Monday, 31 August 2009

City of Bones - Cassandra Clare


Clary is a normal teenage kid, she lives with her mum, gets into trouble for staying out late, hangs out with her friend.
Then Clary sees something strange in a nightclub and that's just the start of the major weird in her life. Her mother is abducted, she is seeing things that shouldn't exist and its increasingly difficult to know who to trust.

There are one or two things I thought this book could do without, the whole JC angle (you'll see when you get to the end) and some of the confused identity issues were a teensy bit unnecessary and melodramatic.

Other than that, which is minor, this was a really excellent YA novel and a great start to a series/trilogy. The characters were quirky and fun, the book was well paced and although it may be an indimidating size for some younger readers at nearly 500 pages, it flies by.

Contest Reminder

I am extending the deadline for the Neal Asher contest, because I am that good to you all.
The rules remain the same, comment on any of Harry or Chris' posts since Wednesday and be included in the random selection of one winner for a Hardback Copy of Orbus by Neal Asher.

Here is a review of Orbus by Walker of Worlds

and the posts included in the rules are:
Reviewer Time: Tia Nevitt
One Eyed Monster - Cinema's descent into stupidity
A Quiz
The Calling: David Mack
What do the famous read?
Harry's Blogsitting Agenda

you have until 7am tomorrow UK time to leave a comment on one of those posts to be in with a shot.

I will be reviewing the book soon myself and am enjoying it so far. It's not been a quick read, but it's been quite entertaining.

Sunday, 30 August 2009

Reviewer Time Preview: Tia Nevitt from "Fantasy Debut"

As promised I am featuring my commentary from my "Reviewer Time" entry for this week. If you are interested in the interview section then pop up at my place.
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This week on “Reviewer Time” I have invited one of the community’s most established and branched out reviewers namely Tia Nevitt from “Fantasy Debut”. Last week I decided to bring in some fresh blood with the fledgling “Only the Best Sci-Fi/Fantasy”, so now in order to counterbalance I’m featuring someone most blog commenters and lurkers have come to recognize as THE place to sample debut authors.

“Fantasy Debut ” raises an interesting topic about the mission of the creator and the blog’s function in the community. The number of publishers is growing, the number of books is growing as well, niches are created every year and the system of genres evolves in complexity and diversity. As a result more blogs spawn and try to cover as many titles as possible, but it often happens that content is repeated, since most bloggers have eclectic tastes and changing tastes and moods.

Defining oneself with just one movement or subgenre is nearly impossible and yet blogs about urban fantasy, shapeshifter romance and even geographically restricted fiction appear. Tia has managed to define her blog with one mission statement that does not overwhelm her completely and still stay true to her wide taste in fiction. Presenting debutants in a genre you are already well versed in not only gives you the opportunity to observe the shift in movements and usage of tropes and stories, but also allows you to compare them with what came before these debutants and search for the familiarities as well. I speak this as a reviewer seeing the merits, while as a reader it’s great to come to one sole place to learn about new names from across the wide spectrum of speculative fiction.

Apart from its function and mission statement “Fantasy Debut” continues to surprise with diverse content outside the multiple genres presented. Reviews from Tia and her contributors are in moderate length, written in conversational stream on consciousness that can easily relay the experience and general vibe around a novel. Tia is quite responsive to comments and acts a certain information bank with ready opinions for whatever you want to ask and she supplies interesting tidbits from the publishing scene.

“Fantasy Debut” is a mix from multiple elements that can be traced to many blogs, but the true uniqueness comes with her special Wednesdays dedicated to discussing writing and its aspects in order to take her readers behind the curtains of how a book is made. As a writer myself I also find it quite informative and productive to read published authors discuss topics that can affect my writing for the better. Another nailer in how awesome this site is the very humanitarian effort to help unpublished writers and self-published authors find a publishing house or at least receive a general feedback from a wide variety of readers, which is a valuable testing for potential buyers. “Discovery Showcases” try to break the myth that all self-published work is unbearable and un-publishable in a traditional manner and as such are second-hand works, if not third.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

"One Eyed Monster" or Cinema's Descent into Stupidity

Posted by Harry Markov

The inspiration for this post came to me after I spent around two hours with breaks watching an absurdity called “One Eyed Monster”. This is a B-movie about an alien possessing porn legend Ron Jeremy’s nine-incher and rape-murder the cast of an adult movie, who are stuck in a cabin during a blizzard.

The existence of such a premise alone poses the question: How far can people stretch the limits of creative stupidity? In the case of the Fields brothers, the creators of this movie, I’d have to guess that they can extend it the way Mr. Fantastic does with his extremities. But this idea wouldn’t be as bad, if it only remained an idea. Alas since there is a movie, then there was a whole group of people, who gave green light to this project, which poses another question: How low are the criteria in the movie industry to allow the shooting of this film, even if it’s a B-Movie? Apparently they go very low. I understand that today everybody has the freedom to put out any kind of content and I support this idea, but I am also a supporter of the idea that there should be at least a form of inner censorship that can say enough is enough.

Since I sound like a prick right about now, you must be wondering why I watched it and not say, delete it into oblivion, but instead bashing a very bad movie, when an intelligent person wouldn’t bother. That afternoon I had a friend over and our longest tradition together was to download and watch something extremely weird or idiotic and make fun of it. It’s a great way to manage stress, but this movie got me thinking where the movie industry is headed. Don’t think of me as a movie snob, because I believe that there is a cinema for every cultural need a human being can develop.

As such I also believe that there are movies that are solely created to entertain in one form or another without the need for mental input from the viewer. Transporter was all about action and adrenaline, while the first Scary Movies drove me to a heart failure with laughter at low brow humor and slapstick stupidity. I like it when a movie just triggers a mood that lasts and doesn’t involve much thinking, but I really like it when they are done right.

But where is the quality in the purely made for entertainment movies? This is question that “One Eyed Monster” led me to. This year has been very weak with movies made for that purpose. “Bride Wars” was bland; “The Haunting” as well; “The Spirit” and “Crank: High Voltage” almost made me vomit, while “Transporter 3” bored me and parodies haven’t been that great either. It would seem that right about now we are subjects to a steady stream of sequel series. Action is let loose without much of a plot like the edited mess of blurs that is Crank: High Voltage and nudity and sex are tastelessly served.

I guess sex is a major part in the movie industry, since sex generally sales, but lately this marketing technique has been boosted to new heights. For instance the upcoming “Jennifer’s Body” will heavily rely on Megan Fox exuding sex appeal rather than her acting ability. I think the movie will be good, but there are far too many grisly results where sex doesn’t help at all like the dildo scene from “Van Wilder: Senior Year”, “Crank: High Voltage” and “Zombie Strippers”, where necrophilia and striptease blend into something mind numbing.

I don’t judge, because for every movie there is a willing audience and I know that people wouldn’t enjoy things I watch and read and like in general, but I can’t help, but worry about the path the movie industry has taken. If the blockbuster list and new, strange productions speak about the taste in entertainment of today’s general viewer, then doesn’t that mean that flick by flick the general movie goer is dumbing down?

