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Showing posts with label Novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Novels. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Halloween/Days of the Dead tour- Author Gail Z. Martin talks Costumes, Candy, and Characters

Costumes, Candy, and Characters
By Gail Z. Martin

I love to see creative costumes at Halloween, especially the off-beat, homemade ones. A boy once came to our door wearing a table (completely with tablecloth) that had a big serving dish on top. When he lifted up the lid, his own head—with plenty of gory makeup so it looked severed—lay on a plate. He definitely got extra chocolate for that!

The most adventurous I ever got was dressing up as a Roaring Twenties flapper when I was in graduate school. At the time, the town had an amazing costume rental store!

That got me thinking about what the characters in my series would wear if they went trick-or-treating or to a costume ball.

For the medieval series (Chronicles of the Necromancer, Fallen Kings Cycle, Ascendant Kings Saga, Assassins of Landria), ‘costumes’ are usually disguises, used to help collect information or avoid being arrested. In peacetime, the characters might have attended a costume ball, but the stories are set during times of upheaval, so elegant events need to wait until order has been restored. The same is true of the characters in our Wasteland Marshals near-future, post-apocalyptic series. For Jake Desmet and his friends from our steampunk series, going to a costume party would probably mean dressing up like historical figures or characters from books.

In the modern-day stories (Deadly Curiosities, Night Vigil, Spells Salt and Steel, and Joe Mack), it’s fun to think about how the characters might approach Halloween and what costumes they might consider.

My Deadly Curiosities crew would have fun with the concept. They use magic and psychic skills to stop the things that go bump in the night, but they wouldn’t hesitate to decorate Trifles and Folly, Cassidy’s antique shop, for the season, or give out candy.

I can definitely imagine Cassidy, Teag and their friends dressing up on Halloween as the cast of Buffy, knowing that most people won’t get the in-joke that Cassidy and her team really do fight monsters.

Sorren, the nearly 600 year-old vampire who is Cassidy’s business partner, wouldn’t pick a Bela Lugosi costume. He’d be more likely to dress like the real European nobility he mingled with hundreds of years ago.

Travis and Brent from the Night Vigil might take the easy costume choice of dressing like the Winchesters from Supernatural, since they also fight demons. Or they could go as characters from The Walking Dead, because they’ve dealt with more than their share of zombies as well. If they felt particularly sarcastic, Travis still has his old suits and clerical collar shirts from when he was a priest, and Brent could do a dark suit and fedora as a private eye.

If Mark Wjocik from the Spells, Salt, and Steel series went to a bar that threw a Halloween bash, he could be a zombie hunter (since he hunts monsters in real life) and pay homage to Dawn of the Dead and Night of the Living Dead which were filmed not far from his corner of Pennsylvania.

Joe Mack, who is immortal after being brought back from the dead by a Slavic god in the late 1800s, could pick from any of the eras of his long life. I think he might favor dressing up like Eliot Ness from the 1920s.

One thing I’m sure of—they all like Halloween candy and would never turn down chocolate! 

 

Night Vigil (2 books)

The Darkhurst (3 books)

 
 

About the Author
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Follow me on Facebook in the Shadow Alliance reader group (www.Facebook.com/Groups/MartinShadowAlliance), X/Twitter, @MorganBriceAuthor on Instagram and @MorganBriceAuthor on TikTok!Gail Z. Martin writes urban fantasy, epic fantasy, steampunk and more for Solaris Books, Orbit Books, Falstaff Books, SOL Publishing and Darkwind Press. Urban fantasy series include Deadly Curiosities and the Night Vigil (Sons of Darkness). Epic fantasy series include Darkhurst, the Chronicles Of The Necromancer, the Fallen Kings Cycle, the Ascendant Kingdoms Saga, and the Assassins of Landria.

Together with Larry N. Martin, she is the co-author of Iron & Blood, Storm & Fury (both Steampunk/alternate history), the Spells Salt and Steel comedic horror series, the Roaring Twenties monster hunter Joe Mack Shadow Council series, and the Wasteland Marshals near-future post-apocalyptic series. As Morgan Brice, she writes urban fantasy MM paranormal romance, with the Witchbane, Badlands, Treasure Trail, Kings of the Mountain and Fox Hollow series. Gail is also a con-runner for ConTinual, the online, ongoing multi-genre convention that never ends.











Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Here's Your Invitation to try our Dark Mocha Bites

We're inviting you to try our Dark Mocha Bites!

