*** Welcome to piglix ***

Mark Morris (author)

Mark Morris
Born (1963-06-15) 15 June 1963 (age 53)
Bolsover, Derbyshire, United Kingdom
Pen name J. M. Morris (for Fiddleback)
Occupation Writer
Nationality British
Genre Horror, thriller, dark fantasy, science fiction
Subject Doctor Who, Torchwood, and others
Website
www.markmorrisfiction.com

Mark Morris (born 1 January 1963) is an English author known for his series of horror novels, although he has also written several novels based on the BBC Television series Doctor Who. He used the pseudonym J. M. Morris for his 2001 novel Fiddleback. For more information: www.markmorrisfiction.com

He currently lives in Tadcaster, North Yorkshire, in a 200-year-old stone house, with his wife, the artist Nel Whatmore. They have two children.

Morris began his writing career in 1988 as part of the (now defunct) Enterprise Allowance Scheme, which was at that time paying claimants £30 a week to be self-employed. His first novel, Toady, was published in 1989 (re-titled The Horror Club, and its text shortened by one-third for the US market) and several further books followed: Stitch, The Immaculate, The Secret of Anatomy, Mr Bad Face, Longbarrow, Genesis and Nowhere Near an Angel. Before Toady, he had written a novel called The Winter Tree, which was rejected by publishers, but allowed him to gain him some familiarity with them.

In addition to his major works, Morris has published, as chapbooks, the novellas The Dogs (for Barrington Stoke, an imprint for 'reluctant readers') and The Uglimen.

Morris has written a great deal of other short fiction, too, his first published short story being 1988's "Homeward Bound," published in the magazine Dark Dreams (#6, 1988) and continuing well into the 21st century (for example, 2014's "Sins Like Scarlet," co-written with Rio Youers) in the anthology Dark Duets: All-New Tales of Horror and Dark Fantasy. Morris has contributed many book reviews to the genre field, as well as essays.

He has also published two volumes of short stories, Close to the Bone and Voyages into Darkness (with Stephen Laws) and a novel as "J.M. Morris": Fiddleback (which was renamed The Lonely Places and had a slightly longer epilogue for the US market, which the author claims was "in order to (quote from US editor): 'clarify matters for a US readership.'"). A further collection of short fiction, Separate Skins, was due for release from British small press publisher Tanjen, but the publisher went out of business around that time and the book — introduced by Graham Joyce - remains unpublished.


...
Wikipedia

...