Mx3 Review: Harbor by John Ajvide Lindqvist

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books; Reprint edition (October 11, 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 0312680279
  • Source: Publisher

One snowy morning on a small island in Sweden, Anders and Cecilia take their six-year-old daughter, Maya, across the ice to visit a lighthouse in the middle of a frozen channel.  Anders & Cecilia explore the lighthouse, allowing Maya to explore on her own. She disappears, not leaving a footprint or any indication of her fate.

Two years later, Anders returns to the island.  Now in a perpetual state of intoxication, Anders turns to the inhabitants of the island for answers to his daughters disappearance. He can’t accept that Maya is dead; he is certain she’s alive somewhere. Everyone, including his own mother, appear reluctant to say a word, the sea seemingly holding a power over them all. It’s not long after his return that strange things begin to happen: items moved, including some of Maya’s possessions, the overwhelming feeling of being watched. Never could Anders have imagined depth to the mystery and secrets behind the islands past. He commits to doing whatever it takes, risking everything, to find out what actually happened that morning two years ago. Anders will stop at nothing, risking his own life, to discover what happened to his daughter.

Known for reinventing horror genres, Lindqvist doesn’t fail to do the same in Harbor.  The suspense built up at a slowly, steadily, keeping the reader on their toes.  Characterization is another aspect at which Lindqvist excels; Harbor is story that takes place over five generations, allowing the history, the familiarity, of each of the families involved to build.

Harbor is quite a lengthy novel, but yet there is so much that I want to know more about.  That’s not to say that the author left things unanswered; he was extremely successful at tying all the levels of the storyline together.  I simply didn’t want this one to end; I was drawn to the characters and the richly drawn atmosphere .

The beauty behind this book is the author’s writing; this is a book that cannot be skimmed or skipped over. Tiny details mentioned early on will come back again in later chapters. Missing those details might take away the impact of the story.  I don’t often like to compare authors to others, but fans of Dan Simmons and the classic writings of Stephen King will definitely appreciate the style of this novel.

There are not many horror books that I would recommend to those that aren’t fans of the genre, but Harbor is a book that would be appreciated by fans of a multitude of genres. The writing is rich, the characters multi-dimensional, the storyline compelling.  Highly recommended.

 

 

Posted in Horror, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review, St. Martin's Press, Thomas Dunne Books | 6 Comments

Mx3 Guest Review: Touch by Alexi Zentner

Hardcover: 264 pages
Publisher: W.W. Norton & Company (April 4, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0393079872

(reviewed by Sarah from Word Hits)

“Stay off the ice,” wrote Alexi Zentner, as he signed my copy of Touch. I hadn’t yet read the book, so I didn’t understand that loaded and ominous warning. Initially, I was drawn to Touch by the cover image: a dark, alluring forest brightened by an eerie glow of snow. Neither the cover, nor the author’s tease, disappointed. Touch is a riveting and spooky read.

The novel takes place in Sawgamet, a frontier town in the north woods of Canada that feels a bit like the haunted northern reaches in A Game of Thrones. But you don’t have to wade through thousands of pages before the monsters in these woods make their presence felt.

Touch is at once the coming-of-age tale of Stephen, a boy eager to join his father out in the logging cuts, and also an elegiac ode to the town and its hardships. Through memories and vivid details, Stephen’s story is interwoven with that of his father and his grandfather. The book offers a gritty, atmospheric look at daily life in Sawgamet, which was founded during the gold rush and then boomed into logging. Zentner takes us seamlessly from the 1940s back to the 1880s and in-between. These flashbacks are not at all distracting, but contribute to the narrative pull of the book.

All the while, however, Touch exudes a creepy, supernatural menace from the ghosts, witches, and monsters that lurk in the forest. “The idea of the unknown that comes with being in the woods is something that is familiar to anybody who has gotten far enough away from the city to feel truly alone,” said Zentner. “When you enter thick growths of trees, or when you are out in the wilderness at night, you can suddenly realize how alone you are, and no matter how rational or how much of a disbeliever you are, there is the opening for the unknown.”

