David Dubrow

Author

  • About Dave
    • Interviews
  • Dave’s Blog
  • Dave’s Fiction
    • The Armageddon Trilogy
      • The Blessed Man and the Witch
      • The Nephilim and the False Prophet
      • The Holy Warrior and the Last Angel
    • Dreadedin Chronicles: The Nameless City
    • Get the Greek: A Chrismukkah Tale
    • Beneath the Ziggurat
    • The Ultimate Guide to Surviving a Zombie Apocalypse
  • Free Stories
    • Hold On
    • How to Fix a Broken World
    • The Armageddon Trilogy Character List and Glossary
  • Social
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • Google +
    • Amazon
    • Goodreads

Interview With David A Riley

April 20, 2016 by David Dubrow 18 Comments

(Interested readers can check out my earlier post on the David A Riley/Bram Stoker Awards dust-up here.)

Horror author and publisher David A Riley was gracious enough to consent to an interview, which I am posting in its entirety.

You’ve been a member of the Horror Writer’s Association for some time. You were also on the Board of Trustees. During that time, did anyone express any concerns about your political views?

No one. Several years ago, when the HWA forum was considerably livelier than now, I was a frequent participant in discussions on it, and no one so much as mentioned my political views, either what they are now or what they were in the past.

Do you have previous experience serving on an awards jury?

I served on the [Bram Stoker] awards jury for First Novels several years ago. So far as I am aware my participation was viewed satisfactory by everyone concerned and I found it easy to do what was expected to the best of my abilities. There were no complaints.

Why did you withdraw from the jury of the Bram Stoker Award for Best Anthology?

Because, as I saw it, that was the best thing to do for the good of the HWA. There is nothing prestigious or glamorous about being a juror. It does involve a lot of unpaid, unseen, arduous work reading an enormous number of books by authors or publishers or, in the case of anthologies, editors, keen to have their books included amongst the finalists for the Stoker awards. Of course the juries cannot add more than a few books, but it does mean reading all those submitted, good, bad or indifferent. I know from when I was a juror for First Novels this can be a hell of a chore. Standing down, therefore, was easy – it saved me a lot of hard work, some of it far from enjoyable. I only put my name forward because the HWA sent out a last minute email appealing for volunteers from active members for this position. I thought I was helping the HWA by stepping forward, never realising the reaction stirred up by certain individuals, some of whom already had a personal grudge against the HWA and are not even members.

Tell us about the UK’s National Front Party. What drew you to it?

I joined in 1973. At that time it was widely viewed as a patriotic nationalist party with serious concerns about the high numbers of immigrants who were coming into the UK at the time. Amongst its members were a number of retired senior servicemen from the Armed Forces, clergymen, teachers and other professionals. The chairman of the nearest branch to me had just defected as a leading member of the Conservative Association in Blackburn. It had a pseudo-respectability in its early days which only gradually disappeared over the years. It denied being fascist, having a totally democratic internal structure, including annual elections for all officers. Splits at the top, though, happened a lot over the years, the most devastating coming only three or four months after I resigned from it. After each split many of our best members would become disillusioned and leave. The skin-headed thug was not typical by a long shot in the earlier years. Unfortunately, as violence against the party escalated over time, these became far more predominant.

I would add that I was involved in the north west of England, far from the party’s headquarters in London and the people I worked with were local. We only had intermittent involvement with anyone from the leadership and were more or less left to get on with things as we saw fit. Also, you did develop a sort of siege mentality over the years, so that exposés about the party’s leadership were generally viewed as smears, a bit like the reaction, I would imagine, goes on in groups like the Scientologists.

Are you still part of the UK National Front?

I resigned in 1983 and have not been involved since.

A lot of people have characterized you as a fascist. Would you say that’s a fair description of your politics?

No.  It’s an easy label to flash around, usually by those who are fascists themselves, particularly from the left. Fascists don’t believe in free speech and try to suppress it for their opponents. I have never in my life tried to do that. They are also prepared to use physical violence against their political opponents. I was never involved in anything like that. I would add that during the time I was involved in the party any member who associated with a neo-nazi group, either in Britain or overseas, faced expulsion. This, I can confirm, was enforced.

Do you feel as though you have anything to apologize for in regard to your politics, past or present?

