The Horror of 2011; Stopping Censorship in 2012

I probably should have mentioned these items closer to Halloween, but I had two horror-related pieces published in the latter part of the year.

The first is a short story, one of very few I’ve gotten into print. It’s called “The Door,” and is about a young man who begins noticing small but disconcerting changes in his daily routine. It ran in the anthology Red Blood, Black Sky from Another Sky Press. You can read it for free online.

The second is a review of Jim Trombetta’s The Horror! The Horror! Comic Books the Government Didn’t Want You To Read. Trombetta’s book is partly a textual examination of 1950’s horror comics, partly a collection of some of the genre’s best stories and artwork, and partly a history of the effort to censor comics, leading to the imposition of the Comics Code. My review, “The Untimely Death of ’50s Horror Comics,” ran in the November issue of Hustler. It isn’t online.

Speaking of censorship and reading things online — if you happened to stop by this site on January 18th, you would have seen that it was blacked out. That’s because kristianwilliams.com, along with I-don’t-know-how-many other sites closed shop for the day to protest a couple nasty bills before Congress. SOPA and PIPA, as they were called, would have authorized widespread censorship in the hopes of defeating online piracy. The black-out action resulted in millions of emails being sent to congress and, thank goodness, the bills are now effectively dead. It turns out, if nothing else, the internet can be used to save the internet.

(Thanks, Joe, for keeping me in touch with the 21st century and managing the technical side of blacking out, and then restoring, the site.)

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