I am deliberately elusive with plot details, because I don’t want to ruin the suspense or the surprises. About halfway through I braced myself for disappointment, wondering if the author could keep it up. But fear not, there are no LOST-like disappointments here. The ending resonates and satisfies.

Zentner, from Canada, taps into Inuit lore. “The Inuit mythology that I use in Touch is something that I very much took and altered so that it was presented through the view of the white settlers in Sawgamet,” he explained. “While some of the monsters and magic in the book are based on that Inuit mythology, all of it is turned, at least slightly, from the original tales.” Still, as a reader, I got an extra thrill when I googled these creatures and saw their rich histories.

Zentner describes his writing as “mythical realism,” grounded in lore and oral traditions, rather than the magical realism of Latin American writers. “Magical realism is often about the way that magic can insert itself into our lives,” he said. “But mythical realism is about the way that magic is already a part of our lives, but we don’t always notice it.”

“It’s important, as adults,” he added, “to remember that we should still be able to see the world with a sense of wonder.” This certainly comes through in his writing, which is beautiful, stark, and enchanting. Touch has been shortlisted for the Center for Fiction’s Flahery-Dunnan First Novel prize, Canada’s Governor General’s Literary Award and longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. In 2008, Zentner won both the Narrative Fiction Prize and the O. Henry Short Story award.

Touch spins out like a haunting yarn. You have the sense that this ghost story is being told to you around a campfire and that you are somehow part of it. But beware of the shadows in the trees.

Sarah is graciously providing a copy of Touch for giveaway.  To enter, please fill out this form.  The winner will be contacted via email on Friday, October 21!  Good luck to all who enter!

Posted in Horror, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Paranormal Fiction, Review, W.W. Norton & Company | 3 Comments

Mx3 Review: Little Goblins Ten by Pamela Jane

  • Reading level: Ages 4-8
  • Hardcover:32 pages
  • Publisher:HarperCollins (July 26, 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 0061767980
  • Source: Publisher

Last year, my boys & I reviewed Pamela Jane’s A Vampire is Coming to Dinner.  Here’s a synopsis from Publisher’s Weekly: Read along as the narrator of this story comes up with some practical rules for dealing with a vampire. But rules are meant to be broken, aren’t they? From feeding the vampire garlic to filling the house with mirrors, the narrator is doing just that! With ten full-page gatefolds and a pop at the end of the book, kids will love seeing which rules are being followed and which aren’t! If you’re expecting a vampire (invited or not) this is your chance to get ready for a night of pranks and surprises. It is best to be prepared. “…a ghoulishly good time.”

When I learned she recently released another Halloween picture book, I couldn’t resist!

Little Goblins Ten is an adorable take on the popular Over in the Meadow story:

Over in the forest
Where the trees hide the sun
Lived a big mommy monster
And her little monster one

The story continues with visits to other monster families including ghosts:
 

Mummies:

Werewolves:

And more!  At the end, all of the creatures come together for a wonderful Halloween treat:

The rhyming text and rich illustrations (by Jane Manning) really add to the overall experience of reading this picture book. My youngest son is six; this has become his favorite Halloween book this year. We’ve read it at least a dozen times.  He’s so familiar with the text he can read it on his own.  After we read this one, I introduced him to the original “Over in the Meadow.” His response: “Mom! That’s a book for spring. This is fall…it’s all about Halloween!”  That’s my boy!

 Little Goblins Ten is destined to be a favorite of many this Halloween! I highly recommend that libraries add it to their permanent collection! While there is clearly a Halloween theme, I believe this is a book that can be appreciated year-round! Highly recommended!

Thanks to TLC Book Tours for providing me the opportunity to participate in this tour! Be sure to check out the official tour page for all of the tour stops.

Thanks to the publisher, I have one copy of Little Goblins Ten to give away to one lucky reader! To enter, please fill out the form below. The winner will be contacted by email on Friday, October 21st.  Good luck to all who enter!