What do you think about this?

Friday, 28 August 2009

A Quiz to Get Your Comments

Relax, there are no right or wrong answers...just put your answers in the comments and remember: a comment in any post either Harry or I post over the weekend automatically enters you in the drawing for a beautiful hardbound copy of Neal Asher's Orbus!

To show you how easy it is, I'll include my answers in blue.
  1. What was the last book you purchased? You Shall Know Our Velocity! by Dave Eggers
  2. What was the last book you read? Inherent Vice by Thomas Pynchon
  3. What book are you currently reading? Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach
  4. Imagine yourself alone at a table in a quiet, dimly lit restaurant. You've got your current book with you, and the waiter arrives to bring you your dinner. What is it? (basically, we're talking about your ideal food complement - go wild) A beautiful cut of steak grilled rare, a glass of pinot noir, some bread, some cheese...jeez, I'm actually salivating on my keyboard.
OK, have at it!

"The Calling" by David Mack

Posted by Harry Markov

Title: "The Calling"
Author: David Mack
Pages: 336
Format: Novel
Genre: Urban Fantasy [officially a supernatural thriller]
Publisher: Pocket Books

What you can expect: An urban fantasy with an unlikely protagonist by the genre’s standards and rules so far with a touch of Christian mythology and a CSI/Law & Order aftertaste.

Pros: A protagonist that exists outside the urban fantasy male mold for danger boys; a decent albeit loose spin on Christian beliefs.

Cons: Unmemorable and more often than not stale prose, which is a matter of taste really, but I can’t be dishonest with my dissatisfaction. Another kidnapping story without reinvention of the trope.

Summary:


HEAR THE CALLING.

No one would guess by looking at Tom Nash that he's extraordinary, and that's just fine with him. A tall, broad-shouldered jack-of-all-trades from Sawyer, Pennsylvania, Tom has a knack for fixing things. He also hides a secret talent: he hears people's prayers. Stranger still, he answers them. Maybe it's because he's a handyman, but Tom feels compelled to fix people's problems. Which is all well and good -- until the soul-shattering plea of a terrified girl sends him on the darkest journey of his life....

SEEK THE TRUTH.

Heeding the call and leaving his home for New York City, Tom discovers a secret world beyond the range of mortal perception -- a world of angels and demons and those who serve them. With the guidance of a knowing stranger named Erin, Tom learns that he himself is one of The Called, born with a divine purpose and a daunting task: to help the powers of Heaven in the war against the agents of Hell, an army of fallen angels known as the Scorned. Thrust into an epic battle of the sacred and the profane, Tom Nash must find the girl who prayed for his help -- because her fate will determine whether humanity deserves to be saved, or damned for all eternity....


Characters: As you might have guessed already, I am not going to be as flattering as I would have liked to be with “The Calling”, but what can you do when a book doesn’t work for you other than share why it didn’t. As usual I will start with characterization and then move down to the other components. Surprisingly I had no issues with characters at large.

There is no denying that David Mack is a veteran as his long list of accomplishments in tie-in fiction and scriptwriting speak for themselves. His experience shows through in the character department with protagonist Tom Nash, who as a choice for main character excited me. Not many UF titles have a middle aged handy man with a pregnant wife; a wife that actually earns more than him. At the same time Tom is devoted to following through with the tasks provided by his divine vocation to hear prayers without much fuss. There is no dangerous sex appeal or hormonal denial of one’s given stand in the paranormal world, which I find refreshing and as execution well-performed.

From the support cast I enjoyed main villain Frank Kolpack, a dirty cop with a calculative mind and general fondness of big figure sums, and Anna Doyle, the kidnapped Phaedra’s mother. Frank is one of those Machiavellian characters that you can only admire in how they manipulate the elements around them and juice a situation for their own gain, while Anna is a very strong character. Her grief didn’t move me one inch, but her snappy anger-fueled repartee with her daughter’s kidnappers certainly made her one of my favorite characters from the whole novel.

While I enjoyed the axe handle wielding Erin Sanchez, Mack’s attempt to embroider personal tragedy and emotional issues to her spunky and aggressively sunny personality failed and just stereotyped her along so many other urban fantasy heroines. A not-so-realistic character was twelve year old Phaedra and here the reasons are too many. For one it’s a pain-stacking task to create a psychologically believable twelve year old, since children at that age are still in the phase of maturing and caught between childhood and teenhood. Since the novel itself is not YA and the target audience consists of adults I felt challenged to think as a pre-teen and justify her actions and behavior.

Story: “The Calling” as I already mentioned is an out-of-the-box project for urban fantasy as a genre and I praise the uniqueness that Mack brought to a world, where Good and Evil are represented by the Called and the Scorned, fractions that are built similarly. Each fraction has Seekers, who hear prayers, Sentinels, who have offensive abilities, and Sages, who are the generals above the foot soldiers in the ancient conflict. Members of both fractions are kept hidden from being captured or discovered by divine powers that work in subtle ways. So far so good, but the world this time is not enough to arouse my interest, when prose and plot border on dull.

Yes, as far as my personal preferences go and experience with fiction and entertainment media, Mack produced a rather predictable and easily forgettable novel. His prose is what I would call Spartan and rather states than evokes imagery. Longer paragraphs listing the items in every new setting killed the mood so many times. I guess, it’s fair to mention that the kind of simplistic approach resonates with his protagonist’s personality, but it certainly acted off-putting to me.

The instant I cracked the book open I knew that it would end on a positive note. We have a generally good-natured and untroubled character with the best possible intentions and a case, which involves a kidnapped by the bad guys child that can shift the balance. There is no mystery or suspense here that indicates that the good guy will fail or that he was in any peril, even while running from the Russian mob and the Scorned. I guess I am jaded in that department.

The Verdict: Not bad a transition into a different genre. It could have gone way worse and I am glad Mack avoided the common combinations of tropes and devices in urban fantasy, but it’s not quite as much as I expected it to be and I expect it to fade altogether from my memory quite soon.

Rating: 2 out of 5 shiny stars.

Thursday, 27 August 2009

What Do the Famous Read?

While Harry's gearing up for a weekend of heady posting, I'd thought I'd pop in on my "off day" to share a little something that made me smile.

I will shamefully admit that, at times, I am drawn to websites and blog that occasionally deal in, well, just say say celebrity news. I'm not proud of it...I know only too well the threat of being sucked into the water cooler vortex that is celebrity gossip, but the thing is they're just cool and hip and I know that if they just noticed me they'd think I was cool too and we could hang out and they would say to me, "gee Chris you're so cool why aren't you famous" and I'd sheepishly say, "Well you know that's not really my thing, Brad, and I'm sorry about that whole thing with Angelina you know, there were a lot of bubbles in the hot tub and how was I to know that all the champagne was going to lead to..."

