Charlaine Harris . . . the woman who changed what vampires and werewolves are supposed to be. Vampires who do not sparkle but yet give off a vibe of lust. Werewolves who do not have emotional streaks but those who are tough yet gentlemanly.
Club Dead is the third book in the Sookie Stackhouse series. In all
honesty, I do not follow the TV series. I like the books better. Anyways, off topic. Club Dead (or Josephine's) is a club set in Jackson where shifters, were's, vampires, and humans go. It is put under a spell where it is difficult to find, except for those who are in the supernatural families along with their humans.
In the beginning of the book, Bill (Sookie's boy-toy) is very mysterious, and pretty much pisses off Sookie. The next day, Bill has disappeared and Sookie goes about her normal day as a waitress. All of a sudden Eric (whom I love), Pam, and Chow get together to tell Sookie that Bill is missing, and that they think something terrible has happened. Well, Alcide comes along the next day to help her pack and take her to Jackson to help find Bill. Well, the people in Jackson who know Alcide believes that Sookie is his new girlfriend. Alcide takes Sookie to Club Dead to see if she can get any readings on clues to find Bill. That is as far as I am going to say. Now, let's talk characters.
The characters are a real masterpiece. Sookie, a telepath who is a southern charm, is in love with Bill, a vampire. I do not get that much of a vibe off of either one of them. Although, some of the supporting characters I am into. There is Eric who is the Sheriff of the area surrounding Bon Temps. Eric, who is also the owner of Fangtasia, a club in that area. Then you have Alcide, oohhhh, Alcide. He is my new crush in books. This is the first for werewolves for me. He is a sweetheart with a temper to spare. Alcide who has the hots for Sookie, and is waiting for her. Oh boy. Since I do not watch the show, I had to look up to see if Alcide had fit my image. See for yourself to the left heehee. I pictured the body, but the face a little different.
So . . . do I like the book? HELL YEAH!!! I actually do like her writing and her story lines for the last three books that I have read, and I have number 4 sitting on the TV stand waiting for me to read, but I have to give my attention to my other books while I am on vacation lol. I do recommend reading the books. For the first time falling in love with a werewolf, EVER this is a good change for me. Check them out, and give Charlaine a shout out about how good her talent is!!!
http://www.charlaineharris.com/
https://www.facebook.com/CharlaineHarris
Pull up a blanket, a cup of coffee (or tea for others), a nice little comfy corner of a couch (or your side of the bed), and spread the joy reading. If you like anything paranormal (werewolves, vampires, witches, demons and more) this is the place for you. If you have any suggestions for me, let me know. I will try them out and put what I think on here.
Monday, August 12, 2013
Saturday, July 6, 2013
H.P. Mallory - Fire Burn & Cauldron Bubble
So, my dear hubster got me a tablet for me as an early "congratulations on finishing your associate's" gift, and the next day, I just started downloading like crazy. The first thing I started looking for was paranormal books that were free. I wanted to download free books on authors I have never tried because at least if I did not like the story, I did not spend money on it, and if I did, I am more than willing to pay for the next book(s). Well, the first book that I downloaded was H.P. Mallory's Fire Burn & Cauldron Bubble.At first, I did not know what I was getting myself into. A woman by the name of Jolie Wilkins who owns a shop and works with her friend Christa in a little place called L.A. It was a normal day, when all of a sudden a ghost shows up to Jolie, she tries to acknowledge it and then the ghost disappears. Not too long after the ghost disappears, a young man with an English accent shows up by the name of Rand. Jolie and Christa taken back by his handsomeness, asked Jolie if she can help him with some "magic" as in see what is in his future. The first time, there was no luck, so he schedules more meetings, and each time there was some progress, Jolie not thinking she was able to do this, but starts realizing the more she reads into this so called future of Rand, the more she is believing. Then, finally, Rand asks her out to dinner, and starts telling her what she is capable of doing, and that he is a warlock (a male witch).
