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Nightmare fairy tale

Nightmare fairy tale

探花视频 alum鈥檚 Reddit horror story leads to major book and Netflix deal


鈥淵our first home can be a nightmare,鈥 reads the marketing tagline for the slick new horror novel by brothers Matt and Harrison Query, natives of Boulder, Colorado.

But the story behind the book is more like a dream come true: 鈥淗obby鈥 writer posts a short story on Reddit; less than six months later wins deal with a major publishing house and sells the story鈥檚 film rights to Netflix.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the fairy-tale side of it,鈥 says University of Colorado Boulder graduate and public-lands litigator Matt Query (Psych, SocSci鈥12).听

Rewind to the days before the world plunged into the COVID-19 pandemic. Matt Query had become a regular reader of the Reddit subreddit r/NoSleep, where amateur writers share original horror short stories.

Old Country book cover

At the top of the page and above: The cover of Old Country, Matt and Harrison Query's new novel.

鈥淚t became almost a habit for me to read r/NoSleep late at night,鈥 says Matt Query, whose Reddit handle is VatoCabron. 鈥淭hat got me started writing fiction.鈥

In February 2020, he decided to post his short story, 鈥淢y Wife and I Bought a Ranch,鈥 about a young couple who leave the city and buy a remote Idaho ranch, where a malevolent spirit begins to torment them, morphing from horror to horror according to each season.

Minus the haunting, the story was autobiographical: Matt Query and his wife, Sonya Query (IntlAf鈥12), had recently bought a 16-acre spread 20 miles from the small city of , Oregon.

鈥淭he story came to me while walking around taking care of sheep, horses, cows, bees and chickens, dealing with mountain lions and bears and all the challenges that come with every different season,鈥 says Matt Query.

鈥淚n real life, instead of a sinister, spooky spirit, there鈥檚 just always something to do. If it鈥檚 fall, we need to cut a s*** load of firewood and have enough feed stocked up. In spring, it鈥檚 a battle with Mother Earth, as everything starts to grow aggressively.鈥澨

Matt Query published the harrowing tale in six parts, to the raves of Redditors. In July, a content hunter happened upon it.

鈥淭here are actually people trolling the archives (on r/NoSleep) looking for content to buy,鈥 Matt Query says. 鈥淭his dude reached out to me from an anonymous account. He said, 鈥榤y name is so and so, with this production company. Have you thought about selling the rights to the story?鈥欌

Matt Query briefly considered dangling $1,000 听to see if the guy would bite, then thought better of it. Instead, he called an in-house expert on creative properties: his younger brother Harrison a Hollywood screenwriter (Engl ex鈥15) who had sold several screenplays that had drawn interest from such big-name directors as and .

鈥淗e said, 鈥楲et me take the reins, we鈥檒l split it, and I鈥檒l try to get a screenplay deal, too,鈥欌 Matt Query says. 鈥淚n 11 days, he had sold the cinematic rights to Netflix and on top of that got us a screenwriting contract. Then Grand Central (Publishing, a prestigious imprint of Hachette Book Group) picked it up for the novel.鈥

The brothers immediately got to work, with Matt Query focusing on the novel and Harrison Query the screenplay. The two works were developed in tandem in what Matt Query describes as a 鈥渇un, unique process. We get along really well.鈥

Old Country, a riveting, 300-plus-page version of the original story, reached bookstores in July, ratcheting up the terror page by page.

鈥淭he sinister stitchwork of the scarecrow鈥檚 mouth began to twist and gyrate as it formed words, but there was nothing being spoken鈥攖here was no noise at all, while also being the loudest thing I鈥檇 ever heard. The scarecrow wasn鈥檛 projecting particular sounds, but it had a voice鈥攁 deep, glottal, sucking voice that was ripping and pounding through my head in a fiendish cadence,鈥 co-narrator Harrison Query says.

The novel has garnered high praise from top industry reviewers:

鈥淭he payoff is an emotional and psychological journey that deepens the layers of this entertaining horror story. 鈥 Fans of Stephen King and Paul Tremblay will find this a satisfying escape into the woods,鈥 Kirkus Reviews .

Harrison and Matt Query

Harrison (left) and Matt (right) Query are the authors of Old Country.

The comparison to King seems particularly fitting.

鈥淚鈥檓 not a big horror reader. I like the genre, but a lot of it scares the s*** out of me!鈥 Matt Query says. 鈥淏ut I consider myself a prolific Stephen King reader.鈥

Netflix bought the adaptation rights outright, which means the streaming-entertainment giant is in control of whether anything ever goes into production. Matt Query knows how quirky Hollywood is, courtesy of his brother, who is a successful screenwriter鈥攄espite the fact that none of his scripts has been produced.

鈥淭hey (Netflix) have a famously massive 鈥榗ontent bank.鈥 They buy up anything that gets big, or if a novel gets a notable publishing deal,鈥 Matt Query says. 鈥淭hey have the rights, so there is no timeline on production. 鈥 If it ever does get made, that鈥檚 a bonus.鈥

On the other hand, the brothers have completed the script and have 鈥渂een paid in full.鈥 All in all, a pretty good deal for the brothers.

鈥淚f I didn鈥檛 have my little brother and his industry wherewithal, I wouldn鈥檛 have gotten here. He鈥檚 been a fantastic quarterback and hand-holder throughout the process,鈥 Matt Query says. He also credits Harrison鈥檚 agent, of Ground Control Entertainment.

Since selling Old Country, both Matt and Harrison have returned to Boulder to live. Matt Query remains on retainer for his former Oregon law firm. He鈥檚 also a certified wildland firefighter and volunteers with in the hills west of Boulder; he recently deployed with his crew to fight a wildfire in Texas.

But now he鈥檚 also a writer. The brothers just inked a two-book deal from a 鈥渂ig publisher,鈥 one of which is another 鈥淲estern-set, contemporary horror-thriller,鈥 Matt Query says. They haven鈥檛 sold the film rights yet, but they鈥檙e working on that.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been fun working together,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e best friends.鈥