The Writers Chair
He finished a 90,000-word manuscript, typed "the end," read it back, and thought: that's shit. Then he threw the laptop to the end of the bed, walked away for a few weeks, and started the entire novel from scratch — no notes, no rescue job, just a clean slate. That book, The Devil's Tree, is now the one he's proudest of. This week's guest doesn't write in a quiet office with a closed door. He writes in the living room, next to the kitchen, with the washing machine running and kids walking through — and he's finished four novels that way. Axl Malton is an award-winning UK-based author of dark fiction exploring the darker side of human nature, known for psychological tension and unsettling narratives. He started writing in lockdown with no publishing background at all, taught himself the industry through rejection letters and Stephen King's On Writing, and has since published with Wicked House. His new novel, Caelum's Lake, is out July 21st — a departure from his previous full-on horror, this time a psychological thriller about a grieving writer who discovers a lake that may be a doorway to the afterlife. We get into how he decides a draft isn't working and has the nerve to bin it, why rejection eventually becomes "water off a duck's back," and how Caelum's Lake was written in hospital waiting rooms while his wife underwent cancer treatment. We also talk convention tables, why he still doesn't trust himself to self-publish, and the real-world lake mythology that inspired the book's central idea. 🎙️ What we get into: * Why he scrapped a finished 90,000-word manuscript and rewrote it from nothing * How writing in constant household chaos stopped bothering him — and what he'd tell parents who think they don't have the time or space to write * The mindset shift that turned daily rejection into "water off a duck's back" * Why his most recent novel took just 50 days to write, and what made it come out "fully formed" * Writing Caelum's Lake from hospital waiting rooms during his wife's cancer treatment, and using fiction to process real trauma * The real-world folklore of earthly doorways to the afterlife — Lake Avernus in Italy and similar sites — that shaped the book's central concept * Why he still won't self-publish, and the specific kind of validation he says he needs * What a publisher (Wicked House) actually does for marketing versus what's left to the author * The convention table trick that gets people to stop walking past your books * What's next: Here Lies the Devil, a companion novel to The Devil's Tree, and his approach to writing an "un-vampire" vampire Links & Resources: ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
27 episodes
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