Jolie, not sure of what Rand is talking about, goes along with it. He asks her and Christa to a house where a man he worked with long ago was killed and would like to know who killed him. With the help of Rand, Jolie was able to astral project to the past and see what happened. Well, she got more than she bargained for. Not only did she see who shot him, but she was able to bring him back to life!!! I KNOW RIGHT?!?!?! Rand, also amazed by her abilities thinking, maybe I should teach her more things that she can do. This can be projecting conversations with him through the mind and change her appearance. Well, the stopped talking for a bit, and a local witch invited her to a party the witch was throwing. She shows up and meets a vampire by the name of Sinjin. He gets under Jolie's skin, but she is still turned on by this vampire. She sees Rand, and finds out that this witch wants Jolie to join her clan and be her employer (master). Well, Rand is not having any of it so he decides he will be Jolie's Master. Well, this does not go very well with the witch and they end up having a duel in the middle of the party, with Rand winning. This is not even half of the book!!!
I do not want to give more information, considering this is an awesome book and I recommend it!!! Does it make you intrigued? Anyways, with witches, warlocks, vampires, werewolves, fairies, witches and warlocks who are shape-shifters, lots of magic and deceiving, this book is a mixture of everything that a paranormal book lover like me wants!!! Check it out on Kindle or in paperback and give it a whirl!!!
Thursday, May 9, 2013
The Harlequin by Laurell K Hamilton
The Harlequin. Book 15 of the Anita Blake series I have to admit, really was not one of my favorites. Although, it was a very good book, but for some reason, the men in her life are becoming more and more like annoying women. "You don't spend enough time with me", "I want this . . . I want that". Stuff that usually drives a man crazy, now I know why it drives them nuts.
Anyways, getting off track. The Harlequin is about these vampires that Marmee Noir created for her to be like "watchmen". If a clan of vampires get out of hand, the Harlequin will let them know.
Well, on a date with Nathanial (uhm, a male stripper who has hair down to his ankles, and lavender eyes. A body to die for. S & M. Sorry, again, getting off topic), Anita receives a package in a movie theater bathroom, with a white mask. Thinking it's from Nathanial, but finding out from Jean-Claude, the Harlequin are keeping their eyes on them considering it is white, they are being observed. Stuff hits the fan, the Harlequin hits their town, and both the Harlequin and Anita's group are staying with their laws, which clashes with the others. Which is a basic lose-lose situation for the both.
I am really trying not to give too much away, because like I have said before, there is a lot that goes on in these books. Long story short, a lot of stuff goes down, and she depends on her faithful partner Edward, who brings along not only his stepson but also a sadistic man who has a record of tearing women apart that has a specific profile. A profile that looks like Anita.
I think I have to stop here. If I go on any further I will give stuff away and I am not that type of person.
There are fight scenes, crazy sex, female-like companions, hot men, the list goes on for what a women can look for in her books.
If you would like more information on her other books, along with her Marry Gentry books you can follow her on Twitter, like her Facebook page, and even take a look at her website and check out some of her graphic novels (that are based on the Anita Blake series).
Anyways, getting off track. The Harlequin is about these vampires that Marmee Noir created for her to be like "watchmen". If a clan of vampires get out of hand, the Harlequin will let them know.
Well, on a date with Nathanial (uhm, a male stripper who has hair down to his ankles, and lavender eyes. A body to die for. S & M. Sorry, again, getting off topic), Anita receives a package in a movie theater bathroom, with a white mask. Thinking it's from Nathanial, but finding out from Jean-Claude, the Harlequin are keeping their eyes on them considering it is white, they are being observed. Stuff hits the fan, the Harlequin hits their town, and both the Harlequin and Anita's group are staying with their laws, which clashes with the others. Which is a basic lose-lose situation for the both. I am really trying not to give too much away, because like I have said before, there is a lot that goes on in these books. Long story short, a lot of stuff goes down, and she depends on her faithful partner Edward, who brings along not only his stepson but also a sadistic man who has a record of tearing women apart that has a specific profile. A profile that looks like Anita.
