“The Man in the Watch Still Visits Me at Night”

Cover by Matthew Revert

Out September 22, 2006 from CLASH Books

House of Leaves meets David Lynch in a surreal horror novel exploring generational trauma and the monsters it breeds, from Joshua Chaplinsky, cult author of Letters to the Purple Satin Killer.

The lives of three unlikely women unfold to reveal a shared history of neglect and abuse. At the center looms the Vogel House, a facade of rotten wood and sagging eaves that plays host to a parasitic dream—the malevolent entity known as The Man in the Watch.

After spending the night in an abandoned house, Jenna Thomas returns home haunted by someone else’s past. She revisits the scene in the hopes of exorcising her dreams, only to uncover something far worse. Mrs. Vogel receives an unexpected letter from her estranged daughter. It fills the old woman with hope for the future, even though her daughter is long since dead. Meanwhile, a young woman contends with the legacy of her father while simultaneously fighting for the future of her unborn child.

The Man in the Watch Still Visits Me at Night thrusts readers into a nightmarish dead zone of overlapping realities, presided over by a malignant force that manipulates memory and delights in human suffering.

Check out this first look over at FANGORIA.COM, including an exclusive excerpt from the novel.

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New Novel Announcement: “The Man in the Watch Still Visits Me at Night”

The Man in the Watch Still Visits Me at Night coming October 2026 from CLASH Books.

From the author of Letters to the Purple Satin Killer comes a surreal examination of generational trauma as filtered through the lens of the modern haunted house novel.

“Letters to the Purple Satin Killer” coming August 2024 via CLASH Books


Based on the short story of the same name, originally published in Thug Lit #20, reprinted at Trigger Warning Short Fiction, and included in my collection, Whispers in the Ear of A Dreaming Ape (CLASH Books). Cover by the illustrious Matthew Revert.

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Jonas Williker is considered one of the most sadistic serial murderers of the modern era. This epistolary novel explores the aftermath of his arrest and the psychological trauma of those who lived through it.

The Pennsylvania native brutalized his way into the zeitgeist during the early part of the new millennium, leaving a trail of corpses across five states before his eventual arrest. All told, Williker was responsible for the rape and murder of 23 women, and is suspected in the deaths of dozens more. His calling card—a torn piece of fabric found on or inside the bodies of his victims—helped popularize his now ubiquitous nickname.

The Purple Satin Killer. 

In the years following his arrest, Jonas Williker received hundreds of letters in prison. Collected here, these letters offer a unique glimpse into a depraved mind through a human lens, including contributions from family, the bereaved, and self-professed “fans.” They represent a chilling portrait of the American psyche, skewering a media obsessed culture where murderers are celebrities to revere. What you learn about the man from these letters will shock you, but not as much as what you learn about yourself.

 “Letters to the Purple Satin Killer is in turns horrifying, illuminating, darkly hilarious, and always surprising.” 

—Meredith Borders, Fangoria

“This book. It made me wince, cringe, chuckle, guffaw, check the locks on my doors, shake my head, and maybe utter a few swears at the author. Letters is a unique satire of an American nightmare.” 

—Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts and The Cabin at the End of the World

“Chaplinsky breathes some much-needed life into the serial killer genre, taking the unique and utterly brilliant angle of turning the focus onto us, and our morbid fascination with these depraved individuals. This book ought to come with a bottle of bleach, to dip your soul in after you’re done.” 

—Rob Hart, author of Assassins Anonymous and The Warehouse

“Akin to Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer fucking Les Liasons Dangereuses, then strangling it, this sadistic epistolary novel reads like a crime scene smattered in the DNA of Richard Chizmar and Thomas Harris. Better wear rubber gloves when you crack open this brutally captivating book.” 

—Clay McLeod Chapman, author of What Kind of Mother and Ghost Eaters

“Remnants of Dennis Cooper and Bret Easton Ellis at their finest, Letters to the Purple Satin Killer is Chaplinsky’s best book yet. Cleverly inventive and perfectly perverted, it is deceptively difficult to put down once you get started. Clear your schedules and silence your phones. You’ve just found your next obsession.”

