Into its Depth: Classifying The Angels of Autumn by Joshua Skye
Writing high-quality erotica is a challenge. It is reminiscent of 
scripting high concept scenes of horror or fantasy. No matter how 
grounded in reality they may be, no matter how dirty and gritty it is, 
there will always be a need to delve into the depths of the imagination 
and give it the distinguished air of the extraordinary. Horror, fantasy,
 erotica… they can be epic and profound. They can be every bit as 
emotional, heart-wrenching, and enthralling as any dramatic piece of 
literature. Genre writing is just as worthy and important as what would 
traditionally be categorized as classical works. And the brave writers 
who create such worlds are just as important as any other author. 
The
 erotic content of The Angels of Autumn was indeed quite challenging, 
from making the difficult decision to be uncompromising and uninhibited 
about it to the actual writing itself. There are no easy choices in 
writing, and like horror and fantasy, the true bravery actually 
manifests in essentially just doing it. It takes courage to create a 
scene of private pleasure, the joys one can give to oneself, perhaps 
even braver than writing a vanilla scene between two people. Braver 
still is to write something just a little deviant, sex in the shadowy 
depths of someplace open and public, carnal gatherings with many people,
 or consensual brutality. It really is brave to be an honest writer 
especially in the realms of speculative genres. Erotica can be just as 
speculative as horror and fantasy especially when you let your 
imagination soar. 
Sometimes I have to bring myself back 
down from the clouds; ground myself as it were. I love to romanticize 
sex in ways foreign to the usual notions of carnality. Sometimes I like 
to give erotic scenes an air of the horrific by describing them as I 
would a scene of terror or dread. Other times, I like to let the 
descriptions fly and grant them an atmosphere of high fantasy, using 
lofty and ambitious verbiage to describe even the most mundane aspects 
of sex. And, of course, I live to do the reverse and give startling 
moments their own distinctive sexual vibe. Sometimes, it’s really just 
all about the sex. 
The Angels of Autumn not only has its 
explicit erotic content, detailed and realistic, but it also weaves a 
slithering sexual undertone into the entirety of its strange and complex
 world. This was purposeful. I wanted it that way. I wanted it to be 
raw, uninhibited, and inescapably carnal. An unnerving sensuality can be
 found in everything, it’s there in The Angels of Autumn, even at its 
most disconcerting. I was once opposed to categorizing the novel at all,
 wanting it to remain a mystery, unclassifiable. But the truth is that 
it’s an erotic work of speculative fiction to its seedy little core. And
 I quite like it that way. 
***
Joshua Skye
 was born in Jamestown, New York but predominantly grew up in the Texas 
Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. He is a graduate of K.D. Studio Actor’s 
Conservatory of the Southwest and has worked on indie/underground films 
and on stage. He lives in rural
Pennsylvania with his partner Ray
 of sixteen years and their eight year old son, Syrian. His short 
stories have appeared in anthologies from STARbooks Press, Knightwatch 
Press, Sirens Call Publications, Rainstorm Press, JMS Books and 
periodicals such as Blood and Lullabies. He is the author of The Singing
 Wind, Bareback: A Werewolf’s Tale, along with the forthcoming Midnight 
Rainbows, and The Grigori.
***
Excerpt
The Lombardi Funeral Home was among the oldest of buildings in Wren, 
constructed in the late 1800s as both a business and a residence by the 
Lombardi family, immigrants from Italy, of course.
They conducted
 the bulk of their unusual profession on the shadowy, beautifully 
decorated, meticulously maintained first level while the untidy dealings
 with body preparation were carried out in the basement. The second and 
third levels were where they actually lived. Kept in the family for well
 over a hundred years by strict legal clauses in every will and 
testament down the Lombardi line it was now owned and operated by the 
widow Mary Anne Lombardi and her only son, Angelo.