Who should I apologize to? To those who have been baying for my blood? Most of the people involved in this debate come from the States. Since I have never been involved in politics there I should certainly not have to apologise to them. Do I regret having spent those years that I did in the National Front? Yes. If I had my time over again I would not do it. But the early seventies were a different time. Still recovering from its loss of empire, Britain was in a poor state, with strikes, the three-day week, regular power cuts, uncollected rubbish bags piling on the streets, the danger of Militant Tendency (the extreme left) taking over the Labour Party, unprecedented numbers of people arriving from overseas and the air that something had to give, that the country was on the brink of collapse. By the time I left the National Front we had Thatcher. A year later I took part in a non-party march through Blackburn against her notorious Poll Tax.

In your professional career as a writer and publisher, has anyone questioned your competence because of your political views?

Till this recent fracas, no.

Have you ever refused to work with anyone in the writing industry because of his or her politics, race, or religion?

No, that would not make sense and I have never done it. Even when I was involved in politics I never treated anyone differently because of their politics, race or religion. As a small press publisher I have twice paid for artwork from Vincent Chong, one of my favourite artists. I am currently working with a young black British writer over publishing a collection of his stories. I mentioned this elsewhere recently and had it thrown back in my face as being the equivalent of someone saying “I have black friends therefore I am not a racist”. Take a look at how many small press publishers in the UK have books written by black authors. I have only been publishing for just over fifteen months and before this year is out at least one of my books will be by a black writer. I don’t need to do it. I could so easily have turned him down. The fact is I like his work and would be proud to publish it. Which is the only thing that matters. End of story. Re politics, a writer who happily admits to having been a member of the extreme-left wing Trotskyist group, the Socialist Workers Party, approached me for a story to be included in a charity anthology he was putting together. I sent him one and it was included. I have also helped to advertise the book. His politics, past or present, meant nothing to me and I was more than willing to help.

What would you tell a writer who is considering joining the HWA?

Weigh up the pros and cons, what the HWA can do for you, then make your decision, but study what it can do for you carefully and don’t be put off by those who seem to spend inordinate amounts of time decrying it, often for very selfish reasons. Make your own mind up from the facts. I have been a member for ten years and have not regretted it, in spite of the recent controversy. There are a lot of good people in the HWA and if you need help, particularly as a new writer, it’s there to be had.

Thank you very much for your time.

At the end of the week I’ll provide some analysis. Stay tuned.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: david a riley, horror, hwa, interview, politics, sjw

Comments

  1. Lela E. Buis says

    April 20, 2016 at 1:53 pm

    Thanks for posting this.

    Reply
    • David Dubrow says

      April 20, 2016 at 2:47 pm

      Sure thing, Lela! It definitely clears things up.

      I took a look at your paintings. My favorite’s the one of the baby chicks, with demon face a close second. Go figure.

      Reply
      • Lela E. Buis says

        April 20, 2016 at 3:03 pm

        Thanks! Nothing like diversity of taste. 🙂

        Reply
  2. James May says

    April 20, 2016 at 3:48 pm

    Sounds pretty innocuous to me. Were Riley an intersectional gay feminist he’d have had his membership revoked for lack of Master Raceyness.

    Meanwhile, a woman who claims whites are “diabolical” and that SFF fandom is “racist as fuck” – among 18 zillion other sweet racial insults – is this year on her 5th Nebula nomination.

    Keene, the guy who claims Riley’s racism broke the camel’s back, invokes the moral fiber of John Scalzi and Chuck Wendig, the Renfields of anti-white gay feminism. [enter mewling sounds here] Scalzi routinely talks about straight white men the way Nazis talk about Jews and Wendig personally lobbied Disney for more lesbians in his exciting Star Wars movie tie-in “The Intersectionalists Strike Back,” because cis white shitlords have previously not allowed that.

    The other boycotter of Riley’s grand dragonage is Nick Mamatas, a guy who openly supports and Tweets Requires Hate, one of the most psychotic gay feminists in history. That’s saying something considering Shulamith Firestone, whose radical lesbian press gives us the first appearance of “rape culture” in print in 1974, considered her vision of a feminist utopia to be one free of taboos of adult/child, brother/sister and parent/children sex. The power mewling of Mamatas seems unable to form the thought “compared to what,” thereby leading to hijinx and endless fun and confused boycotts. If I read his moral ethos correctly, Mamatas will not only be boycotting his own work but eating flies for their life force.

    Reply
  3. spacefaringkitten says

    April 21, 2016 at 2:19 am

    I joined in 1973. At that time it was widely viewed as a patriotic nationalist party with serious concerns about the high numbers of immigrants who were coming into the UK at the time.

    The National Front Manifesto from 1974 (when Riley was a proud member) coins their serious concerns this way:

    “The National Front advocates a total ban on any further non-White immigration into Britain, and the launching of a phased plan of repatriation for all coloured immigrants.”

