Mx3 Review: Ten by Gretchen McNeil

  • Reading level: Ages 13 and up
  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Balzer + Bray (September 18, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0062118781
  • Source: Publisher

Best friends Meg and Minnie have been invited to an exclusive house party on Henry Island. The two friends are looking forward to the weekend’s activities and the time spent together before Meg heads off to college in the fall. The group invited is small, only five boys and five girls. Meg and Minnie know some of the other members of the group, but many attend another school. While waiting for the host to arrive, the group sits back and enjoys their freedom. Alone on an island until the ferry picks them up the following Monday. A teenager’s dream, right?

All dreams quickly turn to nightmares when they discover a terrifying DVD with the message “Vengeance is mine.” The home loses power due to a storm, the remote location preventing a cell signal, and one by one members of the group are killed in the most unique manners possible.

Told from Meg’s point of view, readers will become immersed in the terrifying world McNeil has built. As people start dying, surviving members of the group start placing blame on one another and the intensity builds. Meg is the only individual who seems interested in figuring out who/why they have been targeted. The majority of the other members are initially reluctant to believe that a killer is among them but the rising death count soon persuades them.

One of the many things I loved about this book was the strong lead character McNeil created with Meg. At first glance, she appears pretty meek, almost a pushover. As time passes, however, she is the one person in the motley group of teens who seems to grow a backbone.  From early on, I was suspicious of most everyone in the group, not really feeling a connection with any of them, other than Meg. Needless to say, I was pretty shocked when the culprit was revealed. A truly addictive read, the intense pacing never waning. This novel is based on Agatha Christie’s, And Then There Were None; I think Christie herself would have been proud of this adaptation!

Ten is destined to become a movie; I’d be largely disappointed if it didn’t. Until then, it makes a perfect book to read this Halloween season. Highly recommended.

 

 

Posted in Harper Books, Harper Teen, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller, YA | 4 Comments

Mx3 Review: Dolly-A Ghost Story by Susan Hill

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Profile Books (October 5, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 1846685745
  • Source: Personal copy

Two young cousins,  Leonora and Edward, are sent to stay with their spinster aunt at her home, Iyot Lock. Edward, an orphan, becomes his aunt’s ward for the summer while Leonora is there while her mother travels the world, embarking in one affair after another. The cousin’s couldn’t be any more different: young Edward is small, meek, and respectful. Leonora, on the other hand, is breathtakingly gorgeous, conceited thanks to her beauty and wealth.

Edward has found ways to occupy himself while at Iyot Lock, but Leonora is unbearably bored. Her mother’s lack of attention and contact while she is away worsens the girl’s already spiteful attitude. For her birthday she craves a doll, a doll that she already has pictured in her mind. When her birthday comes and there is no sign of the gift from her mother, Edward (the empathetic and caring child that he is) suggests to their aunt that she buy the doll for Leonora. He takes the time to sketch the doll as she describes it. Yet when the aunt returns with a doll that is unlike the one she has requested, Leonora throws a fit, tossing the doll aside.

It is then that Edward begins to hear soft crying at night. Certain that it is the doll crying, he takes it away to bury it, it’s face broken after being so carelessly tossed aside by Leonora.He act of outrage makes quite an impression on Edward; he vividly remembers it years later.

Fast forward a few decades. Edward and Leonora have learned they are the sole recipients of their aunt’s estate after she passes away. They return to Iyot Lock for the first time in several years. It is then that they finally realize the implications of Leonora’s childhood fit, decades later, an outcome that is truly haunting and terrifying.

I was about to pick up my book and read a few more pages to lull myself off again, when my ears picked up a slight and distant sound. I knew what it was at once, and it acted like a pick stabbing through the ice of memory.  It was the sound of crying…

Fans of Hill’s work will be pleased to be granted with yet another classic ghost story. As with her other novels, the atmosphere of the novel evokes quite the chilling setting. A dark, remote English home, a doll destroyed by a young girl’s wrath. Truly, anything involving dolls is pretty much guaranteed to send chills down anyone’s spine.

At just under 200 pages, this is the perfect book to curl up with on a cold, fall night. It’s not difficult to find oneself immersed in this story; I was expecting to hear the sound of the crying doll myself. Simply terrifying, in the best of ways. Highly recommended.

