The ARC Party

Robb Olson

Your first look at upcoming books! My goal with the ARC Party is to connect readers with books before they release! Much of the success of a new book is connected to pre-orders and early sales numbers, but sometimes people don't hear about a book until long after it's been released. An episode typically consists of an author giving a quick description of their book, followed by a spoiler free discussion about it. We often talk about themes, characters, settings, etc. But I'm careful to not talk about anything that would ruin the reading experience! www.thearcparty.com

  1. vor 2 Tagen

    Horror Boom StokerCon Virtual Panel

    StokerCon 2026 took place in Pittsburgh at the beginning of June, and this year I was part of the programming team. Me and my good pal Greg Greene were tasked with managing the virtual panels for the con, which was an honor and a lot of fun! We pulled together a couple dozen virtual panels that were incredible, including my own panel where me and some rock star panelists asked and answered the question: Is horror having a moment, and if so, why? This episode, I’m happy to share with you the panel in its entirety. The roster of panelists is crazy. Ellen Datlow, Becky Spratford, Jeremy Robert Johnson, Yah Yah Schofield, and George Dunn all contributed their amazing experience and perspective and it was a great time. If you enjoyed this, maybe consider StokerCon 2027 virtual programming! You have the option to pay just for the Virtual Con which gives you access to all of the new panels as well as panels from previous years. We’re talking hundreds of panels you can only see by getting the Virtual con access. If you are planning to attend StokerCon 2027, you can add virtual to your in-person access. It’s a great value and we’re hoping to go even bigger for 2027. Also, please support all of the wonderful panelists that joined me. They’re doing great work and deserve as much support and recognition as possible! * Ellen Datlow * Becky Spratford * Jeremy Robert Johnson * Yah Yah Schofield * George Dunn For those who prefer YouTube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 10 Min.
  2. 24. Juni

    2026 Horror Preview pt 2

    New to the ARC Party? If you’re new here, I’ll explain why this episode is so cool. Every six months, I get together with two of the most informed and well-read people in the horror book world… Becky Spratford: Becky Spratford [MLIS] is a Librarian in Illinois specializing in serving patrons ages 13 and up. She trains library staff all over the world on how to match books with readers through the local public library. She runs the critically acclaimed RA training blog RA for All, writes reviews for Booklist and a Horror review column for Library Journal. Becky has been an elected Library Trustee and a former Board member for both the Reaching Across Illinois Library System and the Illinois Library Association. Known for her work with Horror readers. Becky is the author of three text books for library workers and the Locus Award nominated and Bram Stoker Award winning Why I Love Horror [Saga Press, 2025]. Becky was named one of the Chicago Tribune’s Chicagoans of the Year in 2025. She is on the Shirley Jackson Award Advisory Board and is a proud member of the Horror Writers Association, currently serving as the Association’s Secretary and Co-Chair of their Libraries Committee. and Emily Hughes: Emily C. Hughes (she/her) is the Bram Stoker Award®-winning author of Horror For Weenies: Everything You Need to Know About the Films You’re Too Scared to Watch and the co-founder of Darker Times, a worker-owned magazine about horror and culture. You can find her writing elsewhere in the New York Times Book Review, Vulture, Slate, Reactor Magazine, Electric Literature, Nightmare Magazine, Thrillist, and more. Emily lives in crunchy western Massachusetts with her husband and four idiot cats. … and we spend a couple of hours talking about books that we’re super excited to read in the coming six months. We each choose two books per month, and go around sharing what we know about them. It’s a ton of fun, and it gives us an opportunity to talk up dozens of books. To date we have highlighted 219 books! That’s a lotta reads. And remember, books don’t have an expiration date, so feel free to go back in my YouTube playlist at the end of this entry, and get some recommendations from 2024 and 2025 as well! Don’t forget to support your hosts! * Keep coming back for my monthly Horror TBR list episodes! * Becky’s book won multiple Bram Stoker Awards at this year’s StokerCon! * Subscribe to Emily’s new horror magazine: Darker Times The Books! July Fabulous Bodies by Chuck Tingle The Red Sacrament by Sara Hinkley Home Sick by Rhiannon Grist Carry Me To My Grave by Christopher Golden The Flayed Man by Chloe Lauter Caught in the In-Between by Alyson Hasson August A Plagued Sea by Kim Bo-Young The Hill in the Dark Grove by Liam Higginson Calamities by Chuck Wendig The Minimalist by Kailee Pedersen The Burn Line by Jonathan Sims Arson By Design by Tyler Jones September Kiss, Slay, Replay by Rachel Harrison Blacktail by Scott Hawkins Something of a Calling by Zoje Stage Mazywood bt Tananarieve Due American Nightmare by Kelly McWilliams The Nudge by Joseph Fink We Turn Gruesome at Night by Eric LaRocca Incarnate by Alma Katsu Something Followed Us Home ed. by Cynthia Pelayo Never Whistle At Night II: Back for Blood ed. Shane Hawk and Theodore C Van Alst Our Cut of Salt by Deena Helm The Ship of Death by Kyle Winkler Observer by Nicholas Russell Crone by Keith Rosson The Rouse by China Miéville Worry Box by Chris Panatier Pictures of You by Josh Malerman October Off The Reservation by Stephen Graham Jones Carrying by Samantha Josephs Savage Lake by Nick Medina Milk Teeth by Caitlin Starling The Unhaunting by Micaiah Johnson Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw November Depth Charge by Tyler Jones Annex of the Obscure vol. 1 by Mo Moshaty Welcome Home Miriam by Sanchita Mitra There Used To Be People Here by Kennedy Cole December Dive by Allison Mick Motherfucking Sharks by Brian Allen Carr Vampire Menstrual Syndrome by SC Hunter See ALL of our recommendations from over the years on my YouTube Playlist: Horror Preview Playlist: 219 Horror Books from 2024 to 2026! For those who prefer YouTube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 47 Min.
  3. 15. Juni

