FIRSTLY, TODAY IS THE RELEASE OF 'STRENGTH'
FOR CARRIE BUTLER! ALL THE BEST CARRIE, I HOPE THE RELEASE GOES WELL!
STRENGTH
BY
CARRIE BUTLER
Title: Strength
Series: Mark of Nexus – Book 1
Publisher: Sapphire Star
Publishing
Category: New Adult (NA)
Genre: Paranormal Romance (PNR)
Release Date: March 07, 2013
Category: New Adult (NA)
Genre: Paranormal Romance (PNR)
Release Date: March 07, 2013
Synopsis:
When college student Rena Collins finds herself nose-to-chest with
the campus outcast, she’s stunned. Wallace Blake is everything she’s ever
wanted in a man—except he can’t touch her. His uncontrollable strength, a
so-called gift from his bloodline, makes every interaction dangerous. And with
a secret, supernatural war brewing among his kind, there’s no time to work it
out. To keep Wallace in her life, Rena will have to risk a whole lot more than
her heart.
Carrie daydreamed her way through college—until they thrust a
marketing degree into her hands, slapped a summa cum laude seal on the corner,
and booted her out into a less-than-stellar job market. Instead of panicking at
the prospect of unemployment, she used her Midwestern logic to steer into the
skid and point her life in the direction she really wanted to go: writing out
those daydreams.
Where to find Carrie:
Where to find Strength:
Today, I have also asked Mike Robinson to my site as part of his Blog Tour for the release of The Prince of Earth!
He has written a piece on writing contemporary horror fiction, I hope you all learn a few tips and find it interesting.
Carolyn
Link to
Amazon Purchase Page:
BLURB:
In 1988, young American
traveler Quincy Redding is trekking across the misty terrain of the
Scottish Highlands. She is destined for the infamous peak Ben MacDui,
the summit of which soon finds her inexplicably debilitated and at the
mercy of a malevolent entity.
The book spans twenty years, alternately following Quincy in her 1988 ordeal in Scotland as well as Quincy in 2008, when, as an adult, she begins experiencing abnormalities that threaten her family and her life – phenomena that may be related to what happened all those years ago.
As both older and younger Quincy learn more of their situation, and as their worlds further entwine, she becomes increasingly uncertain of the perceived temporality or reality of each period
The book spans twenty years, alternately following Quincy in her 1988 ordeal in Scotland as well as Quincy in 2008, when, as an adult, she begins experiencing abnormalities that threaten her family and her life – phenomena that may be related to what happened all those years ago.
As both older and younger Quincy learn more of their situation, and as their worlds further entwine, she becomes increasingly uncertain of the perceived temporality or reality of each period
“What
the Hell is That?”
Writing Contemporary Horror
Fiction
by
Mike Robinson
A friend of mine tells the story of when he was ten
years old and lying in bed. He was having trouble sleeping, and so tossed and
turned well into the deep redeye hour, that time when, regardless of location,
the primal country of our ancestors seems most palpable. As he finally started
to drift off, he felt a tug on the sheet, then heard a voice (“Gruff,” he
explains, “like a grown man”) whisper harshly into his ear, “Scoot over!”
Sleep
never came that night, and, whether ghostly or imagined, the cold-fingered
memory still grips his spine.
Or
take my younger years. One Christmas Eve, after watching the George C. Scott
version of A
Christmas Carol,
I sat in bed, wide awake. I’m sure I was joined by millions of others my age,
but it wasn’t the anticipation of presents keeping me up. It was the damn Ghost
of Christmas Future, who I expected any moment to come drifting down the
hallway to my room. I wanted to close my eyes, but was too afraid I wouldn’t
see him coming, and so would snap awake to a tall robed figure looming bedside,
pointing its long skeletal index finger at me.
