouglasClegg for new short stories, novelettes, novellas and possible novels. If You Get Lost in the Woods, an upcoming story to debut via Patreon.com/DouglasClegg Rooms, Vast and Empty, a novelette by Douglas Clegg. The World on Butterfly - a novella by Douglas Clegg The Mermaid Cage by Douglas Clegg Bring Me the Head of Marie Antoinette by Douglas Clegg The Chateau of Devils by Douglas Clegg The Nightcomer by Douglas Clegg The Grove by Douglas Clegg  The Dollmaker of Venice by Douglas Clegg, a Dark Histories book.

 

There are more but you’d be scrolling forever. I’ve been working on some of these for years.

I will give you my best.

Get ALL the details here:

Patreon.com/DouglasClegg

Horror. Gothic. Supernatural. Psychological Suspense.

 

 

*My goal is once per month but realistically some of these stories run long and may take 2-3 months before they’re ready. Those are likely to be at or close to the novella lengths.

 

 

 

Sneak Peek Cover for Upcoming Story

Thursday, May 9th, 2019

I’ll post some covers for stories I’m creating for first publication to my Patreon community before they go up for sale or reprint more widely. These are to entice you into my web of depravity Patreon page at Patreon.com/DouglasClegg.

I won’t mention what the story’s about but I think you’ll enjoy reading it.

Be sure to join the community at Patreon.com/DouglasClegg for new short stories, novelettes, novellas and possible novels.

 

Patronize Me?

Monday, May 6th, 2019

I have never been so excited about completing the stories, novelettes, novellas and novels I’ve worked on for years than with this.

But I shall say no more. Click the link and find out.

Go to Patreon.com/DouglasClegg

Want to read Doug's latest stories hot off the press before anyone else does? Patreon.com/DouglasClegg

The New Paperback Arrived — Enter the Garden

Tuesday, April 23rd, 2019

The first shipment of The Poisoner’s Garden & Others is in! We’ll be shipping out signed & inscribed copies over the next two weeks. Be sure to get your order in soon at DouglasClegg.com/signed-books under the “Just Published Editions” area.