Monday, October 14, 2024

Bad Moon Rising: Newer names in horror fiction

Compiled by Christy 

October is the time for spooky stories and creepy tales!  Usually some of  the first names that come to mind when horror books are mentioned are Stephen King, Dean Koontz, John Saul, Shirley Jackson, F. Paul Wilison, Anne Rice,  and Octavia Butler. Here are some newer names in horror whose books you may want to try:

Grady Hendrix’s books are lively, bold, and not without a little social commentary. From a haunted IKEA-like big box store to a teen possessed in the 1980s, Hendrix’s premises are attention grabbing. In The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires, a group of housewives in the 1990s must team up to battle a vampire. Hendrix’s other works include Horrorstör, My Best Friend’s Exorcism, The Final Girl Support Group, We Sold Our Souls, How to Sell a Haunted House, and 2025's Witchcraft for Wayward Girls.

  

Though he has written over a dozen novels, Stephen Graham Jones’ breakthrough hit was 2019’s The Only Good Indians, a tale of a vengeful elk spirit. Giving the horror genre a needed breath of fresh air, Jones continued his success with My Heart is a Chainsaw, the first in a trilogy about Jade, a slasher-obsessed teenage outcast who fears (hopes?) her slasher fantasies will soon come true. She tries to warn her small town officials but is repeatedly rebuffed. The other two books are Don't Fear the Reaper and Angel of Indian Lake. His most recent title is I Was a Teenage Slasher.

Clay McLeod Chapman has dabbled in mystery and even middle grade novels, but his most recent releases have been horror. The Remaking weaves the story of an old folk legend, the 1970s movie it’s based on, the 1990s remake, and a subsequent podcast into a meta-horror tale. Whisper Down the Lane is a fictionalized take of the McMartin preschool trial that occurred during the Satanic Panic of the 1980s. Other titles include What Kind of Mother and Ghost Eaters. 

Darcy Coates is an Australian author who specializes in horror and suspense who has been called "the queen of atmospheric suspense". One popular series is Gravekeeper. Keira is a psychic who can help the dead move on, but there's something menacing lurking in the shadows. The first book in the series is The Whispering Dead.

Tananarive Due writes horror fiction with supernatural elements, folklore, and socially conscious themes. In The Good House, Angela returns to her Gramma's house only to find a malevolent force seems to inhabit the place, and it drives people to desperate and violent acts. 

  

Rivers Solomon has tried her hand at science fiction and general fantasy. With Sorrowland, she blends gothic horror, fantasy, magical realism, and body horror into what The Guardian calls “an electrifying gothic techno-thriller”. Vern is heavily pregnant when she escapes from a strict religious compound into the woods. After giving birth to twins, Vern vows to keep them away from the dangerous outside world. She would do anything to protect her children, even if means strangely transforming her body. Solomon's upcoming novel is a haunted house tale called Model Home.

Vampires, coming-of-age, magical realism, socialites, the Jazz Age, ancient Mayan gods, 1970s noir. Silvia Moreno-Garcia is not interested in her works staying in a particular box. In Mexican Gothic, Moreno-Garcia takes on gothic horror and tells the story of Noemí who is summoned by her frantic cousin Catalina to come save her from her new husband. Noemí travels to the Mexican countryside to the remote mansion of the newlyweds, in the hopes of helping in some way. But digging deeper in this family’s past may just lead to violence and madness. Moreno-Garcia also has a recent title about a cursed film called Silver Nitrate.

Christina Henry is best known for her dark re-tellings of classic stories such as Lost Boy (Peter Pan) and Horseman (The Legend of Sleepy Hollow). In The House That Horror Built, a single mom takes a job cleaning a revered horror director's house – only to discover some terrifying secrets. Other titles include Near the Bone and Good Girls Don't Die.

 

  

Alma Katsu is an award-winning author of thrillers, horror, urban fantasy, and historical fiction. She blends genres to create unforgettable stories. In The Hunger, she vividly tells the story of the Donner Party disaster… only with supernatural elements. Vivid descriptions, strong characterizations, and a rising sense of dread make the travelers wonder if there's something out there – or if there's something among them. 

Paul Tremblay’s novels are complex and stylishly written.  His horror stories often involve ordinary people who find themselves in extraordinary situations.  A Head Full of Ghosts is the story of the struggling Barrett family.  John Barrett has lost his job and has sought solace in religion, causing conflict with his wife.  When their elder daughter begins to behave erratically, John believes she has become possessed. Tremblay is also the author of The Cabin at the End of the World and Horror Movie.