I think I have to stop here. If I go on any further I will give stuff away and I am not that type of person.
There are fight scenes, crazy sex, female-like companions, hot men, the list goes on for what a women can look for in her books.
If you would like more information on her other books, along with her Marry Gentry books you can follow her on Twitter, like her Facebook page, and even take a look at her website and check out some of her graphic novels (that are based on the Anita Blake series).
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Day 31: Joshua Skye

Halloween has always been my favorite holiday, autumn my favorite season. Most of my stories take place in the fall. My novel, "The Angels of Autumn" (Pink Pepper Press) certainly does. The intrinsic eeriness in this time of year meshes well with my fascination of the paranormal, all those things that go bump in the night. Some of my earliest childhood memories are of my mother telling me scary stories, true stories. Ghosts, ghouls, aliens, and other creepy creatures, her tales crawled with them and I was endlessly enthralled.
It is perhaps no surprise then that I love to tell scary stories as well. I've been writing ever since I can remember and loving it. There's nothing quite like watching someone read one of your stories, their reactions eliciting perhaps a morbid joy. One of my most provocative tales, "Matriz de Madre" (KMS Books LLC) never ceases to freak people out. I've been told I have the kind of sense of humor that grew up in a dark basement. It's an astute observation.
Some of those early tales have been the basis for more mature stories I've written as an adult. My story "Timothy" was first born a long time ago and has haunted me through the years, rewritten many times until the demonic little imp was fully realized in all of his gruesome glory. He has a home now, nestled snugly among other great yarns in "Childhood Nightmares: Under the Bed" from Sirens Call Publications. I've written many stories of childhood terrors but "Timothy" will always have a special place at the proverbial campfire. He really like to scare people, you see.
Adults have fears too, and it is equally fun to invite those to the party. Knowing that yes there really are such things as monsters, and understanding them from an adult's perspective, the things that lurk in the shadows are often times more disturbing from a grown-up's point of view. Its one thing to know that monsters are out there, its quite another to realize what their true intentions are. My stories "Trick" and "Cathy's Treat" in "31 More Nights of Halloween" from Rainstorm Press, explores monsters from both perspectives. The ghoul in "Trick" could very well be Timothy's mischievous brother, while the monsters in "Cathy's Treat" are a parent's worst nightmares. As a parent myself, nothing could be more terrifying.
Do I believe in the paranormal? Absolutely. I've seen ghosts, unidentified flying objects, and I've had strange otherworldly experiences. Many of these things I've experienced make appearances in my stories. A being of light walking across a field is an image that haunts me and my work because I actually saw it as a child. A character in my novel "The Singing Wind" (JMS Books LLC) speaks of just such an experience. Was it a demon? An angel? An Alien? I explore such concepts often in my work perhaps in an attempt to explain what I had seen. That in itself is a frightening idea. What if all authors of the paranormal are trying, through the medium, to explain things they'd actually experienced? Stories take on a more disturbing depth with that in mind.I think its time to revisit one of my favorite collections of scary stories. "Night Shift" by Stephen King. I love to snuggle down in my bed, pull the covers up to keep the chill at bay, and read a great scary story. Maybe if I read out loud I'll have a few ghostly visitors, it is that time of year after all. Happy Halloween!
**Note: There is a HUGE giveaway at the end of the month
after Halloween!!! To enter for the giveaway, comment on the blogs. The more
you comment, the bigger chance you have at winning!!! There will only be 1
winner, and the winner will be announced 1st week of November!!! Good Luck!!!
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Day 28: Emily Fayad - S.A. Swiniarski
First
off I want to thank Lacey for inviting me to get involved with her “31 Books of
Halloween”. When Lacey first emailed me
about being involved I was really excited.