 

Posted in Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem | Tagged , , | 8 Comments

Guest Review: Trucker Ghost Stories: And Other True Tales of Haunted Highways, Weird Encounters, and Legends of the Road by Annie Wilder

Today I’m pleased to welcome Susan Dunman with a guest review today! Susan is a librarian with the Kentucky Dept. for Libraries and Archives. She’s hooked on audiobooks and invites you to find your next great listen by visiting Audiobook Jukebox, a review site she and her husband maintain which offers indexed links to audiobook reviews across the Web – 10,000 review links and counting.

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Macmillan Audio; Abridged edition (August 7, 2012)
  • Narrator(s): Tavia Gilbert and Peter Ganim
  • Listening Time: 3 hours, 44 minutes
  • ISBN-10: 1427214816

It’s easy to get in the mood for Halloween with  so many great horror stories available to listen to this year. And in my opinion, it’s always a more frightening experience to hear a good scary story rather than reading it in print. While it can be a challenge to find the best unnerving tales, Trucker Ghost Stories stands out because it claims to be a collection of true ghost stories.

Author Annie Wilder is a firm believer in the supernatural and says that her own house is haunted. She hit upon the idea of collecting stories of unusual events from the nation’s highways after recalling a ghost story she was told by a long haul trucker when she was a teenager.

Wilder asked for contributions from a variety of sources. On her web site she wrote, “I’m looking for true ghost stories, weird experiences, and legends of the road from truck drivers or those closely connected to the trucker world (married to a truck driver, work at a truck stop or diesel repair shop, etc.”

The resulting collection of 54 stories attests to the fact that some strange things happen out on the road – whether driving cross-country on an Interstate or down a narrow country road late at night. Most of the stories are told by truckers, although some are shared by regular motorists who had strange experiences while driving. Many of the stories are about ghosts or hauntings, but a few UFO experiences are also shared.

Because most of the stories were shared by people who are not writers, their narratives are rather straightforward and written in a “this is what happened to me” format. Narrators Gilbert and Ganim bring their vocal talents to the unadorned narrative, giving the writing depth and personality. Each story lists the contributor’s name, so Gilbert performs the stories shared by women while Ganim voices the men’s contributions. At times, the narrators even use regional accents if the story mentions the city from where the writer hails. Both have pleasant voices and offer listeners an enjoyable listen.

You don’t have to believe in ghosts or UFO’s to enjoy these stories.  Most are short – between 2 and 5 minutes long – and while some are rather standard fare, there are a few that gave me chills while listening. Some of my favorites were “The Bloody Bride Bridge” where the apparition of a bride killed in a car wreck haunts the site of her death; “Babe” describes the friendly haunting of a rig named Babe after a driver dies in the cab;  and “Last Goodbye” relates an unexplained happening at the funeral for a trucker.

I’ve never seen a ghost or had anything I’d call paranormal happen to me. But it’s obvious that the people telling these stories feel very strongly that they witnessed or felt something that defies logical explanation. Give a listen and see if you don’t become more cautious and observant the next time you drive alone, late at night, down a lonesome stretch of highway.

 

 

Posted in Audiobook, Macmillan Audio, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Mx3 Review: Haunted by James Herbert

  • Paperback:240 pages
  • Publisher:Pan Macmillan (May 4, 2007)
  • ISBN-10: 033045157X
  • Source: Personal Copy

David Ash is called to Edbrook, an isolated English house, to investigate an alleged haunting. An investigator from Psychical Research Institute, Ash is a psychic…and also a skeptic. Upon arriving at Edbrook, Ash is introduced to the Mariell family: Christina, her brothers, Robert and Simon and their Nanny Tess. Now adults, the Mariell’s have been under the care of their Aunt Tess since their parents passed away when they were children. Although adults, they still have child-like behavior, often playing pranks on Tess and one another. There is something off about this family and Ash diligently strives to find out exactly what that is.

Tess seems to be terrified about the activities that have been transpiring in the Mariell home. Christina and her brothers seem to be placating her feelings, only recently admitting something is amiss.

Ash has his own tainted past. Haunted by the death of his sister, Ash strives to disprove hauntings. An interesting combination: a psychic paranormal investigator who believes he is haunted by his sister, yet fails to believe that the majority of other hauntings are valid. He’s adamant about proving the reports of a haunting in the Mariell home are fake.

It’s only a short period of time before strange things start taking place around Edbrook, specifically involving it’s deadly past. Despite Ash’s mission to prove the house is not haunted, all signs point in another direction.  When the truth is revealed, no one is more shocked and devastated than Ash himself.