Friday, October 11, 2024

The Art of the English Murder by Lucy Worsley

 



Reviewed by Jeanne

Historian Worsley sets out to do an exploration of famous murders and the literature they inspired.  She begins by telling the reader about Thomas De Quincey’s 1827 essay, “On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts,” which purports to be the thoughts of a member of the imaginary “Society of Connoisseurs in Murder” who explain what makes a good murder and rates them according to their qualities.  De Quincey is actually commenting on a cultural phenomenon of the time: murder as something exciting and entertaining.

Worsley pinpoints the start of this fascination with the 1811 Ratcliffe Highway murders.  A married couple, their three-month-old son, and their apprentice were discovered brutally murdered in their shop/home; twelve days later, another merchant, his wife, and a serving girl were slaughtered.  Public interest was intense; Worsley says that it created a new class of journalism, murder reporting.  It seemed that the British public could not get enough of such stories.  Newspapers, cheap publications with vivid (and often invented) details of sensational stories, and even puppet shows pandered to this new form of entertainment.

During the course of the book, she discusses how writers helped this obsession and how over time, real cases were given fictional treatments.  All this was to help satisfy the public appetite for crime.  Early writers such as Wilkie Collins helped pave the way for later authors, such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie.

Along with the development of this murder mania, England was beginning to develop a police force.  At first these fledgling officers of the law were viewed with deep suspicion as busybodies and unreliable, but writers helped to turn the tide of public opinion.  Charles Dickens was one of the early proponents of the police; he wrote glowing articles about the new detective branch and even used real officer Inspector Field as a model for his Bleak House character Inspector Branch.

Readers of both true crime and fictional crime will find much of interest in this book, written with Worsley’s breezy charm.

Note: There was a TV series hosted by Worsley on this topic under the title “A Very British Murder.”

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

A Season with the Witch by J.W. Ocker

 Note:  This blog was first run in 2018 but we thought it was worth running again!




Reviewed by Christy


            J.W. Ocker likes to travel quite a bit. But his destinations are almost always weird – so much so that he regularly documents his adventures in the travelogue blog Odd Things I’ve Seen. He’s written several books on his travels including Poe-Land: The Hallowed Haunts of Edgar Allan Poe.  To write  A Season with the Witch, he moves his wife and daughters into Salem, MA for the entire month of October to observe and participate in their Haunted Happenings. Anyone with a love of history and all things weird and creepy would probably get a kick out of Salem during the month of Halloween. Just be sure to book many, many months in advance.

            Ocker begins with a brief overview of the Salem Witch Trials and America’s fascination with them. He describes historical sites pertinent to the trials including grave sites, judges’ homes, and where the gallows supposedly stood. (Behind a Walgreens now, in case you’re interested.) He then goes on to discuss the various kitschy museums around town and even throws in some pirate and maritime history for good measure. He interviews street performers, street preachers, shop and restaurant owners, actual witches who live and practice in Salem, and regular every day Salemites. He eats carnival food and drinks Candy Corntinis. (Any autumn or Halloween themed cocktail he sees, he tries.) He visits the filming locations for movies like Hocus PocusThe Lords of Salem and a string of Salem-related episodes of Bewitched. He also talks in depth about the often-maligned statue of Elizabeth Montgomery. On the big night he and his wife take their daughters trick or treating down a street where the residents sit on their porches to hand out candy. (And in one case, pumpkin pie jello shots for the adults!) One cheery resident wrote down where each trick or treater was from (she was already up to six different states), and another proclaimed he had given out 900 pieces of candy the previous year. And that’s not even getting into the wild party that is Essex Pedestrian Mall on Halloween Night.

            This book was so much fun to read. Ocker’s writing is warm, conversational, and often times laugh out loud funny. As a self-described “spooky person”, he was clearly having a blast living in and writing about Salem, and it’s contagious.  Although I would love to visit Salem myself one day I already feel like I’ve at least passed through.

            The only negative thing I can say about A Season with the Witch is that it is full of simple grammatical and spelling mistakes. He gets names wrong (including Jack Skellington and Rob Zombie’s wife), and it seems as if a more thorough proof reading was skipped. I’m not sure why that would be unless they were rushing to get it out in time for Halloween. Regardless, while irritating, it wasn’t enough to damper my enjoyment. I think anyone who is interested in history, pop culture, travel, or Halloween will enjoy this book immensely.