It’s
difficult for me to believe that one can write truly effective horror -- horror
that feels organic, new and authentic -- without some variation of this
wonderful “fright gene”. And while many kids get scared, I’d venture to guess
it’s a minority that actually craves such experiences, and would as an adult
classify them as ‘wonderful’. They’re frightening at the same time they’re
uplifting, texturing the world in rich, noble insanity. I still have them, too,
to some degree. They’re baked into the cake. For whatever reason, my brain
works often in perverse entertainment to unnerve itself, like when I lie awake
in the dark, on my side, and think, “I’m alone right now. What would happen if
I felt a light tap on my shoulder?”
This
gusto for goosebumps, this knack for nightmare, is, I believe, a formative and
fundamental part of writing good horror fiction, fiction that is borne of an
innate, ongoing process, and not just relegated to Halloween. Such a mindset
also encourages originality, because for you the tropes and stock creatures and
boardroom frights have come and gone, and you’re out scouring murkier fathoms.
By
no means am I insinuating that horror writers belong to some exclusive club
that asks potential members to list their childhood terrors for approval. I’m
merely saying it helps incalculably if that hungry fascination, both celebrated
and unsettling, runs in your DNA.
Take
a novelist acquaintance of mine. For years she wrote romance and erotic
fiction. Successfully, I might add. But one day she became interested in trying
horror, “because it always sells”. I was skeptical -- I thought she should no
more write horror than I should romance. But hey, I’m open-minded (truly I am),
so my reply never went beyond a nod and some words of wooden encouragement.
Her
result, while well-written and passable, was largely what I expected: a
paint-by-numbers retread of typical genre fare. She didn’t have it in her
blood, nor had she sopped up enough of the genre to know what was overrun and
what awaited better exploration. Her approach was artificial, mechanical (not
helped by the dollar signs in her eyes). I’d seen such things as hers, and had
yawned past them. And yet, decades-old work by the greats, which I’ve read and
re-read, continue to chill. Stephen King said horror must regularly renew
itself, or die. H.P. Lovecraft, Richard Matheson and Clive Barker are some of
last century’s revitalizing visionaries. Who’s holding the defibrillators this
century? Why not you?
We’ve
all heard the mantra that the heart of horror is fear of the unknown.
Increasingly, however, that truism is more acknowledged than executed. Since
the 1980s publishing bust, when oversaturation proved the genre’s downfall,
horror has limped on, like a transient ambling down the road, pitied by faces
watching from curtains of snug homes. Dark Fantasy took it in, as has
Paranormal. YA has sucked up some of it. It’s been broken down and mixed in
with other genres. This is partly why we’ve seen the resurgence of tropes like
vampires, werewolves and zombies, all of which hardly represent “the unknown”,
not any longer. They’re well known, and so, in this author’s opinion, not very
scary.
Some
of the best inspiration for those looking to break this rut can be found not
necessarily in mainstream books but in the thousands of utterly bizarre reports
posted everyday in archives and message boards of websites catered towards
strange phenomena. Even documentary-style TV shows like Paranormal
Witness
can offer up good fodder. Whether you believe these people or not, it’s for
sure that nothing can be as weird as reality. And I don’t just mean Victorian-garbed
girls fading into thin air, or Sasquatch strutting through the brush. Consider
the following example of a man who, while living in the jungles of Hawaii, was
invited to dinner by a neighboring couple, Tom and Anne, whom he’d always
considered nice, but odd. He goes on to explain:
“One night .... I was over at their house as usual and was
sitting at the table having some food and conversation. I was eating, looking
down at my plate. Tom and Ann were saying something. All of a sudden, like a switch
went off, they stopped talking in mid sentence. I looked up from my plate,
across the table at Tom and Ann next to him and I saw them there, as if
frozen in time. Their mouths wide open with their eyes and their mouth’s
completely black. And I don’t mean normal black. I mean a deep, empty black.
Blacker than any black you’ve ever seen your life. Almost like another
dimensional black. Their mouths as black as their eyes. You could feel the
black (if that makes any sense).
