Page 15 - Reader's HouseMagazine - Issue 62
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This award-winning, wickedly funny, and fresh supernatural thriller is a pulse-pounding blend of occult horror and a riveting murder mystery.
Winner of the Literary Titan Book Award, Barry Maher’s The Great Dick and the Dysfunctional Demon is a wickedly funny supernatural
thriller. Set in 1982, failed songwriter Steve Witowski becomes entangled in dark magic and ancient rituals after saving the mysterious
unconventional as the fiction he writes. Once a journalist whose byline appeared in nearly a hundred publications, Maher supported himself through an equally staggering number of jobs—at times even living quite literally on
Where Supernatural T error Meets Sharp H uman Wit
Barry Maher And The Art Of Finding Horror Through Humour
Barry Maher discusses how illness, humour, journalism, and lived experience shaped his supernatural thriller, revealing why grounded characters make horror believable, frightening, and deeply human.
BY Z. ROBERTS
arry Maher has lived a life as
he became a familiar media presence on and demonic secrets. This major television networks and through his
fresh and original page- syndicated column, Slightly Off-Kilter. turner is ultimately pulse- Yet Maher’s path has never been without irony or humor. He openly jokes about pounding, leaving readers on having been incarcerated twice—for minor the very edge of their seats. infractions he recounts with self-deprecating wit—and brings that same sharp, offbeat perspective into his writing. That sensibility is fully on display in his supernatural thriller, The Great Dick: And the Dysfunctional Demon, a novel born not from abstract inspiration but from a life-altering medical
experience.
Maher explains that the story came to him immediately after brain surgery to remove a cancerous tumor. Awakening with a pop song looping in his head, he also found himself confronted by a vivid, fully formed horror narrative that felt less imagined than remembered. Writing the book became both a creative imperative and a personal declaration—a way to prove to himself that there is life, imagination, and purpose after a cancer diagnosis.
it becomes—an idea rooted in his belief that the most effective supernatural horror is an exaggeration of real life rather than an escape from it.
Humor plays a crucial role in balancing the terror of the novel. For Maher, comedy naturally emerges from character and circumstance, even in the midst of horrific events. Steve, in particular, uses humor as a coping mechanism—sometimes as defense, sometimes as offense—as his world unravels around him. This interplay between fear and laughter gives the novel its distinctive tone.
Maher’s background in journalism strongly informs his fiction. Research, discipline, and a professional approach to writing help ground the novel’s supernatural elements in reality. His process is methodical and demanding: long days spent writing and rewriting, polishing each scene through multiple drafts. He subscribes firmly to the belief that writing is rewriting, and that persistence matters more than waiting for inspiration.
His years as a professional speaker have also shaped his storytelling voice. Speaking before live audiences taught Maher how quickly attention can be lost—and how powerfully it can be held. That immediate feedback sharpened his sense of pacing, clarity, and emotional payoff, lessons he now applies on the page.
When asked what advice he would give aspiring authors, Maher keeps it simple: write. Talent, he argues, matters less than consistency and commitment. For writers struggling to find a publisher, he emphasizes excellence first, but also encourages openness to self-publishing, acknowledging it as a viable path that can offer both creative control and financial opportunity—provided authors are willing to learn the business side of the craft.
Through The Great Dick: And the Dysfunctional Demon, Barry Maher demonstrates that horror can be funny, deeply human, and profoundly personal—and that even the darkest stories can emerge from a fierce determination to fully embrace life.
Barry Maher, author of The Great Dick: And the Dysfunctional Demon, photographed overlooking California’s
Central Coast, where imagination and reality often collide.
the beach. His journey later took him into
the world of professional speaking, where horror with a riveting murder he addressed audiences around the globe mystery, the plot spirals into and worked with a client list drawn from
Victoria. Blending occult
a nightmare of grave robbing Fortune 100 companies. Along the way,
Set in a stylized version of California’s Central Coast in 1982, the novel reflects a moment of cultural transition, when the idealism of the 1960s was giving way to a more aggressive, profit-driven era. Maher populates this world with characters who feel
unsettlingly familiar. His antihero, Steve, introduces himself as deeply flawed and proceeds to live up to that description, while still remaining self-aware and darkly funny. The demon at the heart of the story, Maher suggests, is frightening precisely because of how human
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