Monday, October 7, 2024

Burning Bright by Ron Rash; and Other Appalachian Authors

 

The Bristol Public Library together with Washington County Virginia Public Library System and the Birthplace of Country Music Museum were awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for The Big Read.  The theme is “Where We Live,” and the book selected is Burning Bright by Ron Rash.  Free copies of the book will be available at all three locations while supplies last.  A wide array of programs will be available, including book discussions, author talks, creative writing workshops, and more. Click here for more information. 



Ron Rash is known for both his novels and his short stories which portray life in the Appalachian region.  A professor and a poet, Rash’s stories can be gritty and beautiful at the same time.  His stories are set in various time periods but all are memorable.  Burning Bright is a superb collection of his stories; novels include The Cove and Serena.

Other Appalachian authors include:

Lee Smith was born in Grundy, VA and began writing stories in elementary school. She is the author of many acclaimed novels and short story collections, including Family Linen, Black Mountain Breakdown, Fair and Tender Ladies, and Devil’s Dream.

Silas House was working as a rural mail carrier just before he sold his first novel, Clay’s Quilt. Clay Sizemore is a young miner who is falling in love with Alma, a talented fiddler trying to escape an abusive husband. Other titles include A Parchment of Leaves and The Coal Tattoo.          


Sharyn McCrumb is best known for her Ballad novels set in Appalachia. Many draw on regional history and legends as part of the story.  Titles include She Walks These Hills, Unquiet Grave, The Ballad of Tom Dooley, and The Devil Amongst the Lawyers.

Julia Keller was a journalist before turning her attention to fiction.  Her Bell Elkins series follows a prosecutor in the rural West Virginia town of Acker’s Gap.  In A Killing in the Hills, the first book in the series, three men are gunned down in a local dinner in broad daylight. To make matters worse, one of the witnesses was Bell’s own teenage daughter. Keller shows both the beauty and the troubles of the area, and the harm addiction brings.

Wiley Cash writes about his native North Carolina in his gothic, character-driven novels.  Like Rash, Cash doesn’t hesitate to show the darker side of human nature but love can be a powerful countermeasure.  His first novel was A Land More Kind Than Home.          

Ann Pancake grew up in West Virginia and her writing tends to be set in the Appalachian region.  Her work includes novel, short stories, and essays.  Strange as This Weather Has Been is a contemporary novel about a family dealing with the rise and fall of the mining industry and mountaintop removal. 



Amy Greene writes novels set in East Tennessee.  Long Man is set in 1936, when the TVA wants to dam the river and flood the surrounding communities. Annie Clyde Dotson’s family has lived on this land for generations, and she is determined to try to hold on to it for her daughter.

Denise Giardina writes a variety of historical fiction. Born in Bluefield, WV, she is the author of two acclaimed Appalachian novels.  Storming Heaven begins in the 1890s, when miners began to unionize; Unquiet Earth picks up in the 1930s. Giardina likes to tell her stories through her characters, presenting different viewpoints.

Brian Panowich writes gritty thrillers that have been dubbed “Country Noir” for vivid landscapes and violent crime.   In Bull Mountain, a sheriff whose family has lived on the land for generations has to contend with balancing duty and family ties. 

Other authors to consider:  Adriana Trigiani, Jesse Stuart, Barbara Kingsolver, Robert Morgan, Charles Frazier

Friday, October 4, 2024

The Auctioneer by Joan Samson

 



Reviewed by Christy

In Paperbacks from Hell, Grady Hendrix covers the history of the horror paperback boom of the 1970s and 1980s. Some of these novels had a lasting impact on the horror genre but were still lost to time. Thanks to the small printing press Valancourt Books, several of these titles were re-released with their original cover art. The Auctioneer, published in 1976, was one such title. In it, author Joan Samson tells the story of a hardscrabble New England town helplessly taken over by a smooth talking auctioneer who comes once a week to ask for donations for his auction. But what if you've given up everything you're willing to part with? Well, the auctioneer has ways to be very convincing.

            Admittedly, this was a very slow read for me. It is meandering and repetitive and because of that, I was never in a big hurry to get back to it. John, one of the protagonists, is an obnoxious character. Seemingly always simmering with rage over his family's plight, he constantly hesitates to do anything about it. Even when his wife pleads for them to leave. I understand that's one of the themes of the story: why does an entire TOWN go along with this? But it still makes for a frustrating read.

