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Zaharoff 11-09-2017 05:12 PM

DarkFuse Press
 
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I don’t know how many of you were aware of the DarkFuse imprint, but they filed for bankruptcy in August of this year.
During a rather heady run, they boasted an extremely prolific publishing output. Titles were not always pure horror, let alone weird, but were often dark journeys, soaked in grief or regret.
The quality of stories, to my reckoning, was mixed.

I had been buying from them for many years, back to when the imprint was known as Delirium.
Early this year, the publisher seemed to be going off the rails and I watched the descent with an uneasy fascination.

Ucasuni 11-09-2017 05:44 PM

Re: DarkFuse Press
 
That's disappointing. Their prolific output fooled me into believing they'd found a sustainable business model. I'm always saddened when small presses shutter, particularly when they specialize in dark fiction...

Zaharoff 11-10-2017 07:32 PM

DarkFuse - Delirium
 
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In 2011, Delirium launched an HC novella line, in limited editions with distinctive laminated boards.
As a collector, I found this line especially enticing, although it would, over time, tax my resources.
Initially, publishing runs were 150 copies, later trimmed to 100.
Two titles were issued monthly.

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The entire run sold out quickly and there was soon a waiting list.
In 2012, the novellas, now a proven hit with buyers, sold out once again to preorder subscribers.
Only 20 titles were published in 2012. Still, that was 44 titles in two years.

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Delirium was rebranded to DarkFuse in 2013. The owner/editor declared the reasons were to attract a more mass market audience. I wondered about that, but I wonder about many things.
DarkFuse was not Delirium, I realized after awhile, as did others.

Zaharoff 11-11-2017 05:29 PM

DarkFuse 2013
 
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With DarkFuse, the novellas, once again, were presold as a complete run to existing subscribers.
In 2013, however, the novellas were bundled with one novel per month, and the price increased.
The novels did not interest me, and I was suspicious I was not the only collector annoyed by that.
DarkFuse also took the deep plunge into ebooks. Novels, novellas, the works.
There were “Horror d'oeuvres, bite-sized stories for dark appetites.”
Short stories via the internet for the mass audience.
ebooks for general readers, HC for the collectors.

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The “novel trend” continued in 2014, except the offer was now one novella with two novels!
The subscription was pricey. Too pricey for me.
I bailed and advised the top brass at DarkFuse.
“Not to worry, we have a massive waiting list for our limited HC editions.
“Thanks for your patronage all these years!”
Late that year, DarkFuse held a 50% off sale of HC stock.
I picked up the missing novellas from that year. For half off.

https://afewr.files.wordpress.com/2021/03/df3.jpg

Hey, what about that lengthy waiting list?
Was the guy who ran the place just mistaken?
Also, the limited HCs I scored were had different numbers.
I was not the only collector who had jumped.
So why had I been told otherwise?
Say what?

ToALonelyPeace 11-12-2017 02:01 AM

Re: DarkFuse Press
 
I think you already know this Zaharoff, but Darkfuse has had (still has ?) problems paying authors. According to this author here :

Quote:

So, if you’ve read the letter he sent out, you will see that the money issues began before January reporting. That’s the first lie. I can only assume he paid me my advance out of his own pocket. Which goes against everything he’s been saying for the past few years about how profitable his company was. That’s the second lie. I’m not sure if the posts are still up, but Shane published several articles called “Son of a Niche” which promoted a false narrative. In these blog posts, he bragged about how respected in the community he was, and how he was a businessman to be revered, and that the publishing world should bow down before him. I like people who talk like that. Confidence is an attractive quality, and I wanted to be a part of this “movement” he was talking about. But let me be clear. I like braggarts as long as they can back it up. Shane Staley is a bloviating liar.
“But E.! But E.! He only recently started having problems!”
Ahem. No. No he didn’t only recently start having problems. Anyone remember Delirium Books? I didn’t even know about this myself until after I signed my contract with Darkfuse. I still don’t know all the details, but I’ve since spoken with numerous authors and readers who were royally ####ed by Shane Staley and his first foray into the publishing business. I also received some hate mail after signing with Darkfuse because I’d signed with them, one person even going as far as saying, “I thought you were better than this.”

Zaharoff 11-12-2017 05:41 PM

DarkFuse 2015
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ToALonelyPeace (Post 142962)
I think you already know this Zaharoff, but Darkfuse has had (still has ?) problems paying authors . . .

This thread, which I will be done with in a post or two, is a rather cautionary tale for writers, collectors, folk of good faith.
While I understand the writer's anger, that is not my way.
.
.
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In 2015, the DarkFuse modified its brand / website to DarkFuse Magazine.
The top honcho realized the previous error and separated the sundry Novella and Novel HC Clubs.
Another victory for the passive resistance!
I bought the novellas, but not bother with anything else.

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Nevertheless, the online business, the “magazine” was going balls to the walls.
Tiny Terrors, Horror d'oeuvres, Cult of Kill were columns, weekly fiction, I dunno.
2016 was more or less the same, although more lines opened.
Serials, haiku (poetry, for real?) and Erotikos (think aroused zombies or sex farm puppets).
Me? I couldn’t care less. I really liked those little books and kept buying.
Online stories, ebooks, I viewed as a house of cards. Virtual bestsellers, not for me.

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I had also become wary of any and all claims made by the top hand.
Now, all publishers warble about how dazzling the newest release, but DF seemed to take the hyperbole to cosmic levels.
The word “awesome!” would be mere understatement.
2017 was going to be the greatest year ever!

Nicole Cushing 11-13-2017 06:12 PM

Re: DarkFuse Press
 
I was a DarkFuse author. (I had two novellas published through them. One in 2013 and another in 2014.)