Sorry. Lost myself there for a second. What I meant to say was I know it's a bad vice, but sometimes I can't help myself. But here's where it gets worse: one of the things I always look for when scanning through the articles or pictures is to see what, if anything, the famous are reading.

'Cause, you know...inquiring minds and all that.

And every so often you see a picture like the one that adorns the top of this post. Do you mean to tell me Kirsten Dunst is reading a frickin' Carl Sagan book? Really? Here's another shot:

Now I have nothing against Miss Dunst, who appears to be more bedraggled than her cigarette (ba dum bum!), but this all seems awfully calculated to me, like the time I walked around my college campus for a week carrying a stack of poetry books in the vain hope that a certain someone would notice, which she did, immediately after I dropped all the books when I walked into a concrete column. Here's another photo, this time of Angelina Jolie carrying Dave Eggers' What Is the What.

Look, maybe these folks are reading these books, but in my mind it's all exposure and lip service unless you actually get out there and espouse your views on what it is you're reading. And you know who does that?

That's right, us...the Geeks.

The other day I was checking out the hilarious music video promoting Felicia Day's 3rd season of The Guild which, if you haven't watched is a great web series about life, love, and World of Warcraft. But that's not the news. The news is that she reviews books on her blog! And guess which type of books? Fantasy, romance, romantic fantasy...starting to sound familiar? The point is here is a beautiful, fun, smart (I gush, but she's a crush, and my wife allows it) celebrity who not only walks the walk, but talks the talk.

Or is it the other way around? Is it better to walk the walk, or should I talk the talk instead? Is it a sign of senility that I can't remember? Regardless, you can check out all of her thoughts on books here.

And lest you think was all a ploy to post pictures of attractive women on the blog, allow me to introduce you to another famous geek who "puts his money where his mouth is" - an expression I can actually remember.

I've already gone on record about how much Wil Wheaton - self proclaimed Geek and a not-too-shabby writer himself - has influenced me as a fellow geek, a writer, a father, and an all-around good human being. But the dude also loves his bookage, and over at his long-running and outstanding blog you can find all sorts of reviews and comments on the stuff he reads, such as A Voyage for Madmen by Peter Nichols (here), Hyperspace by Michio Kaku (here), and The Hacker Crackdown by sci-fi luminary Bruce Sterling (here).

By now you've probably discovered (as I have - this thing was sort of written spur of the moment) that I don't really have much of a point to this. It's just cool that out there are people just like us, obsessing over passions and loves and standing up to talk about them and spread the word.

But you already knew that, didn't you?

That's why we're here, and I for one am glad to be a part of it.

Harry's Blog Sitting Agenda

Okay, so now with Adele gone enjoying festivities a new profession in blogging is taking shape, namely the blog-sitter or digital nanny, which would be my spin on the term. Since I already promised, there will be no arsons during my stay here. Adele can thank me later for that kindness on my behalf, but I shall bring something I usually avoid to do: creating some form of organization.

Thursday, today, I will post my program with fun activities for the days I shall stay here and remember that this is only regarding my participation in the blog sitting process. Chris’ posts will be a surprise for me too. Don’t forget that commenting on our posts get you in Adele’s special book contest. Anyway, here we go.

Friday: Review of “The Calling” by David Mack

Saturday: Decomposition in Entertainment [expose about the deplorable state of the movie industry and by expose I mean a very loose knock-off meaning]

Sunday: An excerpt from my hopefully popular feature “Reviewer Time” staring none other than Tia Nevitt from “Fantasy Debut”.

Hope you have fun with me.

Taking my leave

Ok folks, I am off for a few days. I hope to pop in and read/comment but for posting I like you in the very capable keypads of Chris/Geek Monkey and our guest blogger Harry of Temple Library Reviews.
and don't forget, if you comment on either of the guys posts you are in with a chance of winning a copy of Orbus.

Tuesday, 25 August 2009

Ravenous Romance Day with Dawn Jackson

Once again it's time for the Ravenous Romance gang to descend upon UN:Bound with lots of delicious food and drink, good conversation and a post by Ravenous Romance author Dawn Jackson.

Dawn's post is near and dear to my heart because a: it's really interesting and shows the inner workings of one writer's imagination and b: it's got zombies in it. What's NOT to love?

Every writer has a unique creative process. Give ten different writers the same basic story premise or kernel of an idea, and you'll get ten totally different variations on the given theme. Unless you're an adolescent male writing about zombies and then you'll get ten stories about a young loner holing up with lots of guns and the last hot female on the planet. Dawn's process is definitely unique and I'm delighted to share it with you here on Un:Bound. We hope you'll share your own creative processes with us in the comments section! Pull up a chair, help yourself to snacks and beverages (the usual selection of goodies!), and let's welcome Dawn as she answers the age-old question:

Where do you come up with this shit stuff?

Where do you come up with this stuff?

Probably one of the most frequently asked questions a writer hears. One we don’t mind answering, but it can get a bit tricky trying to explain exactly what goes on in our heads. So, I’m going to attempt to do it. I’m opening up the doors and letting you inside. Everything you see will be as it is when I go through the plotting process, from thought to keyboard.

All novels start with a single idea. The idea can come from something as simple as your child’s homework; conversations overheard during people-watching or even a dream. For this purpose, I’m going to borrow the topic of a recent call for shorts and novellas from Lori Perkins. Zombies.

Okay, I see you rolling your eyes. Dawn, you write erotic romance. How the heck are you going to slip a cadaver in there, make it sexy and stay away from necrophilia? Ah, the second part of a writer’s brainstorming process, “what if?” Don’t you love a good challenge?

Before I get to the zombies, I want to talk physics for a second. Don’t run away. Science can be interesting. Seriously. In my humblest of opinions, all science started once as fantasy. The difference is simple. Science is proven fact; fantasy is theory yet to be proven. Don’t buy it? Two hundred years ago you’d have been burned at the stake for using your cell phone or even suggesting man could fly or travel to the moon. Ten years ago, the invisible woman was fantasy, today she’s fact. Scientists can bend electromagnetic waves to make objects invisible to the naked eye. Okay, getting off topic here, but keep your mind open. Okay?

Physics. Let’s talk about traveling faster than the speed of light. Scientists say it’s physically impossible to do. If we could, the universe would open up to us. We could travel to distant star systems in our galaxy, other galaxies, blah, blah, blah.

So, how do they know traveling faster than the speed of light is impossible?

Black holes.

Okay, right about now I can see you’re scratching your head and wondering what the heck this has to do with zombies. Remember what I said about all science being fantasy once? Here’s where we cross genres. Do you know why? Because we can. We’re writers and this is our universe, our rules. We’re not confined by anything except our imagination.

Back to the black holes. Escape velocity is the speed it takes for an object to escape the gravitational pull of another object, for example Earth. The speed an object must travel to get free of Earth’s gravitational pull is in direct relationship to its size. So, the bigger the object, the stronger the gravitational pull. You still with me?