I was immediately struck with a sense
of fear. As I stood up and looked at them, I couldn’t believe what I was
seeing. I wasn’t high, I wasn’t drinking, I was just seeing something that I
couldn’t understand. I contemplating running through that dark jungle full of
fear to get home. When everything returned to normal, like a light switch
turned back on, as if nothing happened at all.”
There’s another report in England
of a couple encountering, early in the morning, what they called a “stickman”,
a flat, silhouetted humanoid they compared to the logo on the door of a Men’s
public restroom. It’d been “lolly-hopping”, was their term, until it stopped,
realizing they could see it.
Those
are just two of an infinite number of examples. I bring these up not to revel
in weirdness, but to suggest how deep and dark those unexplored fathoms can be.
So grab a flashlight! And of course, while I tack towards the supernatural, or
extraordinary, keep in mind horror does not
have to be physically inexplicable, though it does involve something inexplicable, like
the who or why of the creepy (and very earthly) home invaders in the underrated
film The
Strangers.
Most
really good horror fiction also, for me, is like a solar system. In the center
pulses the Central Big Idea or Image, which nourishes the smaller ones orbiting
it. Of course, this can be seen in other genres (notably theme-layered literary
fiction), but I feel it’s particularly significant with horror. It’s usually
the image or idea that starts the juices flowing, that spools out the rest of the
story. It’s the image that, when successfully realized, will survive in your
readers’ minds (and dreams) long after the closing passage. Think of The Shining, for instance, and
you think of a murderous father pursuing his wife and son.
My
forthcoming horror novel The
Prince of Earth
began with the image of a young woman injured and alone atop a misty mountain
in the middle of the Scottish Highlands, where she is plagued by a malevolent
force. To me, it was a powerful aesthetic vision, and the progenitor of all
else that came after it. And this image wasn’t attached to any specific idea.
Oftentimes, the idea, or ideas, are built into the image, and it’s your job to
decode them and discover them, unearthing the morbid delights in that visual
package.
If
it’s not entirely obvious, I’m not a big outliner. I realize this is
subjective, and in all fairness I have been known to what I call
“micro-outline” a certain section or chapter I’m having trouble with. Every
writer should do what they feel works for them. But when it comes to horror, a
genre that relies on suspense, surprise, underlying trepidation of what’s
around the corner, I’m mildly suspicious of outlining. If you as the author are
the first to take the journey of your story, unsure yourself what lurks out
there (or within), that shows in the result. It gives the book a heartbeat, a
greater sense of intrigue, doubt and wonder. If the tale is more or less
composed as a “Fill in the Blanks with Scare A, B, C”, or a connect-the-dots
exercise, it tends to dilute the reading experience.
And,
of course, if your Big Image proves too big for an outline, it may just break
its cage, maul your mind and tell you other ways of doing things. And wouldn’t
that also be a wonderful experience?
ABOUT MIKE ROBINSON
Mike
Robinson has been writing since age 7, when his story Aliens
In My Backyard! became a runaway bestseller, topping international charts (or
maybe that was also just a product of his imagination). He has since published
fiction in a dozen magazines, literary anthologies and podcasts. His debut
novel, Skunk Ape Semester, released by Solstice Publishing, was
a Finalist in the 2012 Next Generation Indie Book Awards.
Currently
he’s the managing editor of Literary Landscapes, the official magazine of the Greater
Los Angeles Writers Society (glaws.org). His supernatural horror/mystery
novel The Green-Eyed Monster is now available from Curiosity Quills
Press.
Link to
Mike Robinson’s Author Page:
http://www.amazon.com/Mike-Robinson/e/B009RDLX7K/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
3 comments:
Congrats to Carrie!
Interesting post from Mike. Horror is something that's really hard to do well (in an original way), and I respect those who can pull it off.
Thank you so much, CM! :)
Congrats to Carrie and Mike!
Hi Carolyn! *waves*
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