The CinemaChords Podcast

#40 - Author Nick Cutter Talks ‘The Dorians’: His Latest Horror Vision Examining the Fantasy of Eternal Flesh

1 h 1 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio #40 - Author Nick Cutter Talks ‘The Dorians’: His Latest Horror Vision Examining the Fantasy of Eternal Flesh

Descripción

Critically acclaimed bestselling author Nick Cutter [https://www.craigdavidson.net/nickcutter/index.html], known for modern horror touchstones including The Troop and The Deep, returns with his latest novel, The Dorians [https://www.craigdavidson.net/nickcutter/The-Dorians.html], releasing today, May 19th. Exploring ageing, mortality, and the irresistible lure of turning back time, the novel follows five elderly volunteers offered an extraordinary proposition: the chance to slow, halt, or even reverse the ageing process. But, beneath the promise lie far more sinister implications - an ancient, self-perpetuating biological force only concerned with its own survival, indifferent to morality, consequence, or human desires. To coincide with the publication of The Dorians, CinemaChords spoke with Cutter about the anxieties and ideas underpinning the novel, including ageing, mortality, the seductive fantasy of second chances, the psychological lure of immortality, and the terror of watching the body gradually betray itself. Our interview also dug into themes of artistic obsession, regret, sexuality in later life, and the influence of classic vampire fiction and The Twilight Zone on the book’s disturbing dissection of rejuvenation and decay. BUY YOUR COPY OF 'THE DORIANS' HERE: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Dorians/Nick-Cutter/9781668079560

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47 episodios

episode #47: Araminta Hall on Unreliable Narrator, Narrative Authority and the Elusiveness of Truth artwork

#47: Araminta Hall on Unreliable Narrator, Narrative Authority and the Elusiveness of Truth

Brighton-based author Araminta Hall [https://aramintahall.com/]‘s menacing, twist-laden novel Unreliable Narrator [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/808362/unreliable-narrator-by-araminta-hall/] is set for publication in the US this 14 July. Offering a fresh perspective on power, memory and the stories people tell themselves, Unreliable Narrator centres on Hope, who, ten years after leaving Somerset in the wake of a tragic event, has built a quiet life while guarding a sinister secret that also protects her former lover, bestselling author Ambrose Glencourt. But when Ambrose publishes a novel that shares blaring similarities with their past – recasting Hope as the villain – she is forced to confront both Ambrose and myriad buried truths. As two conflicting accounts of the past collide, Hope fights to reclaim her story in a world where the loudest voice is often the one taken as gospel. Two of Hall’s novels, Everything & Nothing and One of the Good Guys, were selected for the Richard & Judy Book Club at WHSmith, while four of her books are currently under option and at various stages of production. Most recently, Imperfect Women was adapted into an eight-part series for Apple TV+, starring Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington and Kate Mara, which premiered worldwide on 18 March this year.  Ahead of the book’s publication, CinemaChords sat down with Hall to discuss the creative and structural choices behind Unreliable Narrator, including its multiple perspectives, its exploration of privilege, power and, of course, unreliable narration. She also revealed the novel’s balance between journal entries and literary prose, the contrasting philosophies of writing and storytelling it presents, and the ethical boundaries of drawing on real life for fiction. Buy your copy of Unreliable Narrator here: https://amzn.to/4p9Tx5R

14 de jul de 202646 min
episode #46: The Gothic Reframed: Charlotte Cross on Carving a Fresh Voice Within the Dracula Mythos in Her Debut Novel ‘The Brides’ artwork

#46: The Gothic Reframed: Charlotte Cross on Carving a Fresh Voice Within the Dracula Mythos in Her Debut Novel ‘The Brides’