Works in this category tend to be labeled at #horror or #thrillers. So, get these goodies for your Kindle, tablet, or lap! These delicious, dark treats won't rot your teeth. And you can buy as many as you like!
We've cherry-picked some of our favorites below, but there are more choices in the box. Click below to see the entire treat bag. 

What's better for Halloween than a spooky, haunted house story?
Read the story that author, S.H. Roddey, says is the scariest thing she's ever written.
Read it for $0.00 with Kindle Unlimited or


Or, if scary haunted houses aren't your thing, try paranormal Sherlock Holmes stories! 
The game is afoot when the ghosts, fairies, and werewolves are real!


Last, but not least, is an entire collection of horror tales written by women!
Beauty becomes deadly, innocence kills, and karma is a harsh mistress in this thrilling collection of short stories! 


About Mocha Memoirs Press
We love coffee and we love books. The two are made for each other. We’re Mocha Memoirs and we’re dealers of diverse speculative fiction. Like a favorite coffee house, we offer new flavors for every reader. Taste one of our delicious and daring titles today!
-Mission-
We believe representation in speculative fiction (science fiction, horror, fantasy) is not only important, but a necessity. We publish engaging stories that amplify diverse experiences with vivid storytelling, robust protagonists, and fearless voices.

Monday, October 21, 2019

Horror Author Laurel Hightower: On Genre Blurring + giveaway

If you are looking for the ultimate book to read on Halloween night, look no further! Welcome to the blog tour for Laurel Hightower's Whispers in the Dark. This tale will give your goosebumps goosebumps! 
Follow along for exclusive content and a chance to win a signed copy (US only) or a digital copy in your preferred format (International)! 

On Genre Blurring
Laurel Hightower

It’s been a long-held tenet in my reading life that most stories would benefit from the addition of a ghost. Romance? Spooky factor brings your characters closer together. Historical fiction? Ghosts are ready-made in most circumstances. This may have something to do with me being a horror junkie from a young age – trips to the library always resulted in me staggering under a stack of every book I could find with the little ghost sticker on its spine.

Then for a few years, it seemed I’d run out of horror to read. It’s obvious in retrospect that I wasn’t making proper use of the internet, but my library and local bookstores consistently failed to have any authors beyond the four or five most famous we’re all familiar with. I turned to mysteries, my mother having stacks of talented authors to recommend to me – Ian Rankin, P.D. James, Reginald Hill, Jonathan Kellerman. Later I discovered Louise Penny and T. Jefferson Parker, and happily read my way through well-constructed, character driven plots. I loved the police and detective protagonists, the way they stood in a separate plane of humanity. There with us, but as protectors and punishers, always separate. Truth be told, I took the police entrance exam in my late twenties. I passed the written test with flying colors but missed one of the events on the physical by two seconds. I’d injured my hip during training, but honestly, I’ve never been a fast runner. It was crushing at the time, but one of those bless the broken road moments. I love my job as a paralegal; it’s interesting work with enough flexibility to never miss time with my son, which wouldn’t be possible if I were a police officer.

I never lost my fascination with the profession, and when I started writing Whispers in the Dark, there was no question that my protagonist would be a female officer. There was also no question that her particular struggle would involve ghosts. They say to write what you want to read, and if every novel I read had ghosts in them, you’d hear no complaints from me. So I suppose there was never any conscious decision to blur genres – I dreamed up characters that I wanted people to care about, added as many ghosts as I could get away with, and constructed a plot along the lines of my favorite reads. I wasn’t thinking much of genre, in fact, I wasn’t thinking about publishing and being asked to assign my book to one. My agent finally came up with “paranormal police procedural,” which, while accurate, is also a mouthful, and as it turns out, kind of awkward to repeat to a bunch of partners in a law firm. Go figure.

Looking back, as well as forward to my own projects, I think genre is most important after the work is written. Your agent or publisher has to classify it somehow, usually with an eye towards what packaging will sell the best. There’s nothing wrong with writing to market, or to what you believe will reach a wider audience, but it wasn’t something that occupied me during the long process of writing and revisions. Once my agent took me on and was ready to shop the manuscript, I’d already written three other first drafts, all with supernatural elements. When horror proved to be a hard sell to the larger publishers, I did have some moments of doubt – had it been a waste of time to write all these ghost stories? Were none of them ever to see the light of day? Was horror truly dead?