My experience with Shane was a mixed bag. On the one hand, I feel compelled to point out that I never encountered problems with late payment. Also, Shane had a superb graphic designer, Zach McCain, do all the DarkFuse covers when I was publishing through them. He also did a great job of launching the books. His willingness to pay to put books up on NetGalley (which facilitated book blogger reviews) was impressive.

On the other side of the equation, he could come across as cranky and sarcastic at times. And I did get a sense that he talked a bigger game than he walked (so to speak).

But here's one thing I have to really give him credit for: he gave authors an option to get their rights back before he went and declared bankruptcy. That was a good thing. It made the bankruptcy a little easier to swallow. (It sucks, but it doesn't suck as badly as things sucked with Leisure Books' demise, or that of Samhain.)

Anyway...every author is going to have a different take on their interactions with a publisher. I'm not calling Shane a saint. But I don't think he was incompetent or, for the most part, intentionally malicious.

Zaharoff 11-14-2017 01:17 PM

DarkFuse 2017
 
Thank you for your comments, Nicole.
Your novella, Children Of No One, graces my shelves.
Like yours, my feelings towards DarkFuse, are mixed.
Particularly its sad collapse.

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By 2017, Dark Fuse seemed to be going full bore.
In addition to the ongoing columns and divisions, they began dabbling in films.
On 04 January, the occasional column, Son Of A Niche, delivered an unexpected rant.
#8 - “Full Circle: My Love / Hate Relationship With The Horror Genre & Book Collecting.”
The opening salvo tore into collectors.
Not the ones who read the books, arrange them in the shelves, rearrange as needed.
No, rather the ghouls. The profiteers.
Reselling OP titles has occurred as long as I can recall. What they hey, it goes on here at TLO. Ghouls buy authors (eg: Mark Samuels, Jon Padgett, Thomas Ligotti) and presses, then do a bit of profitting. Think ticket scalpers.
To my mind, this should not have irritated the DF top hand, but it did.
The second theme of that column was nostalgic.
Buyers get frequent alerts and updates from publishers. Always along the line of - “New title! Amazing! This deserves a place in your collection!”
Never venting, which was what that was. That was an omen.
For all that, the white boxes ,containing DarkFuse new titles, kept arriving in my mailbox during the spring.
Plus, there was a production list going into 2018.

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Late spring, key folk began departing.
The top hand wrote something about wanting to be a tennis instructor.
As noted by Nichole Cushing, the press gave authors an option to get their rights back before declaring bankruptcy. This was decent.
For collectors, the press allowed us to use any existing credit to select titles from backstock.
I would have preferred the upcoming novella line, but I salvaged something.
In August, DarkFuse filed for bankruptcy. Later, I received official (legal) mail which I tucked away.
It was over.

For well over a decade Delirium / DarkFuse had been dependable.
DarkFuse was not literary horror, but it did not disgrace itself either.
It did not offer zombies, vampires or endless Cthulhu pastiches.
While I did not necessarily care for everything they published, they were not a regurgitating parrot.
The press launched new authors, I believe they won “awards.”
We - readers and writers - can only benefit from more publishers, not fewer.
In the end, I can only sigh about their business failure and gaze at the DarkFuse titles on the shelf, knowing there shall be no more.

Note: Turns out, the top hand is now a tennis instructor. I hope he does well.

Zaharoff 02-22-2021 05:26 PM

Necro Post
 
- Necro Post -

Well now, perhaps I wrote that obit prematurely.
A few months ago I began receiving email announcements from Indie something.
I assumed these came from IndieWire, an invaluable resource in reading about small films, foreign films, shorts, etc ... Movies that will NEVER get a DVD release, or wind up on the major steaming cartels.
My error, these alerts were hailing from IndieMuse, a new website that seems devoted to fresh horror output.
The email links to an address of Shane Staley, and redirects to IndieMuse.
Aspiring authors, even those longing to be critics, they are looking for you.
Good luck out there.

IndieMuse Horror Newsletter #2

Zaharoff 11-23-2022 05:08 PM

DarkFuse #1
 
Various (Editor: Staley, Shane) - DarkFuse #1

First collection of the DF press’s novella series makes a good representation.
“She Sleeps In The Depths” by William Meikle is the most traditional story, harking back to the pre-gore era. A maddening song, an insistent earworm, drives Fallon north. Towards an answer? Or worse.
Michael Penka’s “Better Heard And Not Seen” is a late night riff on the ‘monster under the bed’ phobia. In this case, the monster in the closet.
“Jaws Of Life” by E. G. Smith should delight fans of rural depravities, those who felt that somehow the film Deliverance omitted too much.
Day-trippers, beware those Open To View showcase houses. Especially if they are in the middle of nowhere, and if there are no other fellow prospective buyers about. Even more so if the site is surrounded by ten foot razor wire fencing.
Gary McMahon’s “Netherview” sets up a solid horror thriller, only to quit mid-stride. Quit, full stop. I’m rolling my eyes at him and the editor for allowing this unfinished splop.
Winter, Montana, late night, deep snow, that’s where Clay saw it. That thing, the beast that carried away his wife from the wreckage. Not to be seen again.
Christopher Fulbright’s “Children Of The Horned God” is a rarity, a horror western. Fine sense of place, deft strokes to draw a handful of characters. And friend, the Western code abides – a lone man with a gun, thirsting for revenge. The ending is a mite fuzzy, yet it is an ending proper like.
Like I said, this is a solid introduction to DarkFuse, and a book that is ALWAYS findable at a fair price.


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