In May 1974, my hometown newspaper, The Martinsville Bulletin, ran a profile about me and my affinity for monsters and other scary things. At the time, I had sold what was to be my first published “story” — actually a filmbook of Godzilla vs. the Thing — to The Monster Times, and the first issue of my fanzine, Japanese Giants, was in the planning stages. The article, by writer Gail Dudley, was later picked up by the Associated Press and published in newspapers all over the US. How fun was that?
  Over the years, I’ve maintained a lot of connections with my old hometown,
  including having notices appear in the Bulletin somewhat
  regularly, particularly when I have writing news to share. A couple of weeks
  back, in the Sunday edition — almost exactly 48 years after that first article
  — the Bulletin ran a nice profile written by
  Monique Holland, who came out to interview Samaire Wynne and me about
  Fugue Devil: Resurgence, now in release by Ms. Wynne’s Black Raven Books imprint. You
  can check out the article here: “New Book Fictionalizes Martinsville in Supernatural Horror Short 
      Story Collection”
  Now, I’ve never had a single profile run in any newspaper that got all the
  facts right; some have been fairly egregious, others have been mere quibbles.
  Fortunately, Ms. Holland did a nice job overall, though the gaffes,
  unfortunately, involve Ms. Wynne’s statements more than my own. The online
  version, linked above, at least does not call me “Marky,” as the print/digital
  version does (see below). This, I’m pretty sure, was not Ms. Holland’s fault.
  (As a complete aside, back in my Chicago days, 1983–1987, several of the young
  women in my department at the office took great pleasure in calling me “Marky
  Stevie,” and I can’t help but wonder if they somehow channeled this epithet to
  a copy editor at the Bulletin. I wonder
  this simply because I know for a fact that these
  maybe-no-longer-quite-so-young women still take great pleasure in giving me
  good-natured shit. I’ve been known to return the favor.)
  It is fair to say that copy editing has never been the
    Bulletin’s forte. Back in the early 2000s, when my books
  The Last Trumpet and
  Balak came out, I did a signing
  at one of Martinsville’s bookstores. The Bulletin’s headline read, “Local Author to Sign Cooks on Saturday.” After that one, I
  sent a little cartoon with a caricature of me brandishing a pen and chasing a
  terrified-looking chef, but the paper didn’t run it.
  Note: The Bulletin allows readers a handful of free
  articles before asking you to pay, so you can probably access the link with no
  paywall. Also note: Do not look for cooks in the current article. You won’t
  find any.




 