 

 

Posted in 4-8 years of age, Harper Collins Publishers, Kid-Lit/Middle Grade, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review | 6 Comments

Mx3 Guest Post: Truth is Scarier Than Fiction by Kim Ukura

Today I’m excited to welcome Kim from Sophisticated Dorkiness with a guest post. When I was soliciting guest posts for Murder, Monsters & Mayhem, Kim asked if posts about non-fiction books was permitted. Of course, I said yes. Truth is oftentimes scarier than fiction. That is the exact topic Kim writes about today; non-fiction that will send a chill through your bones!

 

The old cliché is that truth is stranger than fiction, which I’ve always thought was true. I also think truth can be scarier than fiction, so when Jenn asked for guests post as part of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem, I couldn’t resist suggesting a post with my favorite scary nonfiction to round out the celebration.

Since some people avoid nonfiction because they think it will be boring or intimidating, I tried to pick book that are so engaging, well-written, and frightening that I hope even a fiction reader would be able to settle into.


Murder

For murder, the most obvious choice is Truman Capote’s 1966 “nonfiction novel” In Cold Blood. In Cold Blood is the true story of the brutal murder of the Cutter family in Holcomb, Kansas in 1959. The Cutter’s — husband Herb, wife Bonnie, 16-year-old daughter Nancy, and 15-year-old son Kenyon — were a well-respected and well-liked family in their small community. When they were found murdered in their home, there seemed to be no explanation for the crime. However, a long investigation eventually led police to two felons, Dick Hickock and Perry Smith, who admit to the senseless killings.

In Cold Blood follows the entire investigation process, piecing together the day of the crime and the days after from the perspective of the investigators and the murderers.Capote is there for the entire process — capture, trial, and eventual execution — and he details those events in with a chilling clarity and eye for detail.

Since the book was published, critics have challenged its authenticity, particularly Capote’s practice to not tape-record interviews and instead rely on memory for quotes and details, but I can’t really speak to those challenges. What I can tell you is that In Cold Blood is a suspenseful and engaging read that is definitely horrifying enough for an October read.

Monsters

There are a lot of ways to explore monsters in nonfiction, but I found myself drawn to true crime again with The Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston and Mario Spezi. I have to admit that I haven’t actually read this book yet, but I picked it up from the library today and will be settling in to read it as soon as I can.

When journalist Douglas Preston moved his family to a villa in Florence, Italy, he never expected to be drawn into a murder investigation. After meeting a noted Italian journalist, Maro Spezi, Preston learned that the beautiful olive grove next to his home was actually the scene of a brutal double murder committed by the “Monster of Florence,” a serial killer that ritually murdered 14 young lovers. Creepy and monsterous, indeed.

Mayhem

I have to start out every mention of The Poisoner’s Handbook by Deborah Blum with the disclosure that Deb was one of my professors in grad school, and I admire her as a writer, teacher, and journalist. That said, The Poisoner’s Handbook truly is a great book that I think perfectly represents the idea of mayhem in nonfiction.

The Poisoner’s Handbook is the story of “murder and the birth of forensic science in Jazz Age New York.” The heroes of the story are a bit unlikely: Dr. Charles Norris, Manhattan’s first trained chief medical examiner, and Alexander Gettler, a toxicologist who pioneered the science of detecting poison in the body. During a chaotic time, Norris and Gettler worked to develop the fledgling science of forensic toxicology and their efforts to develop and reform the science of poison detection.

It’s really the setting of the book that reflects “mayhem” to me. Jazz Age New York was a crazy place to live. Bootlegging was just taking off, Tammany Hall basically ran politics, and the U.S. government was actually poisoning alcohol to deter citizens from imbibing. It’s that last part — the willful disregard for life held by certain government officials — that take this story from a good, science-based nonfiction read to a truly great book about a maniacal time in our history.

Kim Ukura is a community newspaper editor by day, and book blogger and self-proclaimed dork by night. When not reading or blogging, Kim enjoys crocheting, watching television, and hanging out with her boyfriend and cat. At Sophisticated Dorkiness, Kim reviews primarily nonfiction, with a sprinkling of literary fiction and graphic novels. Sophisticated Dorkiness was voted Best Nonfiction Book Blog in 2010 and 2011.
 