    To me, that sounds incredibly fascist/racist/neo-nazist and the fact that Riley doesn’t think there was anything wrong with the 70s NF is quite troubling. But maybe that’s just me.

    Reply
    • David Dubrow says

      April 21, 2016 at 6:34 am

      I’m sure you’re troubled. Very, very troubled. Extremely troubled, even.

      And no, it’s not just you. Lots and lots of other people are at least as troubled as you are.

      Clearly, the only thing to do is what you’ve been doing all along. You’ve got all this sorted.

      Also, and this is going to come as a shock to you, but your feelings are only important to you. Nobody here cares about how troubled you are. That you wrote a comment to tell the world how troubled you are tells me everything I need to know about you.

      Reply
      • spacefaringkitten says

        April 21, 2016 at 7:10 am

        Well, I’m sure my state of mind doesn’t interest anybody beside myself, but in your interview, you seem to avoid the difficult question: why join an explicitly racist organization if one isn’t/wasn’t a racist.

        Or do you honestly believe that NF didn’t have anything to do with overt racism back in the day?

        Reply
        • David Dubrow says

          April 21, 2016 at 7:53 am

          Prove to me you’re not a racist first, and then we’ll talk.

          Reply
          • spacefaringkitten says

            April 21, 2016 at 10:10 am

            I don’t see what my racism/unracism has to do with this. If you have decided that you don’t want to answer (or ask Ridley) difficult questions, so be it.

          • David Dubrow says

            April 21, 2016 at 10:29 am

            You want Riley to prove he isn’t a racist, but you won’t do the same thing yourself. Why not? What do you have to hide?

        • James May says

          April 21, 2016 at 10:43 am

          Compared to what? Like… maybe American SFF author and lesbian feminist Seanan McGuire publicly telling a Brit like Jonathan Ross he’s not welcome at the WorldCon convention in his own country because of a “white dude parade”? What are you folks comparing this stuff to, cuz I can’t make heads or tales out of your principles. That’s probably cuz you don’t have any. What you do have is a lot of self-sealing, circular arguments that fold back on themselves so a “white dude” mysteriously always loses. That being the case, SFF’s social justice folks like yourself in principle sound like solid NF material. But then there’s that incoherent word salad again; “principle.” In your cult, that’s a Rubic’s Cube stuck in a Gordian Knot and buried under the Sphinx, along with the U.S. Constitution, Hamurabbi’s Code and the Magna Carta. It’s far less complex to just lay all evil at the feet of straight white males.

          Reply
          • spacefaringkitten says

            April 21, 2016 at 5:29 pm

            You want Riley to prove he isn’t a racist, but you won’t do the same thing yourself. Why not?

            Could that maybe have something to do with the fact that Riley, unlike me, has been active in a 100% racist political party, famous for violence against immigrants?

          • David Dubrow says

            April 21, 2016 at 5:42 pm

            Prove to me that you haven’t done the same yourself, or get off my blog. Prove that you’re not a racist anti-Semite who hates all brown people. Prove it! Why is that so hard for you?

            Self-righteousness requires righteousness, you know, and you just don’t rate. Stop wasting my time.

          • spacefaringkitten says

            April 22, 2016 at 12:37 am

            😀

  4. James May says

    April 21, 2016 at 11:20 am

    Seanan McGuire sure took a lot of flak from SFF’s social justice crowd for her epic racist and misandrist meltdown on Twitter over Jonathan Ross, which is to say… none.

    Let’s imagine a white male MRA activist from Norway who’s coming to the World Basketball Championships held in the USA that year. He Tweets a black American female stand-up comic she’s not welcome to emcee the opening ceremonies in her own country because she might make a joke about white men and plus there’s the “black broad parade” and “black savior” syndrome where blacks always score the winning bucket. The Norwegian claims he was promised a safe-space from black female comics. I can’t even imagine the incredible narcissistic arrogance and woman-hating racism of such a person, but I can imagine Seanan McGuire.

    Dear Social Justice Feminists, please don’t ask normal human beings about “racism” until you can understand the phrase “compared to what?” and without all the power/privilege/punching up disclaimers, rewards points, “marginalized groups” and points shaving scam. Your credibility would probably be enhanced if 770’s commenters and that feminist SFF community in general would stop promoting McGuire’s work while supporting boycotting others for essentially the same thing.

    Give us a target and we’ll hit it. Give us a “white males-only” target and another for “marginalized groups” and you can forget it; I’m not playing that game.

    So, Riley compared to who? SFF’s feminists? Riley’s nobody compared to the daily scouring of the privileged white cis hetero patriarchy male rape culture colonial gaze Shire which is SFF.