    Paul Tremblay - DEAD BUT DREAMING OF ELECTRIC SHEEP

    As you are about to hear, my Paul Tremblay story goes a long way back. I’ve read almost every book he’s written, and in that time some titles have stood out to me as being extra special. THE PALLBEARER’S CLUB is one of those books, and now DEAD BUT DREAMING OF ELECTRIC SHEEP too. At the risk of being hyperbolic, Paul took a damn swing with this book, and he connected. That is to say that he wrote a Paul Tremblay book with all the trappings you would expect to find, and somehow deftly wove such a strong and exciting FUCK YOU to AI into the story that, man, deserves all the praise. I don’t want to say too much as to spoil the way Paul worked his magic, but holy hell i’m impressed and excited, and really just think everyone needs to read it. It’s metatextual in such a specific and targeted way. Absolute chef’s kiss. But to put people at ease, it’s not JUST a book that stands on business. It’s a really touching story about someone discovering their life and its assorted tragedies. It’s about someone who seems to not care too much about anything being thrust into a situation where they face truly horrific consequences of their actions. It’s about Weekend at Bernie’s-ing a dude across the country while quoting The Big Lebowski - like you do. So yeah, I’m biased about Paul, but you don’t become a NYT Bestseller and have multiple films adapted from your books because of what I say. I wish I had that kinda gravity. Buy the book! It’s a great book, friends, and great books deserve huge releases. What you can do is get preorders in. Ask your library to buy it. Leave reviews if you got an ARC. Don’t Support AI And you know what else you can do? Cut it out with the AI. Your brain and your soul will thank you. For those folks who like a little video avec their audio: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 15 Min.
  4. 30. Mai