Kincaid felt 
queasy as he looked around the parlor. The furnishings were ancient, 
most assuredly antiques, perhaps even the original Italian décor, all 
aglow in the flickering light of electric candles. Aside from what 
little daylight filtered in through the dark sheers, there were no other
 light sources. A little bell had announced his arrival several minutes 
before but he’d yet to be greeted. 
There was a musty smell and a 
pungent chemical odor beneath it. Someone, somewhere deep in the house 
turned on a hissing record player and after a few scratchy seconds a 
low, somber sonata began to play over unseen speakers. A curtain parted 
and a tall shadowy figure emerged. He said, “How may I help?”
Angelo
 was a handsome man with typically Italian features. He was dressed in a
 nice, solemn suit and had his hair combed strictly back. His large 
hazel eyes fell on his guest and there was an audible sound of shock, a 
sigh and then a deep intake of air. He said, “Kincaid. Wow, I thought 
you’d never come back to this place especially when you didn’t attend 
your brother’s funeral. Everyone thought it was pretty scandalous. So, 
how’s it going?” 
Ignoring the crude judgment, Kincaid detected a 
genuine surprise in Angelo’s voice. He was the same age and had been in 
many of the very same classes as the Kingsley twins, he’d even been one 
of the disapproving assholes who had put them through hell. Angelo had 
been one of the popular kids, one of the over-exulted Wren Dragons, a 
dumb jock destined to forever mourn his golden high school days. As an 
adult, Angelo didn’t seem so intimidating anymore. He was just a man in 
his late twenties, wasting away in the family business, no longer taut, 
tan and toned, no longer important, no longer a Dragon…the toast of the 
town. He had a beer belly which alone made Kincaid happy. “I’m okay,” he
 replied. “How have you been?” 
Angelo’s lips quivered when he forced a smile and answered, “Good. Thank you. How’s your mother?” 
“As good as can be expected, I guess.” 
Angelo
 said, “Right. Well, how can I help you?” He was stiff, formal. The 
fingers of his hands were entwined and resting at his waist. He cocked 
his head to one side, the sympathy in his eyes was counterfeit, a 
professional automation. 
“I wanted to talk to you about my 
brother’s funeral, actually.” Kincaid found he couldn’t look at Angelo 
when he said ‘funeral,’ and so he diverted his gaze across the room to 
nothing in particular. Everything about the place was so old. 
Angelo’s
 voice got deeper and there was a hint of umbrage to it. “I imagine you 
would. Your mother expressed her disappointment in your brother’s 
restoration. We’re very sorry she was so displeased. I assure you we 
pro-rated our fees accordingly.” 
Kincaid slowly brought his attention back to his host and said, “Yeah well, do you do the restoration?” 
“No. My mother does.” Angelo’s stance changed, he was getting defensive both vocally and physically. 
“May I speak with her, please?” 
“Why?” 
“I’m
 not here to cause a scene or anything. I just want to talk to her. 
That’s all, Angelo. I’m not going to berate your mother.” 
The 
Italian man just stood there for several tedious and silent moments 
assessing the guest’s intentions. Kincaid refused to look away this time
 no matter how nerve-racking or unsettling the situation slowly became. 
He wasn’t in high school anymore, he wasn’t the frightened and belittled
 teenager who shied away from everyone and Angelo wasn’t the pompous 
cock-of-the-walk anymore. They were adults and far more equal now than 
Angelo was probably even aware of. 
Kincaid prepared himself for a
 physical altercation. Being picked on mercilessly had prompted him to 
take quite a few self-defense classes over the years. Angelo might have 
been able to beat the shit out of him once, long ago, but his glory days
 were long over. He was out of shape and didn’t have his buddies around 
to back him up. Kincaid put on a confident little grin and stated, “I 
said please. 
Angelo’s shoulders slouched ever so slightly. He 
swallowed hard and his eyes turned down as his voice became 
professional, disengaged. He said, “Of course. If you’ll excuse me I’ll 
see if she’s available. Please, take a seat.” 
“Thank you, Angelo,” Kincaid said lowly. 
Angelo nodded and disappeared behind the curtain. 