 

Posted in Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Non-Fiction, Review | 5 Comments

Mx3 Review: Black Light by Patrick Melton, Marcus Dunstan, & Stephen Romano

 

  • Hardcover:336 pages
  • Publisher:Mulholland Books (October 5, 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 0316196711
  • Source: Publisher

Buck’s parents were killed horrifically when he was young. He was left for dead, discovered at the brink of death.  Since their death, Buck now has a unique gift: he can literally swallow evil spirits, regirgitating them into sacred urns, forever preventing their release.  He is now the exorcist of last resort: individuals call on him to get rid of spirits that traditional means won’t remove.  When he captures a spirit, he’s taken into the Black Light:

The place  where all the souls that ever lived and loved and fought and died had gone to rest, but they weren’t really at rest.  A place filled with echoes of terrible things.  Remains and artifacts. 

The Black Light is where he continues to go, decades after his parents’ death, hoping to find them.

Buck’s most recent case is an unusual one: he’s been asked to participate in the testing of a high-speed train that crosses the desert between California and Nevada.  During one of the test runs of the train, a horrific accident took place.  The only survivor of this accident was an employee, originally quite sane, who upon surviving the tragic accident, completely lost his mind.

He emerged from the wreck a broken mess, babbling about men and women he’d seen murdered. He claimed the murders were visions given to him by God in the moment of his death, and that he’d been returned to earth to warn us all.

When Buck learns the route of the train, he knows he must agree to the job proposed to him. The train’s path takes it directly through one of the worst recored spots for paranormal activity in the country, the Blacklight Triangle.  Accompanying him on the ride are a host of celebrities, including a man in the running for the Presidency.  Buck knows accepting this job is quite possibly a suicide mission. Mediums who have visited this area have died; Buck came close to dying himself in this exact location. 

As the train’s journey begins, Buck is forced to re-evaluate everything he has come to believe about his identity, the death of his parents, and those that he trusts. Everything comes into question as the train goes speeding through the desert at four-hundred miles an hour, heading through one of most dangerous locations in the country.

Black Light is quite the unique novel. A debut novel by writers from the Saw franchise, I was prepared to be overwhelmed with gore. Not so much.  Think of this novel as Ghostbusters meets Die Hard.  The action is quite intense and while there are a few bloody scenes, they aren’t nearly as prolific as I thought they would be.  That said, Black Light probably isn’t a novel for the weak of heart (or stomach) but I can see it being of interest to several types of readers, including fans of horror and action novels.

My only complaint would be the lack of development of the characters.  While this novel is scheduled to be the start of a series, I feel Buck’s character should be a bit more dynamic, enriched in more detail.  First novels often serve as background information for the main characters.  While we do learn a bit about Buck’s past & his parents’ unfortunate demise, we don’t learn that much about Buck himself.  Buck is meant to be a hero we should root for, but I found myself feeling sort of “meh” about him and his plight as a whole. I’m hoping his character is expanded more in future books; I really do think this is a unique and compelling storyline and wouldn’t hesitate to pick up the next book.

At the end, this unique storyline/concept really did win me over. I have faith the authors will develop Buck’s character in future novels. Recommended.

 

 

Posted in Horror, Mulholland Books, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Paranormal Fiction, Review | 1 Comment

Mx3 Guest Review: The Red Church by Scott Nicholson

Today’s guest review comes from Kate of Ex Libris.  Kate is a new book blogger, mom of two, perpetually hopeful Cubs fan and fangirl of many things.  By day, she works in HR for a NASA contractor in Houston, TX.  By night, she reads and reads and read. Today Kate is reviewing a book by one of my favorite horror authors, Scott Nicholson:

The Red Church by Scott Nicholson
Genre: Horror
Format: ebook
Release Date: 2002

For twenty years the red church has been nothing but fodder for ghost stories and a place to store hay.  No one in the small North Carolina mountain town likes to talk about its grisly past.  When people start dying mysterious and horrific deaths, the Sherriff  suspects that it has something to do with the return of Reverend McFall .  McFall’s followers are willing to do whatever is needed, not matter how horrifying, to assure the return of the Second Son.