So, an object so massive it can swallow galaxies has to have some serious gravitational pull. Here’s where the black holes come in. You don’t see a black hole in space. What you see is the absence of light. When the pull of an object is so great, even light can’t escape it, you end up with a black hole. That means even if you could travel light speed, if you went past a black hole’s event horizon, you’re going in. Now, since we can’t travel faster than the speed of light, and scientists know this by studying black holes, is there a way around this theory?

Yes. I think there is. What if you could fold space?

What? Yeah, you heard me. Let that fantasy part of your brain kick in for a second. Suspend your beliefs. Remember, your world, your rules. Take a strip of paper. Put an A on one end and a B on the other. Measure that distance as though it were a distance a ship would have to travel. Now fold it, placing the two letters together. What’s the distance now?

The thing is, even if both objects travel light speed, one trip is going to take less. Why? Because we manipulated the environment around it. We didn’t try to break any speed records; we’re still traveling light speed.

So back to my zombies.

What is a zombie? An undead without a soul? The living dead? What if, a scientist designed a device that could manipulate travel from one spot to the other by folding space? Let’s call it teleportation. How much of that matter makes it from point A to point B? What if inanimate objects work fine, but when he tests it on himself, his soul doesn’t go with his body. What if someone had been waiting for man to evolve this exact technology and they hijack his body in transit?

Now I’ve got a disembodied hero who has to figure out how to get back in his body and warn the world. But hold on. The mind trip you’re on doesn’t stop here. That would be too easy. What if there are legions of these energies waiting for bodies, living on an alternate plain, that fold in space, parallel to our existence? Now we’ve got a scientist out of his body and unable to communicate the danger to others.

What are they? Demons? Ghosts? No, let’s give the reader what they didn’t expect—aliens, people who’ve colonized our world for thousands of years, lived side by side with us. Perhaps we always assumed they were ghosts.

Now how does our hero alert the world to the danger, that his invention has opened the door to an invasion from the other side? Here’s where our zombies come in. Because he can fold space, jump from one plain to the other, he can move greater distances and the physical laws of our world don’t apply to him. Perhaps he can jump into or possess the body of someone deceased and do it from a distance. Try warning the world as one of the walking dead. Not an easy task for sure. But we’re not going to stop there. It’s still too easy for our hero. We’ve got to make him suffer. It’s our responsibility to put our characters through hell. Put on your evil author hat. Here we go.

Perhaps his doppelganger has already been contacted by the military and they are using his technology to transport ships, fighter jets and troops. Think of the invading force now. Now our hero has to break onto a military installation and dismantle the technology. But he’s not alone; he's got buddies, other people who have been hijacked. This will be a case of where the zombies are the good guys and they can't kill the bad guys. So what do they do? They’ll have to kidnap them and force them through the machine. Try kidnapping a bunch of soldiers who know what you’re intentions are.

So, that’s the hero’s path. What about his counterpart, our Femme Fatale? We need a heroine, someone our hero can fall head over heels in love with and do it as the undead. How about an ambulance driver? Perhaps he scared the S*%$ out of her while she’s on her way to the morgue. She’s going to be afraid of him, assume he’s evil. At first she might even try to destroy him. He’s going to need to be really convincing.

Whose body it is can also play into the story, if it was a criminal, perhaps the people that killed him think they screwed up? Now they're chasing him while he's trying to get back in his body and shut down the technology? Perhaps he was an assassinated political figure, a death-row inmate or even a junkie. I like the death-row inmate, public enemy #1. The world was scared of him alive, dead, well…you get the idea. The possibilities are endless. The outcome will be the HEA we all love. She falls in love with the man for who he is, only to discover later he’s not the beast he appears to be. Seems like a beauty and the beast scenario with a twist. Hmm.

Okay, so that’s it. That’s where I come up with this stuff. It's all a process of sitting down, taking some of what you already know and saying what if, like one of those "chose your own adventure" stories.

For more twists of my imagination, check out my reads at Ravenous Romance. You can find my stories in these anthologies, The Hot Dads/DILF, Sex and Shoes and Men in Shorts. Or check out my stand-alone short, Speakeasy.

Dawn

Dawn Jackson is a U.S Army Veteran, an avid practionor of the martial arts, a lover of science fiction and fantasy romance, erotica and crazy plot twists. When not writing, she can be found blogging with like-minded writers and readers.

So, Dawn doesn't have her author photo yet - she says she's camera shy, to which I say "Whaaaa?" Anyone this gorgeous without makeup will find a good friend in the camera!) so sent me this photo of her in the military. Yes, she's the one on the far left. :-)


Competition Time again

Ok, first of all, DO NOT COMMENT ON THIS POST if you want to be entered.

Now the prize:
The lovely people at PanMacmillan sent me a paperback copy of Orbus a while back, which I am enjoying and expect to review soon. Needless to say I was surprised and delighted to find a hardback copy in my post today. I have decided to spread their generosity and and offer up the hardback as a contest prize.

Rules:
The contest is open to everyone, everywhere and starts on thursday when I go away, closing on Monday after I am back on line properly. That is english time.
To be in with a shot leave a comment on one of Harry's guest posts or one of Chris's extra posts. Everyone will be given a number, just one entry per person and you will then be randomised. Make sure you can be contacted by email.

To make things as fair as possible I will enter all the names into a spreadsheet and allocate numbers in no particular order, then stick the figures into randomiser.

Thanks again to Harry and Chris for taking care of things in my absence.
I will post the winner on Monday sometime. That's monday in the UK so I apologise to anone who is still on Sunday or already in Tuesday when it goes up.

Monday, 24 August 2009

Thomas Pynchon - Inherent Vice

Apocalypse coming? How else to explain why I'm covering a Thomas Frickin' Pynchon novel on Un:Bound? Pynchon is one of the few names left in writing where the publication of a novel is an event. Part of this stem from his notorious, J.D. Salinger-esque shunning of publicity of any type, leaving questions of his motivations for writing what he does largely a mystery. But it's also due to the literary power of novels like Gravity's Rainbow, The Crying of Lot 49, and V., all of which exhibit a dense, twisted inversion of the modern novel.

So what to make of Inherent Vice, his most recent novel? Who knows...I can just go by what the book seems to be, since Pynchon isn't talking. His first real foray into genre writing, it's a detective story about a search for a missing person (or two), set in the heart of 1960s California. Larry "Doc" Sportello, hippie/druggie/private investigator is hired by his ex-girlfriend Shasta to look out for her current boyfriend, who she thinks will be abducted by his wife and her boyfriend. Why? Because they asked her to be in on it.

Don't worry - this is the 60s and people just swing that way, at least they do in what amounts to a weird, almost stream of consciousness novel that's not written in first person. Pynchon tries to stay within the confines of the detective noir genre, a la CHINATOWN, but he can't help by his descriptions to comment on the area and the times the novel takes place in.

To what end isn't really clear, nor are the multitude of coincidences and events that pile on top of each other any real help. In the end it was an enjoyable book, maybe more-so that I would typically give it credit for since, unlike his last two novels (Against the Day and Mason & Dixon), it's a moderate length and a little more readily accessible. But as an example of the genre, and as a look into the time period, it comes too far off the heels of other, better books.

Not a review: Long Journey to Rneadal - Sharon E Dreyer

Ok, i'm sorry, I admit defeat. I really tried to finish this one after Sharon was kind enough to send a copy but I just could not engage with it at all. There is nothing actually really wrong with the book as far as I can tell. There is an ok story and the characters seem fine, it's essentially a romance, which I wasn't really prepared for. Most of you know by now I am pretty new to romance and making a tentative approach to the genre while I work out what I like.
I will lay out the reasons I didn't finish it:
Early on in the novel there were a lot of explanations when I was quite happy to take things on faith. This kept me from getting absorbed.
The other biggie for me was that we were constantly reminded that the leading lady (who went by about three different names) was blond and beautiful. Seriously, I don't know why "Ino of the slim ankles" and similar epithets used endlessly in Homer are ok with me, but the blond and beautiful Dr Hunter turned me off, but that's how it was.
The dialogue didn't work for me, no particular reason, but it just didn't. I wanted to enjoy this one, a bit of romance and a space adventure, but I could not engage.
It doens't help with hardbacks that I don't carry them with me, because it means I am reading at least one other book at the same time, which is unfair on them really.

The positive about the book, that carried me a fair way into it, was the nightmare sequences. These were intruiging as they hinted to something deeper in the plot. I'm afraid I don't know where they ended up, but they were used to good effect.

The problem is, my TBR pile is growing all the time and I can't bring myself to sink too much time into one book at the expense of several others.

Anyway, in the name of fairness and balance, here is the axiom's edge review, because they did finish it.

I will look out for other books by the author in future because there is something there I would like to see develop.

Wanted - Blog Sitter for long weekend

Anyone want the keys to Un:Bound from this thursday through to and including Sunday? My brother is getting married and I will be a bit distracted for the long weekend. If anyone fancies guest posting on UN:Bound in that period please email me on hagelrat at googlemail dot com for access. Obviously posts should be loosely related to reading, writing, blogging, reviewing or something of that ilk.

Sunday, 23 August 2009

Book Blogger Appreciation Week

I took part in the meme for fun and I have to say I was surprised and delighted to have received a nomination. To whoever it is out there who thinks Un:Bound does the Best Reviews, thank you so much for the huge compliment. Whatever happens now I am really buzzed to have been nominated. With so many bloggers out there, to have stood out among them is incredibly flattering. On behalf of the whole team, thank you.

Vanished - Kat Richardson

I think it's pretty well established that I am a fan of Kat's by now. I was pleased when I finally got my grubby little paws on Vanished.
After a visit from a late ex boyfriend Harper finds herself delving into her own past, visiting her mother and seeking answers about her father's violent death.
In due course Harper finds herself travelling to London as her interests and those of her, umm, client dovetail.
Kat writes London well, I love it but have never lived there and share her perception of streets that seem endlessly longer than they should be, name plates for places that no longer exist and the difficulty of finding the same route twice through the passages and streets.
Harper is really developing as a character and the Grey itself is becoming progressively more complex as more of it's nature is revealed. Also, plot threads that were brought in right at the beginning are starting to develop here. As always the author is drawing us further and further into the Grey.
There is also a very poignant moment for followers of Kat's blog when Dexter makes a brief appearance.
This is another brilliant and satisfying installment and leaves no question that Kat is building to something big in book 5. I can't wait!

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Grasping for the wind link up meme

Ages ago John at Grasping for the wind did a meme to highlight the genre fiction book blogs on line, giving everyone more access and bringing many of us new readers. Well he's done it again.

visit John's site to pick up the html and post this.

happy reading

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Romanian French Chinese Danish Portuguese German


A





7 Foot Shelves

The Accidental Bard

A Boy Goes on a Journey

A Dribble Of Ink

Adventures in Reading

A Fantasy Reader

The Agony Column

A Hoyden's Look at Literature

All Booked Up

Alexia's Books and Such...

Andromeda Spaceways

The Antick Musings of G.B.H. Hornswoggler, Gent.

Ask Daphne

ask nicola

Audiobook DJ

aurealisXpress

Australia Specfic In Focus

Author 2 Author

AzureScape



B





Barbara Martin

Babbling about Books

Bees (and Books) on the Knob

Best SF

Bewildering Stories

Bibliophile Stalker

Bibliosnark

Big Dumb Object

BillWardWriter.com

The Billion Light-Year Bookshelf

Bitten by Books

The Black Library Blog

Blog, Jvstin Style

Blood of the Muse

The Book Bind

Bookgeeks

Bookrastination

Booksies Blog

Bookslut

The Book Smugglers

Bookspotcentral

The Book Swede

Book View Cafe [Authors Group Blog]

Breeni Books



C





Cheaper Ironies [pro columnist]

Charlotte's Library

Circlet 2.0

Cheryl's Musings

Club Jade

Cranking Plot

Critical Mass

The Crotchety Old Fan



D





Daily Dose - Fantasy and Romance

Damien G. Walter

Danger Gal

It's Dark in the Dark

Dark Wolf Fantasy Reviews

Darque Reviews

Dave Brendon's Fantasy and Sci-Fi Weblog

Dead Book Darling

Dear Author

The Deckled Edge

The Doctor is In...

Dragons, Heroes and Wizards

Drey's Library

The Discriminating Fangirl

Dusk Before the Dawn



E





Enter the Octopus

Errant Dreams Reviews

Eve's Alexandria



F





Falcata Times

Fan News Denmark [in English]

Fantastic Reviews

Fantastic Reviews Blog

Fantasy Book Banner

Fantasy Book Critic

Fantasy Book Reviews and News

Fantasy Cafe

Fantasy Debut

Fantasy Dreamer's Ramblings

Fantasy Literature.com

Fantasy Magazine

Fantasy and Sci-fi Lovin' Blog

Feminist SF - The Blog!

Feybound

Fiction is so Overrated

The Fix

The Foghorn Review

Follow that Raven

Forbidden Planet

Frances Writes

Free SF Reader

From a Sci-Fi Standpoint

From the Heart of Europe

Fruitless Recursion

Fundamentally Alien

The Future Fire



G





The Galaxy Express

Galleycat

Game Couch

The Gamer Rat

Garbled Signals

Genre Reviews

Genreville

Got Schephs

Graeme's Fantasy Book Review

Grasping for the Wind

The Green Man Review

Gripping Books



H





Hasenpfeffer

Hero Complex

Highlander's Book Reviews

Horrorscope

The Hub Magazine

Hyperpat's Hyper Day



I





I Hope I Didn't Just Give Away The Ending

Ink and Keys

Ink and Paper

The Internet Review of Science Fiction

io9



J





Jenna's Bookshelf

Jumpdrives and Cantrips



K





Keeping the Door

King of the Nerds



L





Lair of the Undead Rat

Largehearted Boy

Layers of Thought

League of Reluctant Adults

The Lensman's Children

Library Dad

Libri Touches

Literary Escapism

Literaturely Speaking

ludis inventio

Lundblog: Beautiful



M





Mad Hatter's Bookshelf and Book Review

Mari's Midnight Garden

Mark Freedman's Journal

Marooned: Science Fiction Books on Mars

MentatJack

Michele Lee's Book Love

Missions Unknown [Author and Artist Blog Devoted to SF/F/H in San Antonio]

The Mistress of Ancient Revelry

MIT Science Fiction Society

Monster Librarian

More Words, Deeper Hole

Mostly Harmless Books

Multi-Genre Fan

Musings from the Weirdside

My Favourite Books



N





Neth Space

The New Book Review

NextRead

Not Free SF Reader

Nuketown



O





OF Blog of the Fallen

The Old Bat's Belfry

Only The Best SciFi/Fantasy

The Ostentatious Ogre

Outside of a Dog



P





Paranormality

Pat's Fantasy Hotlist

Patricia's Vampire Notes

The Persistence of Vision

Piaw's Blog

pornokitsch

Post-Weird Thoughts

Publisher's Weekly



Q





R





Random Acts of Mediocrity

Ray Gun Revival

Realms of Speculative Fiction

Reading the Leaves

Review From Here

Reviewer X

Revolution SF

The Road Not Taken

Rob's Blog o' Stuff

Robots and Vamps



S





Sandstorm Reviews

Satisfying the Need to Read

Science Fiction and Fantasy Ethics

Science Fiction Times

ScifiChick

Sci-Fi Blog

SciFiGuy

Sci-Fi Fan Letter

The Sci-Fi Gene

Sci-Fi Songs [Musical Reviews]

SciFi Squad

Scifi UK Reviews

Sci Fi Wire

Self-Publishing Review

The Sequential Rat

Severian's Fantastic Worlds

SF Diplomat

SFFaudio

SFFMedia

SF Gospel

SFReader.com

SF Reviews.net

SF Revu

SF Safari

SF Signal

SF Site

SFF World's Book Reviews

Silver Reviews

Simply Vamptastic

Slice of SciFi

Smart Bitches, Trashy Books

Solar Flare

Speculative Fiction

Speculative Fiction Junkie

Speculative Horizons

The Specusphere

Spinebreakers

Spiral Galaxy Reviews

Spontaneous Derivation

Sporadic Book Reviews

Stainless Steel Droppings

Starting Fresh

Stella Matutina

Stuff as Dreams are Made on...

The Sudden Curve

The Sword Review



T





Tangent Online

Tehani Wessely

Temple Library Reviews

Tez Says

things mean a lot

Tor.com [also a publisher]

True Science Fiction



U





Ubiquitous Absence

Un:Bound

undeadbydawn

Urban Fantasy Land



V





Vast and Cool and Unsympathetic

Variety SF



W





Walker of Worlds

Wands and Worlds

Wanderings

The Wertzone

With Intent to Commit Horror

The Wizard of Duke Street

WJ Fantasy Reviews

The Word Nest

Wordsville

The World in a Satin Bag

WriteBlack



X





Y





Young Adult Science Fiction



Z





Romanian





Cititor SF [with English Translation]



French





Elbakin.net

Mythologica



Chinese





Foundation of Krantas

The SF Commonwealth Office in Taiwan [with some English essays]

Yenchin's Lair



Danish





Interstellar

Ommadawn.dk

Scifisiden



Portuguese





Aguarras

Fernando Trevisan

Human 2.0

Life and Times of a Talkative Bookworm

Ponto De Convergencia

pós-estranho

Skavis



German





Fantasy Seiten

Fantasy Buch

Fantasy/SciFi Blog

Literaturschock

Welt der fantasy

Bibliotheka Phantastika

SF Basar

Phantastick News

X-zine

Buchwum

Phantastick Couch

Wetterspitze

Fantasy News

Fantasy Faszination

Fantasy Guide

Zwergen Reich

Fiction Fantasy



A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Romanian French Chinese Danish Portuguese German

Friday, 21 August 2009

Interview - Damien G Walter

Yesterday I had the pleasure of meeting up with Damien G Walter, who I first stumbled across as a guardian blogger, then discovered, through a mutual acquaintance is a Leicester lad and involved in lots of interesting things locally.

Needless to say I immediately began my usual tactic of online stalking until my existence is acknowledged, and then begging for an interview. It worked. So we met up in a superb pub that I don't go to nearly enough and had a chat. Or at least, I mumbled vaguely question like things at him and Damien ran with them.

We covered a lot of ground in 45minutes. Damien talked about his writing; he writes short fiction and is working on two novels at the moment. This led us to the whole short fiction scene, which is a little strange to me still and doesn't have the kind of profile that novels get. We also covered live events, Damien's work with the BBC and his day job/s at Charnwood Arts & The Literature Network.

Having been in his time a charity mugger (oh how I hate running the gauntlet of chuggers on a lunch time) and holding at one time for the same Council I work for, the post now known as Book doctor, he is actively working to improve literacy and work with writers in the East Midlands. In fact he is running three surgeries in the East Midlands in September on which there are still a few places.

Damien has in the past attended the six week Clarion workshops in America and gets a little fanboyish about being taught for a week by Neil Gaiman, which is one of the nicest things about writers who really love their genre, seeing them get as giddy as we fans do when they talk about meeting their writing heroes.

Then there is the guardian blogging, how it came to be and the Booker prize rants as well as the promise of coverage of this year's World Fantasy Con.
Damien has been kind enough to provide a copy of his short story Momentum which was first published in Electric Velocipede #13 and you can view it here along with short fiction by Polly Tuckett.

Other short stories by Damien can be found at "Serendipity, Transmission, Pulp.net and Scifantastic magazines" and you can check out his posts for the guardian book blog here.
Damien’s own site is here and he is a regular on twitter as damiengwalter.

If you want to know more, you will have to listen to the interview.
Enjoy.

(In a side note my mum is totally jealous and has taken to harrassing me to find people to talk to her book groups - she says she will get them all together in one go. *grin*)

Update

I just wanted to pop in and say, in the next couple of weeks my darling of a designer is going ot produce a proper graphic for Young & Un:Bound. He has some amazing ideas and I can't wait to see what he produces. Will let you know when it goes up.

Thursday, 20 August 2009

The Birthing House - Christopher Ransom


Ok, just below this is a book trailer, and just above this, in the next couple of days will be details of my chat with the delightful Damien G Walter. But for now, here is an interview with the author we were supplied with.

There is more to come over the next week or so.








Please introduce yourself and tell us a bit more about you and your writing career.
I’ve been writing prose off and on for sixteen years but took a five-year detour to write screenplays before working up the courage to write my first novel, The Birthing House, which is out now in the UK and will be released in the US this August. I spent three years writing The Birthing House and it was the best education in writing I ever received. I was a terrible student in high school and college, and never attended a writer’s workshop or other writing program, so maybe it took me a little longer to do it on my own. At any rate, I never enjoyed writing as much as I did while working on my novel, so I plan to stick with this for a while.