‘Come to me, and be mine for eternity’ Historical fiction author Charlotte Cross [https://www.panmacmillan.com/authors/charlotte-cross/47736] launches her debut novel, The Brides [https://amzn.to/44KLkLV], in the US tomorrow (7 July). Having harboured a lifelong fascination with history, Cross grounds her new narrative in the framework of Bram Stoker’s Dracula—reintroducing familiar figures like Jonathan Harker, Lord Godalming, and Abraham Van Helsing, but entirely reframing the perspective. Written in an epistolary format—and ideal for fans of Kat Dunn’s Bitterthorn and Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian—The Brides is a sapphic horror love story set in 1884. The plot follows Mafalda as she journeys to Budapest to care for her grieving aunt, swiftly followed by her secret love, Lucy, who travels from London with a chaperone and lady’s maid in tow. However, the maid, Alice, is plagued by terrifying visions brought on by “the Sight.”  When their chaperone falls ill, the women head into Transylvania in search of healing waters, ultimately accepting a nobleman’s invitation to Castle Dracula—where their host’s dark ambitions threaten to tear them apart. In celebration of the book’s US launch, CinemaChords caught up with Cross to uncover the “delightfully monstrous” blueprints behind this gothic subversion, tracing her journey to find an authentic voice inside a century-old literary shadow and exploring why horror remains our most honest mirror for dissecting the human condition. Get your copy of The Brides here: https://amzn.to/4p9Tx5R

7 de jul de 202639 min
episode #45 - Chuck Tingle Talks ‘Fabulous Bodies’: Turning Influencer Culture into Blood-Soaked Midnight Movie Mayhem artwork

#45 - Chuck Tingle Talks ‘Fabulous Bodies’: Turning Influencer Culture into Blood-Soaked Midnight Movie Mayhem

“These days, nobody seems to care about the experience, they just expect everyone else’s time for doing absolutely fucking nothing.” So declares one of the key characters in Fabulous Bodies [https://amzn.to/4fcQ3Mq], the highly anticipated new novel from USA Today bestselling author Chuck Tingle [https://www.chucktingle.com/]. It’s a line that hits shockingly close to the bone, perfectly encapsulating a book that’s bound to become a major topic of discussion when it publishes this coming July 7th through Titan Books [https://titanbooks.com/72792-fabulous-bodies/] in the UK and Tor Nightfire [https://torpublishinggroup.com/fabulous-bodies/] in the US. For us, Fabulous Bodies is a brilliantly bonkers, genre-fluid chiller that reads like a late-night ’80s midnight movie for the online age. Melding the close-quarters, adrenaline-inducing stakes of Michael Mann’s Collateral with the cult sci-fi schlock of The Hidden, the novel drags an initially detestable delinquent into the orbit of a sinister, charismatic figure. Yet, beneath its trippy, B-movie exterior, you will find a fiercely sharp critique of influencer culture and our insatiable appetite for shock value, exposing a modern narcissism that rewards increasingly extreme behaviour for fleeting attention. The result is a wildly entertaining but deeply resonant critique that ultimately forces readers to reckon with whether great art can ever truly excuse destructive impulses. The novel charts the misadventures of Poppy Stringer, an aspiring fashion influencer by day who moonlights as a Palm Springs grave robber by night to make ends meet. When her ultimate idol – the flamboyant, piano-slamming rock icon Eddie Michaels – unexpectedly dies, Poppy is offered a lucrative payday to snatch his corpse from the medical examiner. What should be a straightforward final score quickly turns into absolute, unadulterated chaos when the deceased rock star suddenly wakes up, triggering a fabulously blood-soaked joyride of pure grindhouse cinematic carnage.  In anticipation of the book’s release, we caught up with Tingle to discuss how he merged this contemporary satire on fame and performance with the raw energy of an ’80s midnight movie. The author also opened up about using “America’s iconic answer to Elton John” to interrogate the sinister side of creative genius, and just how much the narrative was informed by his own experiences navigating the surreal reality of meeting personal heroes. Grab your copy of the book here: https://tinyurl.com/FabulousBodies

3 de jul de 20261 h 1 min
episode #44: Paul Tremblay Talks ‘Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep,’ AI, Human Agency and the Horror of Surrendering Ourselves to Technology artwork