I don’t read a lot of books in the horror genre, and now I know why.  This book was scary.  Nicholson finds the perfect voice for the cast of characters in this small mountain town.  Since there isn’t one main protagonist, you are able to view the story from many different perspectives.  That technique is part of what makes this book so chilling.  I was drawn into the story by earning about the church’s terrible past through the eyes of long time residents, and then frightened by the creature that lurks in the bell tower as told by the viewpoint of the children. The zealots who follow McFall tell their story, as well, and you get to peek inside the mind of someone who is rationalizing death and sacrifice in the name of their  beliefs.

The church itself is a creepy and terrifying character in this story.  From the very first scene, you feel the unease that its presence causes.  As you learn its tragic history, its evil grows and becomes the setting for some of the scarier parts of the book.   The fact that there is a church that’s painted red sets the tone right away and sent chills down my spine every time I thought about it.  If you are looking for an entertaining, well written and scary book to read, this is a good choice!

Thank you, Kate, for this excellent review and accepting the challenge to review a horror novel! 

 

 

Posted in Horror, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Review | 1 Comment

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. It is hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

The Monster’s Corner: Stories Through Inhuman Eyes ed. by Christopher Golden (review)
Bad Moon by Todd Ritter (review)
The Night Strangers by Chris Bohjalian (review)
The Keeper of Lost Causes (audio) by Jussi Adler Olsen
Black Light by Patrick Melton, Marcus Dunstan & Stephen Romano

Currently Reading

Patient Zero by Jonathan Maberry
Harbor by John Ajvide Lindqvist

Books to Complete This Week

Dead Mann Walking by Stefan Petrucha
Zone One by Colson Whitehead

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 13 Comments

TSS: Wrapping up Week One of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem!

Can I just say  how much fun I’m having with Mx3? Horror and thriller have always been two of my favorite genres, Halloween my favorite holiday, so the month of October is always a treat for me!

Here are last week’s posts, in case you missed them:

Additionally, there is a weekly giveaway for all those who contribute links to the link-round up.  This week’s prize is:

  • ARC of The Monsters Corner by Christopher Golden
  • Finished Copy of BAD MOON by Todd Ritter
  • This adorable vampire plush

And this week’s winner is…

Tanya from Dog Eared Copy for her review of Patient Zero! Congratulations, Tanya!

To be eligible for next week’s giveaway, simply link up your horror/thriller/suspense/Halloween post to the link round up post! The more posts you enter, the more chances you have to win!  If you are participating in Carl’s RIP challenge, all those posts are eligible for this giveaway as well!

 

 

Posted in Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, The Sunday Salon | 11 Comments

Mx3 Guest Post: Jane Bradley, Author of You Believers

 

Today I’m ecstatic to welcome author  Jane Bradley to the blog today! Her book, You Believers, is a haunting story about the power of the human spirit, of the ability to perseverance despite the horror and tragedy many are forced to face.

 Holding on to Faith in a World Where Monsters Roam

I never believed in evil until I discovered the real man behind the crime that inspired my novel, You Believers.  Sure I knew about God, Satan, Heaven and Hell.  But those were only metaphorical things to me, images constructed to help us comprehend our deepest fears and desires. I’ve always believed in the wild wide world of human behavior. I believed that when people do what we call “evil”: serial killing, torture, mass murder, the “evil” resulted from early environmental factors.  I blamed painful childhoods, social oppression maybe. I thought people caused pain in the world because they were drowning in their own pain, that they felt comfort through cruelty. I thought maybe seeing pain on the faces of others distracted “evildoers” awhile from their own pain throbbing within. And I still believe all this is true, but now I believe in something more.