            Despite this, I'm glad I read it. I think it's worth checking out, especially if you're interested in the history of the horror genre as a whole. Unfortunately, the topic of gentrification is one that still resonates to this day. Some negative reviews suggest "others have done it better" (specifically Stephen King with Needful Things), and maybe that's true but I still think there's value in reading the origins of inspiration. Particularly if a forgotten female writer gets her day in the sun.

          

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Nevermore: Hummingbird's Gift, Echo, Mr. Smith

 


Nevermore 8-13-24: Reported by Rita

The Hummingbird’s Gift by Sy Montgomery

Hummingbirds fascinate people around the world. The lightest birds in the sky, hummingbirds are capable of incredible feats, such as flying backward, diving at speeds of sixty-one MPH, and beating their wings more than sixty times a second. Miraculous creatures, they are also incredibly vulnerable when they first emerge from their eggs. That’s where Brenda Sherburn comes in.

I love everything she writes! This is a quick read full of fascinating information.    –CD           5 stars

 


Echo by Pam Muñoz Ryan

Lost in the Black Forest, Otto meets three mysterious sisters and finds himself entwined in a prophecy, a promise, and a harmonica. Decades later, three children, Friedrich in Germany, Mike in Pennsylvania, and Ivy in California, find themselves caught up in the same thread of destiny in the darkest days of the twentieth century, struggling to keep their families intact and tied together by the music of the same harmonica.

A very good book. I listened to the audiobook and highly recommend enjoying it that way.    –MH   5 stars

 

Mr. Smith by Louis Bromfield

This is the story of an army major, a well-to-do Midwesterner stationed on a small island in the Pacific. The story is told on two levels of time: the main thread follows the life of Wolcott Ferris, growing up in a Midwest town in the throes of becoming a city; the transitions tell of his months of self-discovery on an isolated Pacific Island during the war and of the other misfits who served under him.

I thought the POV was negative – a rant. I’m glad I read it, but I am not sure I would recommend it.        –PP     4 stars

 

Other Books Mentioned

How to Land on Your Feet: Life Lessons from My Cat by Jamie Shelman

The Hawk's Done Gone by Mildred Haun

Hanger by Vic Edwards

The Pawprints of History: Dogs and the Course of Human Events by Stanley Coren

Ship of Theseus by V.M. Straka

The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

The Witches of New York: a Novel by Ami McKay

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane

Bear: a Novel by Julia Phillips

Troubled: a Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class by Rob Kim Henderson

No Time Like the Future: an Optimist Considers Mortality by Michael J. Fox

Servants' Stories: Life Below Stairs in Their Own Words, 1800–1950 by Michelle Higgs

The Glassmaker by Tracy Chevalier

The Antique Hunter's Guide to Murder: a Novel by C. L. Miller

The Secret History of Bigfoot: Field Notes on a North American Monster by John O'Connor

 

New Books

The Keeper of Stars by Buck Turner

The Bright Sword: a Novel of King Arthur by Lev Grossman

Monday, September 30, 2024

New Books in October!

 

  


Andrews, Donna  Rockin’ Around the Chickadee

Armstrong, Kelley  I’ll Be Waiting

Banville, John  The Drowned

Beaton, M.C.  Killing Time (Agatha Raisin)

Child, Lee & Child, Andrew  In Too Deep (Jack Reacher)

Connelly, Michael  The Waiting (Ballard & Bosch)

Cornwell, Patricia  Identity Unknown  (Scarpetta)

Erdrich, Louise  The Mighty Red

Griffiths, Elly  The Man in Black:  And Other Stories

Hannon, Irene  Over the Edge

Harkaway, Nick  Karla’s Choice: A John Le Carre Novel (Note:  Nick Harkaway is John Le Carre's son)


  



Hawkins, Paula  The Blue Hour

Kashiwai, Hisashi The Restaurant of Lost Recipes

Kelly, Julia  Betrayal at Blackthorn Park

Klavan, Andrew  A Woman Underground

Korelitz, Jean Hanff  The Sequel

Macomber, Debbie  A Christmas Duet

Mallery, Susan  One Big Happy Family

McCall Smith, Alexander  The Great Hippopotamus Hotel (No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency)

McFadden, Freida  The Boyfriend

O’Connor, Carlene  You Have Gone Too Far (County Kerry)

Patterson, James  Murder Island (Doc Savage)

Penny, Louise  The Grey Wolf

Penrose, Andrea  Murder at King’s Crossing (Wexford and Sloane)

Prose, Nita  The Mistletoe Mystery (Molly the Maid)

Rankin, Ian  Midnight and Blue

Steel, Danielle  Triangle