What is your most recent novel about – if you are allowed to tell us?
The Birthing House is about a couple in their 30s, Conrad and Joanna Harrison, who are trying to reboot their marriage, so to speak, by moving from Los Angeles to a small town in rural Wisconsin. Soon after they settle in, Jo leaves Conrad for eight weeks of training for a new job, and Conrad, stewing in the house all summer, discovers that their new home, which is really his new home, was a birthing house at the turn of the century and may now be haunted. Conrad is wrestling with the idea and reality of becoming a father, the growing pains of leaving adolescence and his early 20s behind to become domestic. He is haunted by a destructive relationship from his high school years that continues to wreak havoc in his life and is responsible for almost literally opening the door to the entity that still resides in the former birthing house. In the course of uncovering (or ignoring at his peril) the house’s history and trying to salvage his dying marriage, Conrad becomes obsessed with his next door neighbour, Nadia, who is 20 and pregnant, and has some experience with the evil residing under Conrad’s roof. The novel is about the toll of a dual-income marriage, how our past relationships inform and disturb our present relationships, how infidelity and sexuality fit into the larger scheme of procreation, and—as I like to joke—only incidentally about a haunted birthing house.
I make that joke because, in truth, I did not set out to write a haunted house novel at all, or even a horror novel. I am not particularly interested in or frightened by ghosts or monsters. However, in terms of communicating what’s going on in someone’s head, a house is a great metaphor for the mind, and the ghost is a marvellous mirror of the psyche. And people—they scare me. So I just started writing about three characters locked in a situation I found fascinating. About a hundred pages in, I realized the story was following the classic haunted house trajectory. Coincidentally (or not very), my wife and I had recently moved from Los Angeles to Mineral Point, Wisconsin, which is a town of about three thousand people, so we were experiencing an amusing form of culture shock. We bought a 140-year-old Victorian and later learned it had been a birthing house and small clinic near the turn of the century. I did not borrow my house’s real history in any way; the idea of what it would be like if my house really was haunted was quite enough. During the first draft, I was only vaguely aware that I was writing about a troubled marriage, sex, birth, and all the rest while living under the roof of a birthing house. The potential of a haunted birthing house became intertwined with the questions and themes I was exploring, and the title was too appropriate to resist. Who knows, maybe the house wanted me to write the book (he says with nervous laughter and mild fear).

What do you think makes the horror genre so fascinating to readers and writers?
The power, for one. The raw, straight-to-your-primal-center-ness of it. There is no question fear is one of the most compelling emotions, that it is one of the strongest and most fundamental. It’s not like delight or melancholy, relative lightweights. Fear is right up there with love. It is crucial to our survival. From one perspective, it is fair to say fear drives nearly every other emotion, including love. Do we not love out of fear of being alone, at least partially? Do we not work for fear of going hungry?
For readers, horror fiction is a safe venue we visit to experience fear without being overwhelmed by it. No one wants horror in their life, but we will all face it in one form or another. I forget who said stories are tools for living, but I believe that. I cannot imagine living without quality fiction. So, if that is true, then horror stories might contain some tools for learning how to deal with the bad shit life throws our way. Maybe that is a stretch, but I find reading dark fiction fortifying in some way. I also just like experiencing a good thrill, without the hangover.
As for writers, for this writer anyway, the horror genre comes equipped with another marvellous set of tools. The ghosts, the houses, the monsters, the descent into a self and reality (even an everyday, real-world reality) we did not know existed, the whole range of darker human psychology. It’s almost another language. There are tropes and tricks and rules to break. When the writing is going well, the writer feels every event in the story as it is being written, as if by surprise, as his reader will experience it eventually. This makes for a fun ride behind the keyboard. But more importantly, writing horror, like writing in any other genre, should be an exploration of the self. It’s not easy to plumb one’s deepest fears and bring them into the daylight, but it is rewarding on many levels.

As a horror writer / fan, what sells a story / concept to you?
I don’t care much for concept anymore. Ideas are cheap. When I was younger, all it took to convince to buy a book was a vampire or a knife on the cover. But like any habitual reader, over time I have discovered that the writing is what counts. Without the execution, without quality writing and an original voice and real characters, no monster or end-of-the-world concept is scary. So I try to find authors that write well and then I follow them. One of my very favourite authors, Dan Simmons, wrote horror novels in the early portion of his career, and they were all stunning. But then he went and did this crazy thing—he turned his back on millions of dollars and branched off into science fiction, which I had never much cared for, and I followed him there. He later went on to write mainstream, hardboiled crime, historical fiction, and much more. Now the real joy is seeing what he does next. As a writer, I don’t have the guts or the talent to pull that off. But as a reader, I can’t ask for more. Concept bores me. Narrative force, good writing, brave authors—these things sell me.

What movies / books influenced your development as a genre writer? Similarly, what books, movies, comics, get you excited as a fan?
I suspect we live in an age when there are two types of horror writers: those who admit they were influenced by Stephen King to some degree, and those who lie. It might be a cliché at this point, but King’s books taught me to love reading. I read Cujo when I was 11 and I never looked back. Pet Sematary is the scariest novel I have or probably ever will read. It’s also a very serious novel, when you look beyond the cat that comes back from the grave. He’s writing about the most painful things a human can face: death, burial, the loss of child. How our culture does almost nothing to prepare for the natural eventuality of death. I honestly don’t know how he found the courage to go that far--that deep into his fear. I reread it again for the fifth or sixth time last summer and was struck by how even the vocabulary and syntax King uses in Pet Sematary reek of sour earth, embalming fluids, medicine, cold soil. There is a vintage texture, as if it were aging well in the sense of a classic, which of course I feel it is. So, yes, like many readers in the 80s and 90s, I was weaned on Stephen King, Peter Straub, Clive Barker, Dean Koontz, Robert McCammon, and many others. They all influenced me in some way, large or small.
Dan Simmons’s speculative-horror-love story of a novel, The Hollow Man, is quite different than my novel (or any that I will likely ever attempt to write) but it was a pivotal book in my life. I read it when I was 20, trying to decide what to do with myself, and the novel terrified me, challenged me, and made me weep, all in the span of about seven hours. I decided shortly after that to become a writer. There were a lot of books that nudged me toward the decision, but The Hollow Man was the nail in my coffin.
As I neared my late 20s and began to get serious, there were a few other authors, in various genres, not just horror, that changed how I thought about style and narrative, and I am sure they influenced me as well. Colin Harrison’s Afterburn took my head off. I still study the way he achieves such momentum without sacrificing nuance of language and depth of character. Nabokov has playfulness and an ability to find humour in the most wretched of circumstances, and that can be useful when writing horror.
What gets me excited as a fan is when one of my favourite authors releases a new novel. Peter Blauner is in my humble opinion the best “crime” writer working today, though he is much more than that. The only problem is, he only publishes a new novel every four years or so. But I am glad he takes his time, because the quality really shows and he is always worth the wait.

Who do you go all fan-boy about when it comes to the horror genre? Have you ever met anyone more famous than yourself and how did you react?
When I worked a Barnes & Noble in Los Angeles, I once waited on Julia Roberts, just like Hugh Grant in Notting Hill. She was very polite but she didn’t fall in love with me. Does that count? No, I guess not. Well, I haven’t met too many famous writers. I did meet Dan Simmons years ago, when I had just decided to become a writer and he was signing copies of The Hollow Man (which as I said had just become my favourite novel). Dan was seated in this tiny newsstand on Main Street in Longmont, Colorado, near my hometown of Boulder, so it was easy for me to wander over on my lunch break. Anyway, I was the first (okay, only) person in line; Dan was not yet the supernova he is today. I probably could have had his ear for half an hour, and he was very polite, but I was too frightened to squeak much more than, “Thank you.” I quickly fled the store, clutching my signed first edition to my bosom like a schoolgirl with her first love note.

If you had a chance to invite any horror legend, be it actor, writer, director, author (living / dead / undead) over for some tea, who would you choose and why?
After reading Charles LaBrutto’s excellent biography of Stanley Kubrick, wherein he chronicles many of the director’s bull sessions with writers and actors, I couldn’t stop thinking about what that must have been like for those who had the privilege—and some would say the curse—of Kubrick’s company. I realize Kubrick was not a horror guy per se, but he was tuned in to the dark side of human nature. There is a coldness to his work, his control, his obsessive nature. But he was also reputed to be a very sweet man, and an expert on a huge array of subjects. There is something tantalizing and terrifying about getting one of Kubrick’s phone calls in the middle of the night, being whisked off to his hidden estate, and hired to be a writer on one of his films, only to find oneself locked in a seemingly endless conversation with the man, who, it was reported, went through phases where he and his guests ate the same meal over and over for weeks, until he tired of it. Visiting writers seemed to emerge from the Kubrick compound like aged moles, gray-haired and blinded by his intensity and brilliance. I wouldn’t have been able to resist that call, had it ever come.

Lights on or off when watching horror flicks?
Off, of course, without exception. I am allowed to make my wife watch only one scary movie per year, so that means for all the others it’s me and one of my dogs under a blanket, lights off, eyes bugging out. Actually, watching a scary film by yourself increases the potency, so I don’t mind. Last summer I watched The Orphanage all by myself and that one got me pretty good.

Which do you prefer: Romero originals or remakes?
Oh, I know this is sacrilege, but I’ll go with the Dawn of the Dead remake here. The screenwriter on that one, James Gunn, is a very funny guy who gets zombies and I thought he handled it very well. It was scary and funny and full of great action set pieces. His characters were solid, his dialogue chewy. The sniper going after “Burt Reynolds” bit in there is priceless.

What is the best advice you ever received from someone about horror writing?
The best advice I know of for writing horror is no different than the advice we hear for writing any other kind of fiction and literature. The same things are important. Quality writing, characters that feel and behave like real people with real problems, realistic dialogue, evocative setting, all of it. In fact, when it comes to writing horror, or any genre that tends to rely too much on the wowee factor, we need to be extra vigilant, mindful of the fundamentals—namely, writing well. Plot and suspense are the least of our problems. We can’t rely on ghosts and serial killers and zombies to fool the reader for long. Or maybe we can, but we shouldn’t. Because while the apocalypse might get some fanboys in the door, the fanboys are all growing up, too, and eventually the day will come when they demand better of us. Actually, in all fairness, they already do. So, we owe it to our careers, our genre, our publishers and readers, to strive for quality. The writing is everything. That is what I tell myself every day, because I know I have a long way to go, and if you’re not constantly trying to improve the quality of your writing, you’re dead.

The horror genre has seen many incarnations over the past few years – what do you think the future holds for the genre?
I have been hearing about the death of horror in publishing since I attended The Pike’s Peak Writer’s Conference in 1993 or thereabouts. But good writers kept on publishing horror novels every year, right up through today. The vampire stuff seems to be bottomless. I know a lot of the large houses in New York are a little skittish about horror, but on the other hand, my editor at St. Martin’s Press told me he had been looking for a good ghost story for four years before he acquired The Birthing House. Now, look, I’m not saying I wrote The Turn of the Screw or The Shining—I know I did not. But four years? That tells me that either agents are extremely gun shy about submitting horror or there just aren’t that many well written and truly frightening manuscripts floating through the channels. In either case, we have only ourselves to blame.
But of course there are cycles. Trends. You can’t plan for them or write with an eye on them, though, so why bother? Hollywood ate up a ton of ghost stories after The Sixth Sense made $300 million domestic, and once that milked out, they went after harder stuff, exploitation fare, torture porn (which does nothing for me), and some great zombie flicks (which I do like). Now that those are playing out, we’re back to psychological stuff and ghost stories and dark fantasy and . . .
All of which is to say, I don’t have a clue where horror is going, and I never gave it much thought. I focused on writing the book that I wanted to write, to the best of my abilities, and it worked out. I am fortunate that it did. I am sure timing was a factor. But the reality is that there will always be a market for quality horror fiction and writing that truly moves the reader.

Do you have a zombie apocalypse survival plan – apart from going to hide in the Winchester, that is! – and will you be able to implement it?
You know, if it comes to that point, where we are truly being overrun by the zombie hoard, I think I would rather just join them. I mean, think about it, do zombies looked stressed to you? Other than finding food, what’s a zombie got to worry about? They don’t have to get up and go to work every day. They don’t have to pay taxes or fret about the state of the world or try to get laid. They have no fear of death because the worst has already happened to them. All a zombie has to do is duck some bullets and find some brains to gnaw on, and there are plenty of those to go around. Hey, I’m a foodie. I could live like that. Kind of do already, now that I think about it.

Are there any “how to” books on your bookshelf you would recommend to aspiring authors?
I apologise if this sounds obvious, but writers aspiring to contribute to the field of horror should be reading well beyond the field. It’s not enough to read every Stephen King book. We need to read the classics, non-fiction, biographies, anything that is well written and expands our palette. We are what we eat, after all.
The literary critic James Wood recently published a jaw-droppingly insightful book called How Fiction Works. It is not the same old tired book on how to write. It’s a rich but concise study of the techniques that separate the giants from the rest of us mere mortals. It’s a bit more advanced and I won’t claim to have gotten my head around most of it yet, but it’s a treasure of a book that encourages one to become a better reader as well as unlearn a lot of bad writing habits, which can be painful but very helpful to do. I would tell aspiring writers to read as many good books on writing as they can get their hands on, study them, practice what the books preach, and then move on. Put them back on the shelf and just write. All the books on writing won’t do a damn thing for us if we don’t remember to dive in and write.