    Reply
  5. John Kevin Wilshaw says

    February 12, 2019 at 7:31 pm

    I knew David as I was an activist for the NF in Carlisle in the 1970s and 1980s. People change over the years. If those who attack David for his former involvement in the NF can’t accept that then tough.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. David Riley on charges of racism | Lela E. Buis says:
    April 20, 2016 at 2:26 pm

    […] I thought the issues related to suppression of free speech on File770 were more important than the charges of racism against David Riley and the campaign to have him removed from the HWA jury. Since I’m not familiar with Riley’s history, I’ve kept out of the debate about whether he really is “racist” or not based on his position on immigration. However, others have moved to support Riley by investigating the complaints. Here’s an excellent interview with Riley from David Dubrow. […]

    Reply
  2. Pixel Scroll 4/20/16 Through the Scrolling-Glass | File 770 says:
    April 20, 2016 at 11:37 pm

    […] RILEY INTERVIEWED. David Dubrow conducted an “Interview With David A Riley” after the author dropped off a Horror Writers of America award jury last week amidst […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

"It began to drizzle rain and he turned on the windshield wipers; they made a great clatter like two idiots clapping in church." --Flannery O'Connor, Wise Blood

"Squop chicken? I never get enough to eat when I eat squop chicken. I told you that when we sat down. You gotta give me that. I told you when we sat down, I said frankly I said this is not my idea of a meal, squop chicken. I'm a big eater." --John O'Hara, BUtterfield 8

I saw the 1977 cartoon The Hobbit as a little boy, and it kindled a love of heroic fantasy that has never left me. Orson Bean's passing is terrible news. Rest in peace.

Obviously, these young people have been poorly served by their parents, but the honest search for practical information should be lauded, not contemned.

You shouldn't look at or use Twitter, and this story is another perfect example. There's so much that's wrong here that it would take a battalion of clergy, philosophers, and psychologists to fully map it out, let alone treat the issue.

This is the advertising copy for Ilana Glazer's stand-up comedy special The Planet Is Burning: "Ilana Glazer‘s debut standup special is trés lol, and turns out - she one funny b. Check out Ilana’s thoughts on partnership, being a successful stoner adult, Nazis, Diva Cups, and more. Hold on to your nuts cuz this hour proves how useless the patriarchy is. For Christ’s sake, The Planet Is Burning, and it’s time a short, queer, hairy New York Jew screams it in your face!" This is written to make you want to watch it.

In the midst of reading books about modern farming, the 6,000 year history of bread, and ancient grains, I found this just-published piece by farmer and scholar Victor Davis Hanson: Remembering the Farming Way.

"I then confront the decreasing power of the movement in order to demonstrate the need for increased theorizations of the reflexive capacities of institutionalized power structures to sustain oppositional education social movements." Yes. Of course.

You should definitely check out Atomickristin's sci-fi story Women in Fridges.

As it turns out, there may yet be some kind of personal cost for attempting to incite a social media mob into violence against a teenage boy you don't know, but decided to hate anyway because reasons.

One of the biggest problems with internet content is that the vast majority of sites don't pay their writers, and it shows in the lack of quality writing. It's hard to find decent writers, and harder to scrape up the cash to pay them. This piece is a shining example of the problem of free content: it's worth what you pay for.

If you're interested in understanding our current cultural insanity, the best primer available is Douglas Murray's The Madness of Crowds. Thoughtful, entertaining, and incisive.

More laws are dumb. More law enforcement is dumb. The only proper response to violence is overwhelming violence. End the assault. There's a rising anti-semitism problem in New York because Jews who act like victims are being victimized by predators. None of these attacks are random. Carry a weapon and practice deploying it under duress. Be alert and aware. I don't understand why the women Tiffany Harris attacked didn't flatten her face into the pavement, but once word gets around that the consequences of violence are grave, the violence will lessen.

When are you assholes going to understand that this stupidity doesn't work any longer? Nobody gives much of a damn if you think we're sexist because we don't want to see a movie you think we should see. It only makes us dislike you that much more, and you started out being an unlikable asshole. Find a new way to shame normal people.

The movie Terms of Endearment still holds up more than 35 years later, and if you're looking for a tearjerker, this is your jam. One element that didn't get a lot of mention is, at the end, when Flap, with a shrug, decides that his mother-in-law will become the mother of his children once Emma dies. He abandons them, and nothing is made of it. This always troubled me.

You need to read this story the next time you feel the urge to complain. And if you need a shot of admiration for another family's courage, check this out.