A truly rich atmospheric novel, Haunted pulls in readers from the first few pages, immersing them in a dark and gothic world. Herbert’s suspense-building is truly phenomenal, guaranteeing an intense and heart-pounding read. Haunted is the first novel to feature Ash, a truly flawed character that readers can’t help to both love and hate. While completely chilling, this novel is the perfect jumping off point for readers looking for a classic gothic ghost story.  Herbert has been one of my favorite horror authors for some time; there are few of his novels that haven’t completely terrified me. Highly recommended.

 

Posted in Horror, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

TSS: 2012 Fall 24-Hour Read-a-thon Wrap Up Post

Well, while I technically didn’t read for the full 24-hours, I feel this read-a-thon was my most successful. For the past few years, I’ve stop when I get tired & head to bed. With a family with active and busy weekend plans, I have to be awake and on my toes. It’s worked quite well, especially when I can get a lot of reading in!

Here are my stats from this read-a-thon:

Pages read: 1553
Total time spent reading: 13 hours, five minutes

  1. Which hour was most daunting for you? Since I take this all sort of casual, none of them were truly difficult.
     
  2. Could you list a few high-interest books that you think could keep a Reader engaged for next year? I read a lot of thrillers. TEN by Gretchen McNeil was exciting, short, and kept my attention.
  3. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year? None 🙂
  4. What do you think worked really well in this year’s Read-a-thon? I think everything worked out well. While I don’t participate in the challenges, they were fun and engaging.
  5. How many books did you read? To completion, six. I did start one, read 100 pages, & stopped.
  6. What were the names of the books you read? All Seeing Eye by Rob Thurman, Dolly by Susan Hill, Carnival of Souls by Melissa Marr, All the Lovely Bad Ones by Mary Downing Hahn, Haunted by James Herbert, TEN by Gretchen McNeil
  7. Which book did you enjoy most? Probably Haunted. Spooky & short!
  8. Which did you enjoy least? Nothing against the book, it’s actually a favorite of mine, but GHOST STORY by Peter Straub. I started it, read 100 pages and realized it was too complex for a read-a-thon book.
  9. If you were a Cheerleader, do you have any advice for next year’s Cheerleaders? N/A
  10. How likely are you to participate in the Read-a-thon again? What role would you be likely to take next time? I definitely will, once again as a reader.
Posted in Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon | 12 Comments

Fall 2012 24-Hour Read-a-thon Update Post!

It’s here! It’s here! My excuse to read for 24 hours, uninterrupted! I have piles, yes piles of book set aside to choose from. I don’t believe I’ll read more than 5 or 6 but I like to have my options handy & close by! Here’s my oldest son’s stack of books to choose from:

And mine:

So as not to inundate those who follow my blog and are not participating in the readathon, I have opted to post my updates to my Tumblr page. Not to worry, I’ll post links to each of my updates below.  They will each use the following format: Progress so far:

  • Currently reading:
  • Books finished:
  • Pages read:
  • Running total of pages read:
  • Amount of time spent reading:
  • Running total of time spent reading:
  • Snacks eaten:

There we have it! Good luck to all who are participating.

Update #1: 10 AM
Update #2: Noon
Update #3: 2 PM
Update #4: 5 PM
Update #5: 7:40 PM
Update #6: 10:30 PM-Hitting the sack!

Posted in Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon | 10 Comments

2012 Murder Monsters & Mayhem: Week 2 Wrap-Up/Link-Up

I certainly hope you’ve enjoyed the week two of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem!  Here’s a quick wrap-up:

If you’ve reviewed a horror/thriller book or movie, be sure to include your link on the link up page. Remember, you must sign-up as a participant of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem to be eligible! The winner will receive:

  • Audio book of R. L. Stine’s RED RAIN
  • The Devil I Know by Jackie Barrett
  • Ghost Town by Jason Hawes, Grant Wilson & Tim Waggoner
  • Ghost Trackers by Jason Hawes, Grant Wilson & Tim Waggoner

And some Halloween goodies! Each post earns you an entry, so I encourage you to post often! Each week I’ll host a similar giveaway, so if you didn’t have the chance to post this week you still have a chance!