Halloween is one of my favorite holidays and I jumped at the chance to get
in on the fun. But what to write
about! There are so many wonderful books
out there it was going to be hard for me to pick just one, but after much
consideration I got it. I decided to
pick a book that may not be very well known, written by an author who may also
be a new name to many. The novel I speak
of is “Raven” by S.A. Swiniarski and was published by DAW Books, Inc. in
1996. Before stumbling upon this book,
tucked away and all alone on a random book shelf, I had never heard of either
the book or its author. However, after
reading the back I was hooked, and had to buy it. Then after reading it, within a single night,
it quickly became one of my favorite books and now I wish to give the author
the credit he deserves. Though I haven’t
written a book review in many, many years - I’m going to give it my best shot.
This
novel starts off with us finding the main character, Kane Tyler, waking up in a
dark, dismal storm tunnel with a horrible case of amnesia. He feels weak, scared and very unsure of
anything – including who he is and what happened to him. Finding nothing on his person that would give
him any useful clues, except for a lone hotel room key, he stumbles his way to
the road above and begins his journey to finding the truth. This journey takes
him from one horrifying discovery to another. Kane finds himself faced with a
string of shady characters and the realization that nothing is what it
seems. His journey takes us on a path to
the truth about who he is, the horrors of what happened to him, the realization
of what he must do now and the undeniable reality of what he has become... a
vampire.
An
excerpt from “Raven” – page 26
“…my
subconscious left me with a deep rage and a feeling that I had been in some
sense, raped.
“Maybe
I don’t want to remember.” I took a deep breath. “Stop talking to yourself in
the dark, people will think you’re nuts.”
I
groped for the light switch. A frosty
fluorescent flashed a few rattling strobes before it came on.
The
bathroom was a mess. Worst was the
bathtub. The water was black with dirt
and blood. Water had slopped over and
drenched the hex-tile floor, streaking it red and brown.”
This
novel takes you into the dark realms of paranormal horror – where vampires are
real, the lines between good and evil are blurred, and sometimes the only way
to get what you want is to become what you fear most.
This
is truly a wonderful novel and the author takes a new approach, with new
twists, and spins them with a well-known tale. I want to wish everyone a very scary and
wonderful Halloween.
Emily
Fayad, aspiring writer
DarkRose2001.blogspot.com
**Note: There is a HUGE giveaway at the end of the month
after Halloween!!! To enter for the giveaway, comment on the blogs. The more
you comment, the bigger chance you have at winning!!! There will only be 1
winner, and the winner will be announced 1st week of November!!! Good Luck!!!
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Day 25: Paul Western-Pittard Inteview
Let’s talk about the
first book Undreamed. A psychological thriller about a girl, Alice, who lives
two different lives. One in a dream and one in reality, but she is confused
between what is real and what is not. Have you lived a life that is in comparison
to this story? If not, what inspired you to write something with so many
twists?
Hi Lacey, and thanks for the opportunity to chat.
It’s hard to say what exactly was the inspiration for
Undreamed. I do know a large part came from that classic, lurking paranoid
question of: What if none of this was real? How would I ever know? For me,
anyway, that question is a mind-bender. We can only ever trust the evidence of
our senses, but what if they were somehow fooled? It’s a classic setup and used
in many different genres, but just like Alice mentions in the book, the
question of what’s real has existed as long as there have been people around to
think about it.
I was intrigued not only by the question, but what it would
mean to someone living inside that insanity, where they absolutely knew one
version of their lives was a fake, but not which one. What would it do to them?
How would they cope? How could you exist, knowing that one half of your life
was lie?
I actually set out to write it as simply as I could, with
chapters roughly ping-ponging between her dream life and her real one, but in
the end it does get crazy as it all unravels for her.
Movies like ‘The Game’ ‘The Cell’ and even ‘Fight Club’ have
helped flavour it, along with books like ‘The Magus’ and a lot of writing by
Lovecraft.
Now your other book
Jan and the Spooky Periscope Incident (The Chronicles of Jan). Which is a book
of short stories. It seems like a book of science fiction, completely different
from Undreamed. Is there any science fiction films or books that inspired these
short stories?