Progressive political activist and children's author J.K. Rowling finds herself on the wrong side of a mob she helped to create. The Woke Sandwich she's been trying to force-feed others since she earned enough f-you money doesn't taste as good as it looks when she's obliged to take a bite.

I need you to check out The Kohen Chronicles and pray for this family. Their 5-year-old son has cancer.

Currently, the movie Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker stands at 55% at Rotten Tomatoes. Don't forget that these are the same reviewers who not only adored the absolutely execrable The Last Jedi, but insisted that you were a MAGA hat-wearing incel white supremacist manbaby for not loving The Last Jedi. So either The Rise of Skywalker is an objectively bad film, or it simply wasn't woke enough to earn plaudits from our movie-reviewing moral and intellectual betters.

It's easy to hate the older pop bands like Genesis for their popularity, but they were capable of genius, and it shows in No Son of Mine.

If you want to know which identity group has more clout, read this story of the Zola ads on the Hallmark Channel.

Rest in peace, René Auberjonois. I remember you from Benson as a kid. As an adult, I remember you as Janos Audron in the Legacy of Kain video game series. You made every role you were in a classic.

Elf on a Shelf Follies, Part 2:
8-year-old: I wrote the elf a note! I hope he writes back.
Me: What did you write?
8yo: I asked if he has any friends.
Me: What if he says it's none of your business?
8yo: *eyes grow dark and glittering* Then I'll...touch him.
Me: Ah. Mutually assured destruction, then.

Elf on a Shelf Follies, Part 1: My 8-year-old got an Elf on the Shelf the other day. The book it came with tells a story in doggerel about this elf's purpose, which is to spy on the kid and report his doings to Santa Claus, who would then determine if the kid is worthy for Christmas presents this year. The book also said for the kid not to touch him, or the magic would fade, and for the family to give the elf a name. I wanted to name him Stasi. I was outvoted.

Actor Billy Dee Williams calls himself a man or a woman, depending on whim; his character Lando Calrissian is "pansexual," and his writer implies that he'd become intimate with anyone or anything, including, one presumes, a dog, a toaster, or a baby. J.J. Abrams is very concerned about LGBTQ representation in the Star Wars universe. This is Hollywood. This is Star Wars. This is what's important to the people in charge of your cinematic entertainment. Are you not entertained?

The funniest thing on the internet today is the number of people angry over an exercise bike commercial. Public outrage is always funny. Always.

One of the biggest mistakes the United States has ever made since WWII was recruiting for clandestine and federal law enforcement organizations at Ivy League schools. The best talent pools were/are available from local law enforcement and military veterans, with their maturity and, most importantly, field experience. We've been reaping the costs of these terrible decisions for decades, culminating in a hopelessly politicized, sub-competent FBI and CIA.

Watching Fauda seasons 1 and 2 again in preparation for season 3 to be broadcast, one hopes, in early 2020. Here's my back-of-the-matchbook review of season 2.

Every day I try to be grateful for what I have, even in the face of the petty frustrations and troubles that pockmark a day spent outside of one's living room, binge-watching Netflix. We live lives of ease in 21st century America, making it enormously difficult to do anything but take one's countless blessings for granted. Holidays like the just-passed Thanksgiving are helpful reminders. There's a reason why people call the attitude of a thankful heart practicing gratitude, not just feeling grateful. You have to practice it. You have to remind yourself of what you have. It's the work of a lifetime.

Held Back: A Recent Conversation.
8-year-old: Oh, and Jamie was there, too. He was in my first grade class two years ago.
Me: Wasn't he held back a year?
8yo: Yeah. It's because he kept going to the bathroom with the door open.
Me: No way!
8yo: And girls saw.
Me: That's not right. They're not going to hold a kid back a whole year over that.
8yo: Well, that's what he told me.
Me: Sounds fishy.
8yo: I believe him.
~fin~

It's right and good to push a raft of politically correct social justice policies on everything else under the sun, but when social justice invades Hollywood, that's just a bridge too far, says Terry Gilliam. Sorry, Terry: you helped make this sandwich. EAT IT.

Rob Henderson's piece on luxury beliefs will have you nodding your head over and over again...unless you subscribe to these luxury beliefs, in which case you'll get mad.

I've made the Saturday bread from Flour Water Salt Yeast so often that I've memorized the recipe. It never disappoints. Never. The same recipe works well for pizza, too.

Liberty doesn't mean the freedom to do anything you want. The true definition of liberty is the ability to choose the good. Anything less is libertinism.

Archives

My Social Media Links

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Google +

Author Links

  • Amazon Author Page
  • Goodreads

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in