    Horror TBR - June Releases

    Introducing: Horror TBR episodes! This episode begins a new series of episodes on the podcast, where every month I will have someone on to talk about the books we’re excited for each month! I have enjoyed doing my Horror Preview episodes with Becky Spratford and Emily Hughes - and those will continue! But I feel like there’s an opportunity to do more, and I’m taking that opportunity. The format Me and my guest will prepare a small list of books that we’re looking forward to releasing that month, and we’ll take turns sharing. It’s the same format as my Horror Preview episodes, but since it’s just a month, there’s more room to chat in between titles. Preorder/buy/ask your library I know everyone says that preordering is important, and we all kinda get that, but I don’t know if anyone knows what will or will not happen if preorder sales aren’t robust enough. I don’t either, and I’ve been considering having an episode just on that topic. But until then, I will say that what I do know is that preorder strength can determine if Barnes & Noble chooses to stock a title in their stores for launch day. It’s a driving factor on stores in general doing pre-release bulk orders. If demand looks weak, they can always order it in. So. yeah, preordering can make or break a title. June Releases! Here are the books we talked about in this inaugural Horror TBR episode (in the order they were mentioned) Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep by Paul Tremblay Marion by Leah Rowan The Instruction Manual to Being A Vampire by Craig Wallwork Headlights by CJ Leede Dopefoot by Joshua Millican The Other by Annie Neugebauer Marla by Jonathan Janz Red X by David Demchuk It Came From Neverland by Cynthia Pelayo with honorable mentions to books Clay has blurbed: Back Stabbers by Eliza Jabore The Siren of Groves Peak by Glenn Rolfe Going to the Six by AC Hessenauer For the folks who prefer the YouTube experience: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 42 Min.
  5. 24. März

    Josh Malerman Interview

    I first met Josh Malerman in 2014, not long after the release of BIRD BOX. A friend, Nikki Guerlain, said “you gotta read this book, you’re going to love it.” Nikki was never wrong, so BIRD BOX got put on the roster for a review on my podcast, and through Nikki’s extensive connections, Josh agreed to join the podcast for an interview. I remember it was his Wife Allison’s birthday when the clock struck midnight and we were still on our call. Twelve years, and more than a dozen books, multiple movies, albums, comic books, and who knows what else later and I still feel that same energy talking to Josh that was in the room, on the call, that first night. It’s the same energy that is radiating off of his debut nonfiction book, Watching Evil Dead: Unearthing the Radiant Artist Within. It’s a reverence for creating, a joy of inspiration, a sense of accomplishment when your art is made. But fear not, much like the book, this conversation isn’t just a pile of toxic positivity. We talk about how hard making art can be. How challenging it is to find success. How doubt, fear, anxiety, hopelessness all haunt anyone who endeavors to tap ingenuity and result something new. We keyed into an idea that I think is cool, worth thinking about. The feeling of being pulled forward by something. Almost as if we all hold in us some preternatural drive for craft. I left this conversation feeling inspired. But more so than that, I left feeling proud of my accomplishments, and ready to tackle new things. If you think you’re in the market for some of this feeling, I suggest you pick up your copy of Watching Evil Dead as quickly as possible. And if you’re into Audiobooks, Josh narrates this one. For those of you who prefer YouTube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 20 Min.
  6. 12. Jan.

    David James Keaton - ALMOST GOOD

    David James Keaton has been a friend and a peer since the waning days of 2011. Back then, I was starting a podcast and didn’t really know what I was doing. He was promoting a book about zombies at a bed and breakfast and podcast were kinda brand new. Since then I’ve read a ton of his books, he’s been on a ton of my podcasts, and we’ve even gone to a baseball game. But this is a first! Finally, the tables have turned and David has had me as a guest host on his podcast - Almost Good. Almost Good is a podcast where David and a revolving door of guests talk about mostly recent movies - specifically movies that are “Almost good”. But maybe it’s just a way to give Dave license to be overly critical? Nah. There’s a lot of wit and insight in his episodes, and it’s obvious that before he was a respected professor, or an established author, Dave spent a lot of time in video stores (as a customer and an employee) and had built not only a huge body of experience with movies, but also fine tuned his thoughts on what works and what doesn’t. Usually I disagree with him (lay person that I am), but on this occasion, when Guillermo del Toro drops a Frankenstein, we managed to feel pretty similar about it. While I did have my gripes with the film, the conversation was great, and he even tricked me into talking about like 30 other movies he recently watched. I hope you enjoy this conversation, and that you’re inspired to check out more of David’s podcast. For the folks who prefer YouTube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thearcparty.com/subscribe

    1 Std. 39 Min.

Info

Your first look at upcoming books! My goal with the ARC Party is to connect readers with books before they release! Much of the success of a new book is connected to pre-orders and early sales numbers, but sometimes people don't hear about a book until long after it's been released. An episode typically consists of an author giving a quick description of their book, followed by a spoiler free discussion about it. We often talk about themes, characters, settings, etc. But I'm careful to not talk about anything that would ruin the reading experience! www.thearcparty.com

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