Tag Archive for 'psychic phenomena'

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Giveaway: Five Spine-Chilling Books from the Hachette Group

We have two weeks left until Halloween. Are you ready yet? I’m doing a give-away courtesy of the Hachette Group.

The Hachette Group Giveaway:

What is up for grabs: The five books listed below and a chance to win a bonus book.

Who will win: Three winners will be selected. Simply leave a comment on this post. When you post your comment, be sure to enter your correct email address in the email field. That’s how I’ll notify the winners. Winners must live in the USA or Canada (sorry) and the books cannot be shipped to a PO Box.

When and how the winners will be chosen: Sunday, November 1. Winners will be selected randomly using numbers generated by random.org.

Notification: Winners will be notified by email. The Hachett Group will send the books to the winners. The Hachett Group will also be selecting random winners to receive a copy of The Bride Collector by Ted Dekker.

Here are the books (links go to Amazon.)

The Heretic Daughter
The Heretic’s Daughter By Kathleen Kent

Sins of the Flesh By Caridad Piñeiro
Sins of the Flesh By Caridad Piñeiro

when-ghosts-speak-by-mary-ann-winkowski
When Ghosts Speak By Mary Ann Winkowski

BoneMan's Daughters By Ted Dekker
BoneMan’s Daughters By Ted Dekker

historian-by-elizabeth-kostova
The Historian By Elizabeth Kostova

I’ve only read one of these, The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, and definitely recommend it. The others look interesting. Thanks to all who participate and good luck!

Book Review: Green by Jay Lake

Green by Jay LakeOK I’ve got to come out and say that Green by Jay Lake is a weird book. Now I know what you may be thinking, because I’m thinking it too. You’re thinking, “The Dark is such a weird and bizarre monster that he probably thinks David Lynch movies are perfectly normal and romantic comedies are strange.” You’re right after a fashion, but believe me, I know weird when I see it. Sometimes weird is like David Lynch movies and other times weird is like opening a closet to investigate a strange noise and finding a giant Persian cat doing something unnatural with a goose. The goose might be wearing a hat and saying something over and over in Portuguese. This book is a little like that kind of weird. (Please note that the above scenario has never happened to me, I swear.)

Yes yes this is a fantasy book. It’s not exactly what I call “dark fantasy” but it was dark enough to keep my attention. Green is set in another world somewhat like our own and maybe in Asia somewhere. A little girl is sold by her dirt-farmer father to a man who hopes to turn her into a concubine. Fortunately or unfortunately, the man also has a hidden agenda. Besides the concubine gig, he also wishes to turn the little girl into an assassin to kill the Duke. The Duke rules the city and has used magic to live far beyond his years. The man wishes to end the Duke’s life and rule. For the most part, the reader is left to ponder who is part of this conspiracy and who is not. Along with being taught how to be a very well educated concubine, the girl is basically ritually abused and also, on the sly, schooled on how to be an assassin.

As you can probably guess, after years of this sort of treatment the resulting person, who calls herself “Green”, ends up being a little twisted. While she is ultimately compelling and sympathetic, Green spends most of the book in a bad mood and is vaguely naive and unpredictably violent. Green likes to dress up in strange menacing costumes and wander around cities. Green joins a cult of women who hunt down and kill murderers. Green finds she has a taste for being tied up and lashed to get her kicks.

The book is quite the page-turner. You know the kind of book where if you’re busy with something else (like say you’re toiling over some diabolical project in your lab), it’s almost like the taste of the book is stuck in your head, and you want to go read some more? It’s that kind of book. The writing is excellent. The characters are well-developed and compelling. The story is suspenseful. My only complaint is that it gets kind of bogged down in a few places and I found myself thinking that the plot ended up being kind of more complicated than it needed to be. At the same time, I couldn’t stop reading it.

Creepy Factor: 1 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 4 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 3 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 1 out of 5

Final result: We have a winner. If you’re a fan of Fantasy fiction and you’re looking for a good book to read I say look no further. I also have to say that the cover art by Dan Dos Santos is spectacular. I found you can download wallpaper-sized copies of the cover here, after you jump through some hoops.

Green by Jay Lake – Tor Books – 2009
Jay Lake on Amazon
Green by Jay Lake on Amazon

Many thanks to Tor Books for sending me this book to review. (See my disclosure policy.) Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. Hopefully next time I review a nice juicy horror novel with loads of Weird Erotic Tension. I’m working on it! See you next time!

Weekly Geeks: Interview with Cthulhu

In this week’s Weekly Geek the assignment is to interview a character in a book or story. Today I have the honor to interview Cthulhu, who many of you know is the subject of stories by H.P. Lovecraft among others. In particular, his adventures as a horrible monster are detailed in Lovecraft’s 1926 masterpiece “The Call of Cthulhu” first published in Weird Tales. In the 83 years since then Cthulhu has gone on to be a menacing media sensation. So without further ado:

cthulhu-top

Welcome Cthulhu and thanks for agreeing to meet with me and not squish me like an insect. Can I call you Cthulhu?
Yes. Although I prefer an unintelligible word which translates to “That which must awaken soon and devour the stars and the Earth.”

Wow that’s great. First I want to ask you: You have enjoyed an increase in popularity of late. To what do you attribute your undying popularity?
Well it’s simple marketing 101, really. You need to have a compelling story. Something people can relate to, or maybe something that changes the way they see the world around them. Perhaps tell them something that adds meaning to their brief, pitiful, worm-like existences.

We just had a much-watched election in the United States and, as usual, there were a lot of “Cthulhu for President” bumper stickers. How do you feel about those?
I want the people of Earth to know that it is only when the stars are aligned that my terrible time will come and my minions and I will reshape this puny planet. In the meantime, my lawyers are working to stop these people. I feel that they are diluting my brand.

I have to stop a moment and admit that you’re one of my heroes. Do you have any recommendations for monsters who are just starting out?
I think one of the best decisions a monster can make early on is to be an undying evil. Things like vampires, ghosts, the headless horseman, Jason out at Crystal Lake, and up until recently, Voldemort. They all get the importance of not dying.

Where do you think Voldemort went wrong?
Voldemort first got into trouble when he decided to mess with children. Children are easier to menace, and you get a bigger reaction in the short term, but eventually children become teenagers, and then they get crushes on each other and have all this petty drama going on. A monster can end up feeling pushed aside. And then it’s hard to keep going.

Very interesting. So I’m going to ask you some quick “either-or” questions.
OK.

Good vs. Evil or Chaos vs. Order?
I really think that it’s more complicated than that. A monster needs an inner compass to guide him or her or it. Whether it be devouring hapless victims in a cave, stalking teenagers, or making doomed artists go insane, a monster really needs to listen to that inner voice. What do YOU want to do with your night?

King Kong or Godzilla?
King Kong, definitely. Oh Godzilla has his destructive side, and the lizard has a charming victory dance, but King Kong is a tragic story and I think it’s very moving.

Morticia Addams or the Beldam (a.k.a. the “other mother”) from Coraline?
Morticia all the way. (Laughs horrifyingly) Although there is something about the Beldam. I’d like to show her how to thread a needle, if you know what I mean.

Ha ha. Yes. OK. I’m going to say a word and I want you to say whatever comes to your mind:

Blue.
Black.

House.
Black.

Dream.
Black.

Um. Flower?
Black.

Fairy dust.
Black.

Wow thanks. I’m learning so much here. It’s like being in a monster master class. Do you get on the internet? And if you do, do you have any favorite things?
Yes recently the old ones figured out how to get satellite internet to my ruined city under the ocean. I just discovered this YouTube video of a cat who plays the piano. I play it over and over. (Editor’s note: We think Cthulhu is talking about this clip.)

I’m going to take a page from “Inside the Actor’s Studio” and ask, what is your favorite curse word?
I would love to share that but, if you could express it in print, it would most certainly make your readers go insane. If it didn’t kill them instantly, it would snuff their tiny minds out like candles.

Wow. Well we only have time for one more question and I’ll let you go. Well, Cthulhu, we all know you lay in wait under the ocean in R’lyeh…
Yes. Dreaming.

What do you miss most about the surface?
Depending on how you look at the ocean, it is always Spring or Fall under the sea. I miss a good Winter.

Wow well thanks again. It’s been a real pleasure talking with you. Thanks for answering my questions.
The pleasure is all mine, really. Thanks for having me.

cthulhu-bottom

Vote for Carrie White!

As I said last week, I’ve always had a crush on Carrie White from Brian De Palma’s movie adaptation of Stephen King’s masterpiece, Carrie.

I’m thinking that I can feel just a degree of how the “Vote for the Worst” guys must feel during the American Idol season. Except in my case I want you to vote for the most awesomely awful. You can show your support for your favorite monster (that’s me, naturally) and vote for dear Carrie over at AMC, where they are having a Supernatural Teen Tournament.

Vote for Carrie White

Vote for Carrie White

It's Not Too Late To Vote for Carrie!

This in the “I couldn’t tell you why but I’ve always had a crush on her” department, I have to admit that I’ve always had a crush on Carrie White from Brian De Palma’s movie adaptation of Stephen King’s masterpiece, Carrie. If you have not read the book AND seen the movie then I suggest you do both as soon as possible. Both will make you sleep less well for weeks, I assure you. While you’re waiting for Amazon or Netflix to deliver your homework, you can show your support for your favorite monster (that’s me, naturally) and vote for dear Carrie over at AMC, where they are having a Supernatural Teen Tournament.

Vote for Carrie White!

Vote for Carrie White!

P.S. Sure I like Hermione Granger too, but not as much. Who do you think should win???

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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