#44: Paul Tremblay Talks ‘Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep,’ AI, Human Agency and the Horror of Surrendering Ourselves to Technology

One of our most anticipated books of the year, Paul Tremblay [https://cinemachords.com/?s=Paul+Tremblay]’s latest, Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep [https://amzn.to/4f1tp9E], is all set to publish this coming June 30th through Bloomsbury [https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/dead-but-dreaming-of-electric-sheep-9781037205798/]. Taking aim at contemporary AI anxieties and the growing influence of technology giants, the book spins a surreal, darkly satirical and terrifying work of speculative fiction about technological overreach and human fragility that feels all too plausible in the not-too-distant future.    The book follows Julia Flang, a twenty-something temp, who is tasked with remotely guiding a man in a vegetative state – whose implanted AI links him to a shifting, nightmarish reality – across the country. As his memories resurface and danger mounts, Julia and her unlikely charge must navigate a surreal, grotesque world while uncovering who he really is and who he must find. In anticipation of the book’s release, CinemaChords sat down with Tremblay, who reflected on the unsettling inspiration behind the novel’s AI-controlled Weekend at Bernie’s premise, its examination of humanity’s growing deference to technology, and why lived experience, memory and art remain vital antidotes to a future increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence.Grab your copy of the book here: https://amzn.to/4f1tp9ESUBSCRIBE To Howard's Haunt on YouTube so as not to miss out on any upcoming videos: https://bit.ly/2KUmvrp

26 de jun de 202640 min
episode #43: Daniel Kraus on His Sci-Fi Frightmare ‘The Sixth Nik,’ Cronenbergian Biotech, and the Fight for Human Emotion artwork

#43: Daniel Kraus on His Sci-Fi Frightmare ‘The Sixth Nik,’ Cronenbergian Biotech, and the Fight for Human Emotion

Fresh off taking home the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction [https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/daniel-kraus] for his World War I novel, Angel Down [https://cinemachords.com/cinemachords-best-horror-books-of-2025-so-far-top-horror-novels-you-need-to-read/], New York Times bestselling author Daniel Kraus [https://www.danielkraus.com/] is all set to take readers on a galaxy-spanning adventure in his latest release, The Sixth Nik [https://amzn.to/4efSugV], which publishes this June 23 through S&S/Saga Press [https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Sixth-Nik/Daniel-Kraus/9781668079478]. Part cosmic space opera, part body-horror frightmare, The Sixth Nik transcends genre to take readers far beyond the edges of civilized space where The Sickness—a sentient ship woven from living biomatter—is charting a course toward uncharted cosmic terror. Onboard is Sisilla, a nine-year-old cultist with a brain enhanced by arcane tech known as “niks,” sent to uncover why a plague-ridden planet has suddenly gone rogue.But the planet is far from the only threat. Trapped with a volatile, NonModded captain with a score to settle with Sisilla, a hacked robot that thinks she’s its child, and a living ship that is terrifyingly mutating from the inside out, Sisilla needs to survive long enough to uncover a cosmic secret far more terrifying than anyone could ever have imagined. In anticipation of the book’s release, CinemaChords sat down with Kraus, who shared his inspirations for creating a world that defies the laws of physics and leans into unprecedented, futuristic, Cronenbergian (bio)tech, sure to give you recurring, claustrophobic nightmares. We also discussed the novel’s exploration of deeply nihilistic themes, particularly how the “Niffakoq” colony draws bleak parallels to our own tech-saturated world. This includes how emotion becomes a form of rebellion in a society obsessed with absolute efficiency, and how we can’t stop progress—we can only mop up the mess. And, despite the book’s grim backdrop, we also covered the story’s glimmer of hope in how Sisilla’s struggle to unlearn her programmed instincts serves as a much-needed lesson in moral sovereignty. Secure your copy of The Sixth Nik here: https://amzn.to/4ebLmAK [https://amzn.to/4ebLmAK] Add it to Goodreads here: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/242986069-the-sixth-nik [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/242986069-the-sixth-nik]

19 de jun de 20261 h 3 min