Kincaid
 turned and meandered into the small, dismal sitting room and over to a 
stiff, uncomfortable sofa and sat down. A spider crawled over the 
surface of the weathered coffee table. Not particularly squeamish about 
such things, Kincaid watched it with a distracting fascination, the way 
it moved, the legs click, click, clicking along. He frowned as he 
realized that this spider was malformed. It had nine legs instead of 
eight and yet the added appendage didn’t seem to impede it in the 
slightest. He found himself leaning down, close, to get a better view of
 the little creepy crawly. The spider stopped. Perhaps it was now quite 
aware of its audience. It was perfectly still, frozen. 
“Mr. Kingsley.” The voice was soft. 
Kincaid
 flinched. The spider lurched into motion and scurried over the edge of 
the table and vanished. Being polite, Kincaid stood and turned his 
attention to the petite woman standing in the entranceway. She clutched a
 leather-bound portfolio to her bosom. Her salt and pepper hair was 
pulled into a tight bun on her head. She had modest make-up on and was 
dressed in a long, conservative black dress.
There was a beautifully 
crocheted shawl draped over her shoulders perhaps utilized to hide the 
slight curvature of her upper spine. Kincaid said, “Ms. Lombardi, thank 
you for seeing me.” 
She smiled courtly and entered the room, 
moved gracefully around the back of the sofa and sat down next to her 
guest. Kincaid sat down as well. Her eyes were down. He wondered what 
she was thinking. He imagined she thought he was there to complain. He 
wanted to reassure her he was not and so he said, “I didn’t come here 
to…” 
Without looking at him, she shoved the portfolio at him. 
Sheepishly, he accepted it and took a deep breath before opening it. For
 a moment he expected to see pictures of his dead brother, before and 
after. It wasn’t something he was even remotely interested in. They were
 pictures of the dead and indeed they were before and after shots, 
instamatic snapshots, many of them yellowed with age. The first was an 
old man whose face had practically been pulled off in some horrible 
accident. After the restoration he simply appeared as though he were 
napping. The second was a woman whose forehead had been cleaved open and
 again the after picture was perfect. On and on the pictures went, each 
turn of the page revealing flawless transformations. 
She said demurely, “My work. As you can see, I am very good at it.” 
“It’s
 immaculate, you’d never know, but my mother said she could…” Kincaid 
paused as a realization hit him. He turned his eyes away from the 
Polaroid snapshots in the photo album. The widow Lombardi looked sad and
 afraid at the same time. His voice was shaky, hesitant. He said, “You 
did it on purpose.” 
Mary Anne nodded and took the album back from
 him, she closed it and pressed it, embraced it, to her breast. Her eyes
 moved downward until she stared at the floor and there she focused for a
 long time, barely breathing, silent and still. She was contemplating 
something. Kincaid’s mind raced with what those thoughts might be. His 
heart fluttered nervously. What secret was she about to reveal?
Blurb:
Kincaid Kingsley returns to the town of his childhood after the death
 of his twin brother, Xander. Believing the crime to be motivated by 
hate and prejudice, Kincaid sets out to discover why the police are no 
longer actively investigating the case and hopefully uncover his 
brother’s killer in the process. 
Things in Wren are not 
as they seem, however, and the closer that Kincaid gets to an answer, 
the more danger he encounters. Why are all the townspeople so afraid to 
share what they know? 
As the mystery surrounding Xander’s
 death unravels, the town becomes increasingly blind to what is actually
 going on. Can Kincaid discover who killed his brother and save the town
 from evil? 
Tagline: A Profound and Powerful Gay Erotic Thriller 
Author: Joshua Skye 
Publisher: Pink Pepper Press 
Number of Pages: 212 Pages 
ISBN-13: 978-0615702100 (Pink Pepper Press)  
ISBN-10: 0615702104 
Release Date: October 19, 2012
Links for Purchase: CreateSpace Smashwords Amazon US Amazon UK Amazon DE Amazon FR Amazon IT Amazon ES 