—Max Booth III, author of Abnormal Statistics and We Need to Do Something

 “Letters to the Purple Satin Killer is a morbidly intense and psychologically thrilling page-turner. Once I started it, I couldn’t put it down.”

 —Stephanie M. Wytovich, Bram Stoker award-winning author of Brothel

“Joshua Chaplinsky’s Letters to the Purple Satin Killer is the freshest, most inventive, and easily the funniest serial-killer novel in years. It says something scary and profound about America itself.” 

—Nick Kolakowski, author of Absolute Unit and Love & Bullets

“A wicked feast of serial killer psychosis, Letters to the Purple Satin Killer steeps us in the lives of those who accidentally, and purposefully, love a bad, bad man. Told in blistering letters that heap hope, blame, lust and insanity on a monster, Joshua Chaplinsky’s haunting new novel will dazzle and trouble you in equal measure. An elegant and horrific epistolary of murder.” 

—Brian Allen Carr, author of Bad Foundations

“A fascinating flip of the script here, think In the Belly of the Beast in reverse, where a reader doesn’t satisfy their morbid curiosity from an incarcerated killer’s insight, but instead derives a more dubious satisfaction by stealing the monster’s mail. All the expected epistolary pleasures are intact, but here it’s highlighted by a more perverse voyeurism, as well as some surprising character arcs from the obsessive penpals and rubberneckers, maybe less an arc but more like that inevitable trajectory that curves down down down into the cognitive gutter.” 

—David James Keaton, author of Head Cleaner

“Filthy, shameful, and so much fun, like an ill-advised late-night tryst with your favorite toxic, psychotic lover. Letters to the Purple Satin Killer is a monster in the glossy black mirror reflecting our collective disease, and Chaplinsky catalogues humanity’s mordant cruelty with acerbic aplomb.” 

—Chandler Morrison, author of Dead Inside and American Narcissus

“The range of emotions that seep into these letters—hatred, love, vengeance, desire—makes for a fascinating (and unsettling) epistolary novel. Transgressive and depraved, funny and sweet, it’s Dracula via Chuck Palahniuk with a Jack Ketchum chaser.” 

—Richard Thomas, Bram Stoker and Shirley Jackson finalist

“By turns frightening and funny, Chaplinsky twists the true crime format into an immersive exploration of celebrity worship and humankind’s addiction to being heard.” 

—B.R. Yeager, author of Negative Spaceand Burn You the Fuck Alive

“Unlike any other serial killer novel you’re likely to ever read. Brutal, original and unflinching, it holds the mirror to who we have become, and who we choose to obsess over.” 

—Todd Robinson, Author of Rough Trade and The Hard Bounce

“You can’t see a black hole… only what’s around it. Like this brilliant, ul- tra-vivid book with terrible darkness at the center. Multihued, twistedly fun- ny, and so human it hurts. You’ll get sucked right into the horrifying core.”

—Dennis Mahoney, author of Our Winter Monster

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“The Paradox Twins” is now available

The Paradox Twins is a copyright infringing biographical collage that exists on the Internet, pieced together by an unknown auteur. 

Named for the famous thought experiment, it concerns estranged twin brothers who reunite at their father’s funeral to discover they no longer look alike. Haunted by the past (and possibly the future), they move into their father’s house to settle his affairs, only to reignite old rivalries and uncover long-hidden secrets, most of which involve the young woman who lives next door.  

An epistolary work comprised of excerpts from various memoirs, novels, screenplay adaptations, and documents of public record, The Paradox Twins is an experimental, sci-fi ghost story about the scariest, most unknowable quantity there is—family.

Out Now From CLASH Books

Story Collection: Whispers in the Ear of a Dreaming Ape

whispers_dreaming_ape
Super excited to announce my debut story collection, Whispers in the Ear of a Dreaming Ape, will be published by CLASH Books this Clashtober!

Cover reveal, ToC, & kind words from people you might trust coming soon. PDFs available for review. Please share!