Zelazny wrote across genres, his works encompassing crime, horror, science fiction and fantasy, with his horror novels receiving the most recognition. Zelazny started his writing career in 1999 with two short stories, "Hope Is an Inanimate Desire" and "Harold Asher and His Vomiting Dogs," followed by additional stories through the early 2000s. In 2001 he began to publish more frequently. His story "Lovely Day for Beating an Old Guy," published in the Brian Knight-edited anthology
Random Acts of Weirdness (2002), was the first piece to attract attention. His 2009 short story "The House of Happy Mayhem" received honorable mention for
Ellen Datlow’s “Best Horror of the Year” award. Zelazny sold a novel (
Destination Unknown) in 2008, though it was not released until 2011; his first published book was the short story collection
The Day the Leash Gave Way and Other Stories (Fantastic Books: Wilder Publications, 2009). The book was reissued by On July 28, 2014, Black Curtain Press in 2014 with two additional stories and an introduction by the author. Following a hiatus, he returned to writing in 2011 with the novella
Fractal Despondency (Black Curtain Press), followed the same year by
Shadowboxer,
To Sleep Gently, and
A Crack in Melancholy Time (Crossroad Press) and his earlier novel
Destination Unknown (iBooks).
To Sleep Gently received the 2012 Nightmare Award. Zelazny's first play,
Not Any Little Girl, premiered in
Santa Fe, New Mexico in late April 2012. It later became an Australian bestseller. Other plays followed, also performed in Santa Fe. A film buff, he contributed to the Jean Cocteau Cinema, an
independent movie theater in Santa Fe owned by
A Song of Ice and Fire author
George R. R. Martin, for which he wrote "Previews." For this theater, he and Martin co-produced
Godson, a musical play written by Zelazny's late father. 2012 also included the release of several other works: the short story "Black Whispers" in the Richard Salter-edited shared-world anthology ''World's Collider
(Nightscape Press); the novella Butterfly Potion
(Nightscape Press); and the novel Too Late to Call Texas'' (Black Curtain Press), which was praised by fellow writer
Neil Gaiman. Gaiman called Zelazny a "powerful and good writer," and "[s]omeone who’s been through hell and come out, I hope, the other side." The novel was reissued on September 24, 2013, with a new cover and an introduction by
Billie Sue Mosiman. Among Zelazny's later writings were the novelette
People Person (Black Curtain Press, 2013), considered by many to be his best work to date, and the novel
Voiceless (Evil Jester Press, 2014).
Editing In 2012 Zelazny published his first collection as editor, the anthology
Mirages: Tales from Authors of the Macabre (Black Curtain Press, 2012), which contains work by
Tom Piccirilli, E.A. Black,
Joseph S. Pulver, Kealan Patrick Burke,
Jeffrey Thomas, Edward Morris,
Gerald Hausman,
Joe R. Lansdale, Billie Sue Mosiman and others. In 2013 his second anthology,
Dames, Booze, Guns & Gumshoes, was released, a collection of classic crime tales featuring
David Goodis,
Robert Leslie Bellem, Norman A. Daniels, and many others. He also co-edited
Shadows and Reflections: A tribute to Roger Zelazny with long-time friend
Warren Lapine. ==Influences==