Week One Wrap-Up


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Mx3 Review: Red Rain by R.L. Stine

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Touchstone (October 9, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 1451636121
  • Source: Publisher

Lea Sutter is a travel writer, struggling to make a name for herself. She heads to a small, isolated island off the coast of South Carolina. The island, Cape Le Chat Noir, isn’t visited much by outsiders. It’s history is dark; the Labor Day hurricane of 1935 decimated the island, killing hundreds of innocent people. Rumor has it that people returned from the dead to help survivors rebuild.

Lea finds herself on the island just as it is about to be hit by yet another hurricane. Reluctant to accept the inevitable fate, Lea prefers to believe history will not repeat itself. Unfortunate, it does. The devastation is incredible, bodies (and parts of bodies) strewn all over the island. Lea is traumatized, never witnessing an event so incredibly upsetting. As she takes in the destruction around her, she sees two blonde, angelic-looking twin boys on the island. Twelve years old, Daniel and Samuel have lost their parents and home to the hurricane. Lea sees hope in the two boys and takes them back to New York with her…”adopting” them in the loosest sense of the word. Her husband, Mark, and friend, Margaret, warn her that she’s acting on emotion, acting hastily. Yet from the moment she saw the boys, hugged them, she was smitten.

Lea and the twins return back to New York and introduce the twins to the rest of the Sutter family, including Lea and Mark’s two teen children and Mark’s sister, Roz. The twins are certainly unique characters, using terminology far beyond their years. Reluctant to sleep in the attic bedroom Mark has created for them, they instead opt to sleep in the guest house out back. It isn’t long before tragedy strikes again when a brutal murder occurs in the Sutter’s driveway. The death count continues to steadily rise, each victim horrifically burned. The police suspect Mark is the one behind all the murders for how could two beautiful angelic boys, already victims of tragedy themselves, be behind it all?

Let me start out by saying I absolutely love R.L. Stine, a fan since I was a pre-teen myself. When I learned he was publishing a horror for adults, I was thrilled! While I found Red Rain to be entertaining, I didn’t find it to be incredibly terrifying. To me, it was very reminiscent of the books I loved and adored as a child, yet with a few adult scenes thrown in. Also, as you have to do with many of Stine’s books, you pretty much have to dispel all inklings of believability or probability. Additionally, more detail could have gone into some aspects of the novel, including the island’s dark past and the twins…powers.

If I were to compare this novel to Stine’s past work, I would state this is one of his best. That said, if I were to compare this to another adult horror, it would pale in comparison. So, if you are reading this novel to reunite with a favorite author from your youth, you’ll be pleased. If you are going into this novel to be terrified…not so much. Don’t misunderstand me, I did really enjoy this book on the merit of the author’s talented storytelling. I’ll continue to recommend it, just as I did before I even had the chance to recommend it, but with a bit of explanation behind my recommendation.

 

 

 

Posted in Horror, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review, Touchstone Books | 7 Comments

Author Guest Post: Mary Sharratt, Author of Illuminations: A Novel of Hildegard Von Bingen

Yesterday, I reviewed Mary Sharratt’s enlightening historical fiction, Illuminations. Today, I’m pleased to welcome her for a guest post…about the first known description of the female orgasm, written by Hildegard von Bingen herself:

Hildegard von Bingen: Reconciling Faith and Science

The Western world’s first known description of the female orgasm was written by the 12th century abbess and Doctor of the Church, Saint Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179):

When a woman is making love with a man, a sense of heat in her brain, which brings forth with it sensual delight, communicates the taste of that delight during the act and summons forth the emission of the man’s seed. And when the seed has fallen into its place, that vehement heat descending from her brain draws the seed to itself and holds it, and soon the woman’s sexual organs contract and all parts that are ready to open up during the time of menstruation now close, in the same way as a strong man can hold something enclosed in his fist.

Hildegard von Bingen, Causae et Curae

How could a celibate nun write such a convincing description? Unlike some people in our own age, Hildegard saw no contradiction between science and religion, between being a religious woman and addressing every aspect of human experience, including sexuality.

Born in the lush green Rhineland in present day Germany, Hildegard was a true polymath, a Renaissance woman long before the Renaissance. She founded two monasteries, went on four preaching tours, and composed an entire corpus of sacred music. Her prophecies earned her the title Sybil of the Rhine. She was indeed a visionary in every sense of the word.

Hildegard wrote nine books on subjects as diverse as cosmology, botany, linguistics, and medical science, as well as theology. Even though she believed consecrated celibacy to be the highest calling, her medical text, Causae et Curae, discusses female (and male) sexuality frankly and without moral judgment. There is not a trace of prudishness or anti-intellectualism in her work.