I had my first eerie consideration that maybe devils, demons or something like that existed when I saw the three year old boy my sister had adopted move toward my own three year old daughter with a look in his eye that chills me to this day. His cold empty eyes were locked on the back of my daughter’s head while she sat playing cars on the kitchen floor, and he came at her, baseball bat ready to smack her head, hard.    I was snapping beans at the table, looked over just in time to grab the bat, snatch him up and shake him, yell at him for the awful thing he meant to do.  When his mother asked him why he would want to hit my daughter in the head with a bat—they got along wonderfully, seemed to play harmoniously all the time—he  simply shrugged and said he wanted to, and that distant blankness sat still as stone in his eyes.  When he was five he told my daughter that his blood mother—an alcoholic/drug addict who had routinely beat him when he was an infant—that she had demon snakes in her mouth that came out when she talked.  He said that one day she had reached at the snakes in her mouth and put them in his mouth and that they were still there.  I was sickened and stunned.  I told my sister that he needed serious psychological help, but she and her husband decided that the boy was troubled and that a mother’s love and a daddy’s discipline would remedy things. He only grew worse, and after his little sister was born he tortured and terrorized her.  Eventually his parents sought help and nothing worked.  I could go on about how scary it can be just to be near him—he sniffs and paws at you like a hungry animal. And he now spends most of his time either in mental hospitals or jail.   As a teenager he told his mom, and me, that there were four demons inside him. His artwork illustrates this.  Yes at time I thought well maybe he is possessed; I like to think in a metaphorical way.   But yes, I know there is something bigger and sinister that drives him.

A few years ago as I was researching the “evil” man whose actions inspired my novel, I found myself once again believing in evil. He had a record of brutality that was too harsh to put in my novel—readers wouldn’t want to spend time with a character so horrifying.   This young man, like my nephew, had an abusive early childhood. He too was adopted by parents who raised him with love, comfort, and counseling. Nothing worked. He insisted constantly that he WAS the Devil, and he wanted to be the man on death row with the most killings.  Given what we know of captured serial killers, that would have to be quite a record. I learned of how he car-jacked of a friend’s daughter and what he did to her, and after I had asked for and received permission to write the book, I sat down and quickly wrote the car-jacking scene.  I put in the details that he popped Bob Marley in the cassette player and sang, bitterly, “Every little thing gonna be all right.” as the tearful driver followed his instructions to head out over the Cape Fear River Bridge.  I knew I had a good scene to start the book.   Many months later I went to Wilmington where the girl was car-jacked.  With the victim’s sister, I went to the D.A.s office and saw the pictures of the crime scene, and I heard this man on tapped prison phones laughing and bragging about what he had done. And then he said it. I heard his bitter and proud words on the tape; he told of how he had “popped a little Marley in” and sang, “Every little thing gonna be all right.”  I nearly fell out of my chair.  How in the world did I have that detail in my mind before I knew it to be true. I honestly feared and still wonder, if he was coming to me in my night dreams and day dreams.

Which leads me to another case of evil at work.  The protagonist of my novel, the seacher, Shelby Waters, gets started on her life devoted to searching for missing people because in the past, Shelby’s sister was picked up while on her way to work and hunters found her scattered bones two years later in the North Georgia Mountains.  This little story is inspired by a true story; the murdered girl was in truth a dear friend of my little sister. This case was been a sad mystery to me until I went to a Missing Persons Conference sponsored by CUE in Wilmington. By chance I learned that the man who had most likely killed my sister’s friend is now on death row in Florida.  He’s been convicted for killing three people in the same area; he is the lead suspect for five other murders and is a person of great interest in countless murders in the southeast.  When an FBI agent was asked how many likely victims had been killed by this man who captured people, took them to the mountains, released them to hunt, kill and sometimes eat, blood drained from the agent’s face and he simply shook his head.  There have been countless bones and remains left in little dens all over those mountains. Detectives say the man hunted like a mountain lion. He has no remorse. He has even talked people into making a movie about his deadly recreation, pitching it as a story. The film is called Deadly Run and you can rent it. But you don’t want to. It’s the killer’s own true story and he got a chance to revel in it publicly.

