The German

A study of the undercurrents of xenophobia in a small US town in 1944 during the Second World War, The German depicts a serial killer stalking young boys. The novel alternates between the perspectives of Sheriff Tom Rabbit, 12-year-old Tim Randall and the German. The queer titular character is either an officer who fled the Great War after surviving being shot and half-buried or a deluded madman who can handle himself in tight situations. Unashamed and frank about his lust for men, Ernst Lang decries the American mentality of secrecy and being closeted.

“As he developed, I found him just fascinating,” Thomas says. “Basically what he was looking at was the ability to understand violence and hostility and see it for what it is and how it affects our culture but not be a part of it. You know, to at some point say, ‘Yes, we’re brutes, but I’m not going to be.'”

The work reflects Thomas’s desire to depict objectification, whether it’s Nazis objectifying their enemies, bullies their victims or serial killers their targets. When asked what scares the hell out of Lee Thomas, he answers quickly.

“Oh, people. We’re capable of so much very, very good stuff and we’re aware of all this – but the good stuff and all that is hard; the bad stuff’s easy. Unfortunately, we’re a lazy species. We go for the easy. We have so many ways to justify doing that to each other that it’s just a progression from a minor slight to something much more major. Just look at our politicians; it’s insane.”

An Ottawa journalist, author and writer, I have contributed to what is now known as Daily Xtra since 1999. My first byline (or perhaps, more aptly, bi-line) was a story about a gay volleyball league in Cornwall. Since then, I have had the privilege of penning articles about everything from high school bullying to Mr. Leather competitions to public sex to Ottawa Pride to author interviews and book reviews. My first horror novel, "Town & Train", was published by Lethe Press in November 2014 and is available on amazon.ca and at independent bookstores. As well, my fiction and poetry have appeared in Canadian and U.S. publications, with recent fiction in Icarus: The Magazine of Gay Speculative Fiction and poetry in Empty Mirror Literary & Arts Magazine. My other articles and reviews have appeared in various Canadian media, including CBC Radio, Rue Morgue: Horror in Culture & Entertainment and the Ottawa Citizen.I also blog at jameskmoran.blogspot.ca/

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