I’ve had a couple of people mention that the Jan stories
remind them a little of Douglas Adams, and whilst I never set out to write a
story in that style, his ‘Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ series is a big favourite
of mine. I guess I must be channeling some of that.
The Jan series is on the other end of the spectrum from
Undreamed. It’s geeky absurdist sci-fi comedy and a nerd-fest of badly used
science concepts. It’s a blast to write to this stuff because it’s such an
opposite and believe it or not, a sanity check from some of the darker things
I’m working on.
On your website
cerullean.net, you have a blog series The Barefoot Goddess. And I just want to
say that the illustrations are down right adorable. The first one is “The
Well-Taker”, you described the girl as “a creature of wishes”, collecting money
from a well and collecting the people’s
money. And you also described her as a “dream”. Is she a paranormal creature,
or a figment of everyone’s imagination?
Thank you. All the artwork on that series was created by
Wayne Bryant (@Wayneartist) on Twitter. We go back forever and the Barefoot
Goddess is an evolution of project we’ve been working on for a while.
Is the girl a dream or figment of someone’s imagination?
Well, that’s the question, isn’t it? The series (it’s very short) follows her
on a journey as she discovers her nature and the truth of her existence. It
isn’t at all what she first thinks it is. She is definitely real, through I’m
not entirely sure I’d want to meet her by the end of the series.
What inspired you to
write in this genre of books and short stories? Dreams from when you were a
child? Real life incidents that you transform into a fantasy?
I’m not drawn to a specific genre as such, but I love
stories that question identity and shake down the hero’s understanding of
what’s real. Stories that break the real world or hero’s world in some way.
As to what inspires it? I’ve seen things in real life that I
can’t explain, met people who seem to be connected in ways even harder to
explain. I love it when my assumptions about things turn out to be completely
wrong - because then I have to go back to square one and figure it all out
again. It’s this unsettled or liquid nature of truth that inspires me, I think.
What is your favorite
paranormal author or book?
Tough question. I’ve always enjoyed H.P Lovecraft, William
Hope Hodgson, Stephen King. I think I’d have to say Lovecraft, for his vast
worlds and (again) that sense of reality vs dream world.
I have asked this
question before, and I want your take on it as well. There has been many
paranormal books made into movies. What is your favorite movie based on a
paranormal book?
It would have to be ‘The Others’ (2001) It’s not so much
about the twist at the end as the whole build of fear and paranoia. It’s
different enough from ‘The Turn of the Screw’ on which it was based, but I
think as a film, it captures that psychological horror and sense of dread in
the book. In my opinion, scary isn’t about gore, it’s about staring at your
face in a mirror and seeing stranger.
Do you have anything
works in the making? If so, how about a little teaser?
Yes, a couple of things. The first is a serialised Urban
Fantasy novel called ‘The Transcedents’ which tells the story of Nick Lejune,
who discovers he’s at the centre of war between two rival groups of powerful
magic users. They both need him to stop a sickness that is ripping apart
reality and unmaking more and more of the world.
And ‘Godless’, a psychological horror novel set in a mining
town in the Australian desert. Tara Lakin, a reporter has been sent to cover
the anniversary of the mysterious disappearance of the town’s population thirty
years ago. Her report uncovers more than she could ever have imagined, and somewhere
in the desert, ghosts begin to stir, seeking revenge.
Last one, I have many
friends who are fans of the paranormal, and they are also aspiring writers.
What advice would you give them to make that spark into a flame?
Finish what you start. Learn from your mistakes and do the
next story better. Ideas are worth nothing unless they’re expressed, and
there’s no sense in tinkering with one thing for years until it’s ‘perfect’. It
never will be, so follow your passion, practice your craft, keep writing and
keep getting better.
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**Note: There is a HUGE giveaway at the end of the month
after Halloween!!! To enter for the giveaway, comment on the blogs. The more
you comment, the bigger chance you have at winning!!! There will only be 1
winner, and the winner will be announced 1st week of November!!! Good Luck!!!
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