So yes, I believe in evil. Every culture has its ideas of a bogeyman, devils, imps, all sorts dark forces with malevolent intent.  And many cultures have rituals, marked events that provide a space for evil to make itself known so that then it can be shut away to go whatever dark space will hold it. We like to believe we can stir  evil up and then put it away again, and oh think of the horror movies that have been spawned by this notion. But I’d say, it’s not so easy to control.  Evil is a power as real as the winds and tides. I’d say evil a force hidden and present as underground streams ready to rise up to and through any fissure or crack in the earth.  I think evil finds its way into broken spirits, battered souls and it hatches in the mind of someone, feeds like a parasite spawning ideas, fantasies. Driven by its hunger to feed, it grows until it makes itself known and felt in the world. Evil can slip into an unknowing and unwilling child who is, for lack of a better word, broken by neglect and abuse, a child whose body and spirit have been so repeatedly violated that they are beyond mending.  Such a child is vulnerable to something bigger taking hold and give him a direction, a purpose, and yes, power.  I see this in my adopted nephew; I see this in the calculating casually brutal man who inspired my novel. And I see it in that man with stone eyes and no remorse as he teases at the cops with what he knows and won’t tell as he waits for his turn on death row.

But there’s hope.  Just as there are pools of malevolent darkness, I have even greater faith in the goodness of people, the kinds of people I consider beacons of light.  They are people who both spontaneously and with a plan bring goodness, comfort, order and hope to those left blasted by violence, murder, mayhem.  I’ve had the pleasure of knowing some of these people, one of the being Monica Caison, the founder of CUE an organization devoted to searching for missing and comforting the loved ones left behind.   Such people provide hope and healing.  And they are strong, fueled by a benevolent force bigger than they are,  a force that works through human hands.

In You Believers I had and still have the wonderful opportunity to map out just how we can find and hang on to faith in a randomly brutal world.  Sometimes I discover the best things as well as the worst things about humanity through my characters.  Through Jesse I came to a visceral understanding of evil. Shelby Waters, a woman who runs her life with a mission of goodness.  She pays close attention what people do and say and to the consequences that follow. Shelby’s life runs on a concept I try to live by in my own life:  live your beliefs; don’t just hang onto them like a metaphorical life raft.

I grew up in the Bible Belt where many wear their religion like a flag, and they are not always the kindest people. When went through my own first very hard time and was left to raise myself while my mother was in prison and my siblings scattered.  I knew people in that tiny church down the gravel road that led to our shack of a house, gossiped prayed for me, I had visited that church with my friends when I was a kid. I had often heard the preacher say, “And God bless those poor girls living up the hill.” He was referring to us, my sisters and me.  They did a lot of praying and no one did a thing.  Our wretched lives moved forward until the family crashed and scattered. I sat in that house and yes I prayed for help.  More importantly I finished high school and worked at Woolworth’s. I quickly realized no one was going to rescue, save, redeem me.  I would do it myself.  I realized then that faith is a verb and it has to be a very strong and forceful verb if you want difficult things done. In recent years I discovered the phrase:  “You have to put feet on your prayers if you want something done.”  My sister, the only one left living, told me this bit of wisdom.  And even though she’d scattered to Texas when our mom was locked up, she’d learned to survive with feet on her prayers. I gave that line to my strong-minded Shelby Waters.   Shelby is not a believer in any faith. But she believes in getting things done, and as she goes through the obstacles and set backs and rewards in the book, she allows herself to pray in some little way for some force bigger than she is to guide and support the good things she works so hard to accomplish.  This story that takes readers to hell and back ends in a tiny and gentle space: a garden. Shelby is exhausted physically and emotionally, but she keeps helping a friend in need.  She tells herself she will try to believe, and she does what she must do in the moment. She says, “We weed.  We dig. We plant. We water. We pray.” And with all that done metaphorically as well as physically, she says, “We will stand and walk away.”

That is my message of holding on to faith in an evil world. The key is you can’t hold an abstraction, but you can live it in your actions.  And in living good intentions by doing good things, you bring light and comfort, and while evil doesn’t go away, its power recedes, fades away for a while. And that, as Shelby would say is simply doing “what we can only do in the end.”