In general, medieval thinkers, including monastics, were far more plain-spoken in addressing sexual matters than many of us might expect. But Hildegard’s writing on sexuality was unique in its inclusion of female experience, unlike that of her male confreres, such as Constantine the African, the 11th century monk whose book De Coitu manages to discuss every conceivable carnal pleasure without once mentioning women.

As the woman who coined the word Viriditas, or “sacred greening power and vitality,” Hildegard felt a profound connection to the natural world, which she regarded as the visible face of the invisible Creator who permeates every living thing. Her book Physica was devoted to natural science and is an encyclopedic study of plants, trees, mammals, reptiles, birds, marine life, stones, metals, and elements, describing their physical and medicinal properties. She lists in extraordinary detail the 37 varieties of fish to be found in the Nahe, Glan, and Rhine Rivers.

Her vision of the cosmos changed to reflect the science of her age. In Scivias, her first work of visionary theology, the universe appeared as a mandorla—shaped like an egg or almond. But by the time she wrote De Operationae Dei, the third and final book in her visionary trilogy, her visions reflected the cosmos as a sphere.

873 years after her death, Hildegard was finally canonized in May, 2012. On October 7, 2012, she was elevated to Doctor of the Church, a rare and solemn title reserved for theologians who have made a significant impact. Presently there are only thirty-four Doctors of the Church, and only three besides Hildegard are women (Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Ávila, and Thérèse of Lisieux).

Mary Sharratt’s Illuminations: A Novel of Hildegard von Bingen is published in October by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and is a Book of the Month and One Spirit Book Club pick. Visit Mary’s website: www.marysharratt.com

Posted in Author Guest Post | Tagged | 1 Comment

Mx3 Review: The Devil I Know by Jackie Barrett

  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Berkley (August 7, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0425250423
  • Source: Personal Copy

Fans of horror are familiar with devastating killings that took place at 112 Ocean Avenue in Amityville, NY. 23-year-old Ronnie DeFeo was subsequently convicted and imprisoned for killing his entire family.  These killings were just the precursor to decades of unnatural occurrences that took place in this home. Later, another family, the Lutzes, moved into the home. They didn’t last long…the supernatural activity they experience caused them to flee less than a month after moving in. A book and subsequent movie, named The Amityville Horror were released, once again  shining the spotlight on this eerie home.

Countless numbers of press contacted DeFeo after the book was published, wanting to know about the supernatural events that took place in his home. They all wanted to hear about the hauntings; no one wanted to hear about what happened the night his entire family was brutally murdered. DeFeo withdrew from all the attention, growing more bitter and angry as his celebrity status increased. One day, he receives a letter from psychic Jackie Barrett. Barrett insists that she learned about him from an unknown force, but feels she has to talk with him about the evil that has been tormenting him all these years.

DeFeo and Barrett start communicating via letter and then by daily phone calls. Barrett is startled, but not necessarily surprised, when DeFeo is able to mention incidents in her past that aren’t publicly known. The two seem to be forced together an energy that neither one can control. Thousands of hours of recordings and hundreds of phone calls later, Barrett is finally able to extract the truth from one of the most evil individuals, reportedly the Devil himself.

Whether or not you believe the stories about the Amityville Horror, The Devil I Know is a truly well-researched exploration an study of a truly evil, and obviously imbalanced, man. That said, it portrays not only DeFeo’s story, but Barrett’s herself. Starting at a very early age, she was forced by her mother to take part in a number of exorcisms and seances, her gift to draw out spirits and talk to the dead a valuable one.  But one case involving someone dear to her didn’t turn out the way she’d expected, an event that continued to torment her life. Ultimately, this is a story of freeing one’s own personal ghosts, be it supernatural or spiritual.

There are a few scenes that are particularly spooky…but in my mind not nearly as terrifying as the account of the horrid crime that took place in this home. It could be that it takes a bit more to scare me than the average person?  Ultimately, it’s not the supernatural aspects of this case that are terrifying but instead the documented events that transpired the night of the DeFeo family killing.

Fans of horror and of true crime are certain to enjoy this book. Do a fiction/non-fiction mash-up, read it alongside Jay Anson’s The Amityville Horror. Or even better, watch the film & then read this book. Any way you go about it, this is a book you must add to your Halloween reading list. Highly recommended.

 

Posted in Berkley Prime Crime, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review, True Crime | Tagged , | 3 Comments