Since immersing myself in the horror community, I know the answers to those questions. Horror’s not dead, not even close – it’s just underground, for the most part. I’ve readjusted my expectations and game plans for the next works, and it’s a community and genre I’m happy to be a part of. If the thriller and police procedural elements of Whispers give the book a wider reach, that’s a wonderful side effect, even more so if those readers aren’t turned off by the gorier horror elements.

As far as the future goes, my agent mentioned several times he’d like to see a psychological thriller from me. I started out thinking that wasn’t something I had the chops to do, but over time an idea took hold, and after listening to interviews and podcasts with some of the greats, I took the advice of Josh Malerman and John F.D. Taff to stretch my craft intentionally. Who knows how it’ll turn out, or whether it will appeal to the same readers who’ve enjoyed Whispers. My advice to anyone looking to cross genres is the same that I took – write what you want to read. The rest will come, even if it’s not in the form you expected. And if you get the hankering to throw in some ghosts, you’ve got my seal of approval. 


by Laurel Hightower 
December 7th, 2018 
Genre: Paranormal Thriller/ Horror 
Publisher: JournalStone 
Rose McFarland is a trained killer–a Memphis S.W.A.T. sniper with a secret. Her team knows about the burn scars that lurk under her clothes, a legacy of the house fire that killed her father and brother sixteen years before. Her supervisors know that she spent two years in a rehabilitative facility, healing and learning to cope with the emotional trauma of the fire. But no one knows about the visions that drove her there, angry spirits that consumed her childhood, alienated her from her family and made her doubt her own sanity–the Whispers. When Charlie Akers, a half-brother she never knew, ends up on the wrong side of Rose’s rifle, she unwittingly sets off a chain of events that puts her family in the middle of increasingly dangerous paranormal visitations. Charlie won’t stay dead, and soon ghosts from Rose’s past are creeping back into her life. People she’s killed in the line of duty, family she thought long buried, every one of them under the influence of Rose’s greatest fear, the Whispers themselves. As the walls between our world and the world of the dead grow thin, Rose will have to face her old nightmares to stop the Whispers from breaking free. If she can’t, it won’t just be Memphis that falls to the dead–there will be no safe place left on earth for the living. 
Add to Goodreads

Excerpt
His heart thudding again, Zack tried to hold his breath, peering into the gloom. He didn’t have to wait long. Another shuffle, something dragging against the grit. A shadow, darker than the rest of the night. It moved, swayed. Waited. “Matt?” No answer, but Zack thought he could hear breathing now. Labored, wheezing. The way Matt had sounded toward the end. He took a step closer, stopped. “Matt?” “Zack.” A whisper. Tired, but an uptick of hope at the end. Zack swallowed. Matt had been waiting a long time. For the first time, Zack wondered if his brother would be angry. More dry dragging as Matt moved again. He was close now, almost close enough to touch. Zack coughed, his asthma tickled by something in the dry air down here. What was that? What did it smell like now? “Zack?” A hand reaching out, slow, tentative. Zack smiled tremulously, reached out too. Clasped the hand he’d waited thirty-seven years to feel again. Felt it pull him closer, into a shaft of moonlight coming through a broken window high on the wall. He looked up, into his brother’s face. Faltered. “Matt?” No, Zack realized with regret as the bony clutch tightened and pulled him close. Not Matt at all.
  
About the Author:
Laurel Hightower grew up in Kentucky, attending college in California and Tennessee before returning home to horse country, where she lives with her husband, son and two rescue animals, Yattering the cat (named for the Clive Barker short story) and Ladybug the adorable mutt. She definitely wants to see a picture of your dog, and often bonds with complete strangers over animal stories. A lifetime reader, she would raid her parents’ bookshelves from an early age, resulting in a number of awkward conversations about things like, “what does getting laid mean?” She loves discovering new favorite authors, and supporting the writing and reading community. Laurel works as a paralegal in a mid-size firm, wrangling litigators by day and writing at night. A bourbon and beer girl, she's a fan of horror movies and true life ghost stories. Whispers in the Dark is her first novel, though there are always more in the pipeline, and she loves researching anything horror related. She can usually be found working on the next project into the wee hours, sometimes as late as ten at night, as long as her toddler allows. Follow her on social media, even though she’s really bad at it, and she’ll follow you back. Plus you’ll be rewarded by pictures of cute dogs and kids.