 

 

Posted in Author Guest Post, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Mx3 Review: The Monsters Corner: Stories Through Inhuman Eyes by Christopher Golden

It’s a monster-filled day today on the blog! Earlier today, you got to read a guest post by Bram Stoker Lifetime Achievement Award winner and supernatural fiction author Chelsea Quinn Yarbro on the lore behind monsters.  And now, for more moster fun:

 

  • Paperback:400 pages
  • Publisher:St. Martin’s Griffin (September 27, 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 0312646135
  • Source:  Publisher

 
Christopher Golden’s childhood love of monsters inspired him to reach out to some of the hottest supernatural writers for this anthology of short stories. Unlike most monster anthologies, these stories are all from the monster’s point of view. Readers get a unique vantage point: inside the monsters’ heads.  They learn their motives, their feelings, their motivation.

Here is a synopsis of just a few of the stories:

The Awkward Age by David Liss: Neil is a quiet, socially inept fourteen year-old-boy.  When he is invited to a friend’s house for a sleepover his parents, Pete and Roberta, are overjoyed! They allow the sleepover to occur, desperate for their son to make friends.  The sleepover goes well despite the fact they never met the child, Mason. They decide to return the favor, asking the elusive Mason to sleep over at their home. Mason’s appearance astonishes them; Mason isn’t a boy, but a girl. She makes no attempts to hide or explain this.  In fact, this isn’t her only secret.  She’s not a human girl, but a ghoul, surviving off the flesh of human beings…

Torn Stiches, Shattered Glass by Kevin J. Anderson: It’s the late 1930s, set in Nazi Germany. A monster, Franck, attempts to survive in a world where people hate those they don’t understand.  He’s used to this; he’s remained hidden for a century, only returning to his birthplace after seeking vengeance upon his master, Victor. He thought he would be safe, surounded by those attempting to survive the attacks by the Nazis. When he attempts to stand up and protect them, however, he is seen for what he is to them: a horrible, dangerous monster.

Big Man by David Moody: A horrific accident caused Glen Chambers to transform into a horrid creature: growing at an obscene rate, causing destruction across the country. His body sized increased so quickly it became difficult for him to find places to hide.  Despite the changes his body is making his mind, his conscience, is still intact. While appearing to be a monster on the outside, Glen remains human on the inside. He didn’t mean to kill those thousands of people, destroy all those schools and buildings.  At his size, it’s difficult to control his actions.  Instead of fulfilling the promises to obtain a secure location for him to live, the military wants to destroy him.

The Lake by Tananarive Due: Abbie Lafleur is a Boston-native, moving to Florida to accept an English teaching position at Graceville Prep.  She buys a lakeside colonial requiring a substantial amount of work.  It had a lot of potential and Abbie liked that.  The house’s true selling point was the lake and the isolation. No one had told her never to go swimming in Graceville’s lakes in the summer, especially children and women of child-bearing age.  Swimming in the nude, as Abbie opted to do, is absolutely forbidden.  Abbie, ignorant of these rules, takes advantage of the isolated lake & begins to take nightly swims  in the lake…in the nude.  It’s not long before she notices a change in herself: a think webbing of skin forms between her toes, painful slits open beneath each rib.  Abbie is transforming with each swim she takes in the lake.  The boys from her class who she asks to help her with repairs around the house have no idea what they are in store for..

These are but a small sampling of the nineteen never before published stories that make up this anthology.  Additional authors include: Chelsea Cain, Kelley Armstrong, Gary Braunbeck, Nate Kenyon, Sarah Pinborough and more! The stories really run the gamut of horror: some are quite tame while others are quite violent and gory.  Additionally, you won’t find any of your typical monsters (vampires, werewolves, etc.) included in this anthology. Instead, readers get a glimpse of more unfamiliar creatures like Mothman, Golem, man-eating plants, & more.

A highly-recommended addition to your Halloween reading!

 

 

Posted in Humor, Murders, Monsters, & Mayhem, Paranormal Fiction, Review, St. Martin's Press | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments