Showing posts with label supernatural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label supernatural. Show all posts

Friday, June 1, 2012

Bryan Hall on His Novellette: The Vagrant


Bryan Hall is a fiction writer living in a one hundred year old farmhouse deep in the mountains of North Carolina with his wife and three children. Growing up in the Appalachias, he's soaked up decades of fact and fiction from the area, bits and pieces of which usually weave their way into his writing whether he realizes it at the time or not. He's the author of the sci-fi horror novel Containment Room 7, collection Whispers from the Dark, and the upcoming Southern Hauntings Saga. You can find him online at www.bryanhallfiction.com

I've gotten asked about this a few times as the release of The Vagrant approached, so I figure it's time that I talked a little bit more about the series' central character.  Without him, this saga would just be a series of stories set in the south with only their location to bind them together, so he deserves a closer look.

Creighton Northgate lives out of his truck, moving from town to town as he needs to.  You could call him a paranormal investigator, but he would never use the term himself.  He helps people, and he's developed quite a reputation for doing so.  Word travels fast in small towns, and when you're providing something that nobody else can you quickly find that word of mouth is better than any business card.   People hear about the guy who can see the dead; the guy who tracked down a Sasquatch in the Linville Gorge; the fella who figured out why the walls of a church in Alabama bled thick blood every Thursday night.  People hear about him, and they call him for help.  And Crate carries on, travelling to wherever his cellphone calls take him. 

He's not perfect.  No interesting character is.  His brother's death, and subsequent reappearance as a spirit almost every night, makes it hard for him to sleep.  He self-medicates with booze, and what started as a sleep aid has become alcoholism pure and simple.  Knowing that there's more after this life – along with the rough hand he's been dealt – makes it hard for him to empathize with those who are grieving.  And the fact that he deals with those who are grieving constantly, makes that a little bit harder to manage, when you get right down to it. 

And he's afraid.  His brother's constant presence, following him everywhere, is a reminder of a past that he's trying to forget.  One that's cloaked in as much mystery and confusion for him as it is for the readers.  As he starts to peel back the layers of shadow covering his past, as his brother's spirit and his own desire to be rid of his demons keeps growing, he'll be led back to where he came from.  And what's waiting for him there will change him forever. 

A story's only as good as the people in it, and I hope you find that Crate's someone you want to spend a little bit of time with.  Truth is, things are only going to get worse for the poor guy.
Creighton Northgate is a man shrouded in mystery and on the run from a past he doesn't even fully understand. Blurring the lines between vagabond, enigma, drunkard, and savior, he spends his days staring into the southern legends and paranormal events that most only speak of in hushed, half-believing whispers.
In the midst of a sweltering southern day, he attempts to help a homeless man who seems to share his curse; a man haunted by a silent figure from beyond this world who pursues his every step. By the end of the day, Crate discovers that some things are best left alone; some truths best left in the dark. 
This novellette serves as an introduction to the Southern Hauntings Saga and its central character Crate Northgate, a man whose shadowy past is slowly catching up to him. The first novella in the series will be released late summer 2012. 
To find out more about Crate visit www.whoiscratenorthgate.weebly.com.



Sunday, November 6, 2011

Between the Covers - Book Review #3

The book gods smiled on me this week. I have three books to share with you and no bad reviews.

1) Emma Bull's Finder is a wonderful YA novel set in Bordertown, the land originally created by Terri Windling. (Bordertown is the town between Fairy and our world where humans, elves, and half-bloods exist.) Orient is a finder with a secret. He came to Bordertown after committing a terrible crime in our world. Now he's been commissioned with his friend, Tinker, to find the person who is selling a dangerous drug to humans. The drug "supposedly" will turn a human into a TrueBlood so they can cross the border into Fairy, but in reality, people are dying terrible deaths. This book is filled with wonderful, quirky characters and moves fast. I recommend it.

2) Bones of Faerie by Janni Lee Simner promises to entertain young adults and adults alike. Her take on the world of the Fae and the war between humans and faeries is original and creative. In the town where Liza lives, humans fear magic after The War. Plants and trees left behind by the Fae attack and kill without warning, but in another town, humans have learned that magic is a gift that can be controlled. When Liza's magical talents begin to manifest, she knows she must run away from home before her father kills her like her baby sister. She discovers an entire town filled with people with magical abilities and the secret of what really happened to her mother, a dark secret that will lead her to St. Louis, Missouri and through The Arch into the destroyed world of Faerie. It's been a long time since I've read such an inventive book about Faerie. You will not be disappointed with this one.

3) Tom Piccirilli's The Deceased is brilliantly written. Where other authors use gore simply for shock value, Piccirilli weaves a visceral tale of the gothic and supernatural. It's a whole new animal. Author Jacob Maelstrom returns to his childhood home where ten years ago his sister beheaded his entire family with an axe. Jacob hid in his closet for three days before anyone found him, but he doesn't consider himself a survivor. Haunted by the memories of that night and wondering what happened to his family's heads, as they were never found, Jacob returns to the scene of the grisly murders in hopes of coming to grips with his violent past, but will he cope with the secrets he uncovers? I cannot say enough good things about this novel. It's a must-read for any horror fan. Beautifully written and very emotionally gripping, you have to get this book.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Vampire Books to Die for – Guest Blog by Erin O’Riordan

Vampire trends come and go in pop culture, but I can’t get enough of these undead blood-drinkers. Maybe it’s nostalgia for the late-night horror movies my brother and I used to stay up and watch with my dad. Maybe it’s the guilty-pleasure thrill a girl who was raised Catholic feels when she imagines cavorting with damned, soulless creatures that serve darkness. Most likely, though, it’s the vampire’s forbidden erotic allure: the hypnotic eyes, the piercing fangs, the fact that they’re played by total hotties on TV and in the movies. In my imagination, they’re even hotter.



Bram Stoker’s Dracula, written entirely in the form of letters and journal entries, is an excellent read and still very much worthy of your attention if you haven’t gotten to it yet. Post-Stoker, I tend to prefer paranormal romances to horror, but this is only a tendency. A few of my favorites include: ~Little Vampire Women, by Louisa May Alcott and Lynn Messina. I do love a good literary mash-up, and this one squishes together bloodsuckers and one of my all-time favorite novels. It contains every bit of the fun of Alcott's immortal girl-power classic, except this time the March girls have...well, immortal powers. They’re supposed to, anyway, though vampire hunters have unleashed a plague on the undead community that endangers poor, dear Amy. Laurie is a mortal, and still not immune to the charms of his feminine neighbors, even if they do want to drink his blood.


(Top: Christian Bale as Laurie from the 1990s film version. Bottom: the cover of Little Vampire Women)

~The Casa Dracula Books, by Marta Acosta. The first book, Happy Hour at Casa Dracula, is thoroughly enjoyable. In this witty novel, Acosta creates a wonderful heroine in Milagro de los Santos. Mil, as she is known to friends, just wants what every woman wants: to be taken seriously as a writer, to live in a rat-free apartment, and maybe to find a fabulous guy to get serious with. That guy is definitely not Sebastian, her ex, who's sitting on top of a pile of dark secrets. Along comes Oswald, who may be a vampire, and whose secrets may or may be of the dark variety. Wonderfully written, funny, and romantic, this book is a definite winner – and the series only gets better from there, as Mil is torn between Oswald and his less straight-laced cousin, Ian Ducharme. The final book, Haunted Honeymoon, completely satisfies.

~J.R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood series. The series is about a race of vampires who coexist with humans. Rather than feeding off humans, these vampires need to feed from the opposite sex of their own kind. The race was created by a goddess-figure known as the Scribe Virgin. Her nemesis, the vampire devil, is called The Omega. An elite clan of warriors, the Brotherhood, protects civilian vamps from The Omega's soulless army, the Lessening Society, or Lessers. The "Brothers" are not literally brothers (except Phury and Zsadist, who are twins).

Ward's writing style takes a little getting used to for those new to the series. She writes in a very noir-ish style. I believe she's heavily influenced by Robert B. Parker. She also invented a language the vampires use, which they call The Old Language. She peppers her novels with Old Language words like shellan and hellren ("wife" and "husband").

The thing about J.R. Ward's BDB novels that makes them so hard to put down is the way she keeps her pairs of lovers separated through so many hardships before she'll finally let them get together. That's the basic plot of every one of these novels, starting with the story of Wrath and Beth in the first book, Dark Lover. Every single one of the Brothers is absolutely gorgeous, all six feet tall and pumped up like comic book superheroes. My favorite is Zsadist--called Z--with his multicolored hair kept super-short, canary-yellow eyes that turn black when he's angry and terrifying exterior that belies how tenderly he loves his mate, Bella.


(photo by Eric Lin, Creative Commons license)

Perhaps the best short story Ward ever wrote is “The Story of Son,” which appears in the anthology Dead After Dark. Not part of the Brotherhood series, it’s an oddly affecting piece of dark erotica starring a vampire.