Blog Tour Schedule
October 21st
Reads & Reels (Review) http://readsandreels.com
Viviana MacKade (Guest Post) https://viviana-mackade.blog/
I Smell Sheep (Spotlight) http://www.ismellsheep.com/
Jessica Belmont (Review) https://jessicabelmont.wordpress.com/
The Reading Chemist (Review) https://thereadingchemist.com/
I Love Books and Stuff (Spotlight) https://ilovebooksandstuffblog.wordpress.com
October 22nd
Breakeven Books (Spotlight) https://breakevenbooks.com
Didi Oviatt (Review) https://didioviatt.wordpress.com
Banshee Irish Horror Blog (Review) www.bansheeirishhorrorblog.com
October 23rd
The Magic of Wor(l)ds (Interview) http://themagicofworlds.wordpress.com
Reviews and Promos by Nyx (Review) https://nyxblogs.wordpress.com/
The Faerie Review (Review) http://www.thefaeriereview.com
October 24th
Musings of a Final Girl (Review) https://musingsofafinalgirl.wordpress.com/
Shalini’s Books and Reviews (Review) https://bookreviewsbyshalini.com/
Crossroad Reviews (Spotlight) http://www.crossroadreviews.com
October 25th
Eclectic Reviews (Review) https://eclecticreview.com/
Ity Reads Books (Review) http://www.ityreadsbooks.home.blog
J Bronder Book Reviews (Review) https://jbronderbookreviews.com/


Giveaway Details: 
Signed copy (US only) or a digital copy in your preferred format (International) 

Blog Tour Organized By:

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Book Review: Sharkantula: Shark. Tarantula. Sharkantula. (A B-Movie Novel Book 1) by Essel Pratt

Sharkantula: Shark. Tarantula. Sharkantula. (A B-Movie Novel Book 1)
by Essel Pratt
October 24, 2018
219 pages
Publisher: Immortal Gaze Publications; 2 edition
Shark. Tarantula. Sharkantula.

When a genetically modified tarantula finds itself loose in the Great White shark exhibit at Shark World, the feisty arachnid sinks its fangs into the main attraction. Without warning, the Great White mutates into Sharkantula and the opening day show turns deadly. The mutated shark/tarantula hybrid is hungry and ready to feast upon the flesh of those that don't run away fast enough to escape her webbing. Desperate to stop the carnage, a group of Shark World employees join forces with the tarantula's keeper in an effort to stop the devastation before Sharkantula can escape the confines of the aquatic theme park and spread her terror across the United States.



The book begins with scientist Dr. Fisher and his assistant are being threatened by the government not doing the experiments the government wanted, but trying to find a cure for cancer, using genetically changed spiders. 

One of those spiders escapes and ends up at the marine park, Shark World, where it bites a Great White shark. It is now a sharkrantula. The monster is insatiably hungry and attacks people.

Sharkantula is what happens when you add a campy B-movie premise to horror and science fiction and make it a novel. You get monsters, all the characters you would see if this had been a movie, gore (it is a shark, plus a tarantula, too!), and loads of fun. 

Before you think it is safe to read a book at the beach this summer, watch Shark Week, or binge all your Sharknado movies on DVD, read Sharkantula. It might just make you careful about taking a dip in the seawater off that beach or checking to see if any siders are hanging around your house before turning on the TV. 


I give Sharkantula: Shark. Tarantula. Sharkantula. (A B-Movie Novel Book 1) 4 Shark Week sheep.





Pamela Kinney


About the Author:
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blog
Essel Pratt is a master of horror and fantasy, conjuring tales that haunt souls and inspire imagination. As a student of psychology and teller of tales, Essel writes to share the complex nature of his imaginings with the world. His ever-expanding catalog of short stories spans multiple anthologies and collections, ranging from whimsical fantasy to bizarre horror, including everything in between. Dedicated fans have praised his creations, labeling his talents as prolific in substance. 

Hailing from Mishawaka, Indiana, his passion for writing began in the early years as his imagination taunted from within, begging for a release. Dabbling in art at first, he found that the stories that pleaded to be told could not be imprisoned by ink and paint alone. His most notable and prevalent accomplishments include Final Reverie, Sharkantula, and the multiple short stories that have garnered a following of their own, such as the adventures of Detective Mansfield.

Inspired by C.S. Lewis, Clive Barker, Stephen King, Harper Lee, William Golding, and many more, Essel doesn't restrain his writings to straight horror, instead exploring the blurred boundaries of horror within its competing genres, mixing the elements into a literary stew.