~Many Bloody Returns, by Charlaine Harris et al. There are many charming tales in this collection of paranormal stories on the theme of birthdays. The Sookie Stackhouse story by Charlaine Harris that begins the collection is only so-so, as is the last tale by Toni L.P. Kelner. (It does have a clever title, though. "How Stella Got Her Grave Back"--delicious!) The really memorable, unique tales include Bill Crider's "I Was a Teenage Vampire" (a Catcher in the Rye-meets-Dracula tale), "The Mournful Cry of Owls" by Christopher Golden (love that Eastern European folklore!), and "The Witch and Wicked" by Jeanne C Stein. In fact, "The Witch and Wicked" ends too abruptly. Expanded, it would make a nice stand-alone novel. The other stories are at least interesting, making for a better-than-average anthology.

About the author: Erin O’Riordan’s fabulous fictional vampires include 1950’s chef Oliver and stripper Oakley. “Vampires” is one of her most frequently used tags on her book blog, Pagan Spirits.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Bookin' It Reviews - #2


This week's book review is brought to you by the lovable bat cat, Toshio.

I have five selections.

1) Inferno was okay, not my favorite anthology edited by my favorite editor, Ellen Datlow. The concept was interesting. She wanted to edit a collection of horror stories not themed. She succeeded at this, but I just didn't find myself reading many of the stories and being really excited about them. I liked that the collection didn't include your typical horror monsters like vampires and werewolves. The stories are not bad; they just weren't really my favorites. The author selection was a good one; it included Lucius Shepard, Jeffrey Ford, Glenn Hirshberg, and Lee Thomas.

A few stories did stand out. I really liked Bethany's Wood by Jeffrey Ford, which was about a child's reunion with his "back from the dead" author mother. I also enjoyed 13 O'Clock by Mike Driscoll and The Suits of Auderlene by Terry Dowling, but my top pick from this anthology would have to be The Keeper by P.D. Cacek. I have never read any of the author's writing and found their short story about a young girl holocaust survivor very disturbing. It was the only story in the book that really lived up to Ellen's quote in the introduction, "Perhaps you will have one of those great memories that will stay with you always, a memory of something dark, dangerous, and brooding." I did with that one, but not the others. It takes a lot to disturb or scare me. Maybe, I'm just jaded after reading horror for so many years. I recommend this as light reading for horror enthusiasts.

2) Midwinter by Matthew Sturges was a good read. This is the first book in the Fae series. The plot didn't strike me as groundbreaking, though it is well written. Mauritane is a prisoner and former captain of the Seelie Army. He's recruited by Queen Titania on a secret mission to save the empire from destruction. After picking his band of travelers from the prison, a beautiful emissary from a foreign land, a nobleman, and a human physicist who is looking for a stolen human child, they set off across the dangerous Contested Lands with Queen Mab's Unseelie Army approaching the border. The characters are quite lovable, but I've seen them all before. I was expecting  a little more from this one than I got. Still, I have the second book waiting to be read on my desk. I'm not willing to give up on the series, just yet.

3) The Gathering, a YA novel by Kelley Armstrong, is quite refreshing. I wish I read this as a young adult. Maya, an adopted teenage girl, lives with her family in the small medical-research community of Vancouver Island. Her father is the park ranger for the local park and Maya's grown up loving the mountain lions that roam the forest. But something strange is happening. The mountain lions are becoming bolder, approaching humans, and threatening their safety. What is the cause for this unusual behavior and what does it have to do with the strange cougar paw birthmark Maya bears? I recommend this one for young adults and adults. It's refreshing to read about something besides werewolves and vampires for a change.

4) Neverland by Douglas Clegg blew me out of the water. I cannot rave enough about this amazing piece of horror. This novel is brilliantly creepy and violent. It takes you inside the deviously demented mind of teenager Sumter Monroe who introduces his cousin, Beau, and the other cousins visiting Gull Island off the coast of Georgia, to Neverland, the creepy shack on his grandmother's property containing their god, Lucy. Lucy urges the children to lie, steal, and offer animal sacrifices. Ultimately, she demands the supreme sacrifice for any god -- a human life. But will Beau be able to stop Sumter? And who is Lucy? What dark family secret lurks inside that shed? I could not put this book down. Any fan of the horror genre must read at least one Douglas Clegg novel.

5) The Abandoned by Douglas Clegg turned out to be just as good. This is one of his Harrow novels, a series surrounding the supernatural occurrences at the abandoned Harrow mansion, a dark and sinister house. Teenagers go there to drink, party, and make out, but one summer night in June, a group of misfits gets more than they bargained for -- the mutilated body of a child's corpse stolen from the morgue is found in the family graveyard adjacent to Harrow Mansion. Some speculate it's an offering to open the gates to a world of nightmares in the Harrow mansion. In fact, if you live in the quiet town, you don't want to fall asleep. And make sure you don't wake up those sleeping soundly around you or you just might become part of the house's plot to maim, slaughter, and terrorize the good citizens of Watch Point, New York. I finished this book in less than a day and would read it again in a heartbeart.

As always, happy reading and happy writing to all!