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Book Review: Greylock by Paula Cappa


Greylock by Paula Cappa

Amazon Digital Services

ASIN: B0168XVNZS

Available: Kindle edition

Alexei Georg is in an uncomfortable situation: the brilliant and difficult sonata he has claimed as his original work was composed by someone else, name unknown. The sonata, titled October, has won him awards and may now qualify him for a grant to travel to the White Sea in Russia to record the songs of beluga whales so he can write a symphony based on their sounds , which he will be given time to write in the isolated wildlife refuge of Mount Greylock. Standing in the way of his goal are a lack of confidence that reveals itself in mediocre public performances of any other piece of music, and his vindictive wife, Carole Anne, who threatens to reveal the secret to the awards committee when he leaves her. An affair, a conspiracy with his mentor to prevent Carole Anne from revealing his secret, a jealous cousin, and a serial killer on the loose, all complicate events as Alexei attempts to escape to Russia to hear the belugas. All this would be more than enough to stand alone as a mystery, and Cappa writes that she was influenced heavily by Philip Marlowe, but the real story is the story of the music, and what Alexei is willing to sacrifice in order to rise to musical fame. The trope of a deal with dark forces for fame and glory, particularly in the musical world, is fairly common, but Cappa transforms it. Her vivid descriptions overtake the imagination, and at times, especially in her depictions of nature, have an actual physical impact on the reader. Cappa’s setting of a small boat in the White Sea was original and well executed, with plenty of shivers, bringing the supernatural to the forefront, and her prose in describing the beluga whales and the ocean voyage flowed beautifully.

Cappa’s descriptive powers aren’t limited to nature, either. It is really difficult to write a good sex scene without cliches or purple prose, but Cappa completely avoids these traps in writing about Alexei and his love interest, Lia.  Both of them have agency and show respect to each other, and Cappa writes their casual relationship respectfully as well. It’s great to see this kind of depiction of a modern affair written so skillfully. The story is frustrating on some levels, though. First, none of the characters are particularly likable or sympathetic. Mostly, they are self-centered and manipulative. While Alexei and his love interest, Lia, are well developed, Carole Anne is a caricature, and the police detective on the case of the serial killer is seen only perfunctorily, through the eyes of Alexei and his cousin, who view her with contempt. It’s also difficult to understand the motivations of many of the characters. For instance, Lia, who has known Alexei only casually in the past, chooses to stick with him after she’s threatened at work by Carole Anne, and decides to drive hours to visit him at the isolated Mount Greylock after multiple warnings that he is the primary suspect in the serial killer murders. Finally, I feel that the two storylines, of the more prosaic serial killer murders and the Gothic “deal with dark forces”, could both be stronger as stand alone stories. In particular, the supernatural story left a lot of questions hanging.

Despite any of the issues I had with Greylock, its descriptive powers, insight into both the power of music and the power of nature, and Cappa’s original treatment of what can be a fairly tired theme, aren’t noticeable once the reader is into the flow of the story, and it is well worth the time of any reader who wants to be swept away into an atmosphere where nature, humanity, and the supernatural combine to create both sublime terror and beauty. Recommended.

 

Book Review: Flaws and Claws by Edward J. Russell

Flaws and Claws by Edward J. Russell

CreateSpace, 2012

ISBN-13: 978-1478218685

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

Flaws and Claws is a self-published collection of humor and horror, consisting of three short stories and a novella. “Green Peppers”starts this work off with a humorous look at the start of a new job. Just before his first day on the job begins, he accidentally eats green peppers on a breakfast burrito. Unfortunately, green peppers give him gas– clear the room kind of gas.  It is a long, slow ride up 38 floors in a crowded elevator.

“Not So Dearly Departed”, the second story, tells the tale of Clancy Fillenbaum as he buries his aunt, who raised him after his parents were killed in a car accident. She was an abusive bully who always had a plan in place to keep him under her thumb, and left him feeling inadequate in every way. He is glad to be rid of her. Freedom at last! Unfortunately for Clancy his aunt’s plans are not over yet.

“Opening Day” is the third short story,and follows the adventures of a group of hunters as they go on an annual hunting trip: a week of hanging out with the boys and hunting deer. With tree stands in place, bright orange vests on, and shotguns locked and loaded, they head out into the wilderness. Suddenly a dark blur of fur and teeth slams into them, taking them unawares. One of the hunters is bitten and carried off. The hunters have become the prey.

Milton Dixon Has A Bad Day is the novella in this collection. Milton Dixon is a published freelance news columnist with multiple credits to his name. Times are tough, and Milton finds himself covering a county fair in rural Hilltower, Kentucky. As the fair is finally coming to a close, Milton plans to interview the sheriff and leave, but the sheriff is late. The sheriff’s deputy informs Milton that there has been an outbreak of sorts: people are going crazy and biting each other. Rather than turning in a dull account of a county fair, Milton is reporting on a zombie attack!

This was a lot of fun to read! “Green Peppers” and Milton Dixon Has A Bad Day were hilarious! “Not So Dearly Departed” and “Opening Day” were good scary stories. All of the works established their settings well using descriptions that told enough without going overboard. The pacing throughout was good and flowed quickly. The characters were well defined and it was easy to follow their voices. The plot in each story was good and I had no trouble following the unfolding tales. The only real complaint I have is that there were a lot of typographical errors of various types. If the editing had corrected these issues then I would have given a higher rating. That being said this was a very entertaining read. I have not read any of this author’s work in the past. Recommended for adult readers.

Contains: Graphic gore, sexual situations, swearing

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher

Book Review: Aberrations of Reality by Aaron J. French


Aberrations of Reality by Aaron J. French
Crowded Quarantine Publications, 201
ISBN-13: 978-0992883850
Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition

 

I love a good novel as much as anyone, but there is no greater way to get to know a writer than to read a collection of short fiction. A good short story collection will have stories that vary in length, tone and style, and can inform a reader about a writer’s potential range more than a single novel. Having read it, I can say that this is a well-written collection of razor sharp horror fiction.

 

French has a strong sense of what makes the weird tale work. His stories, while clearly influenced by early weird tale writers like Arthur Machen, Algernon Blackwood, and Lovecraft, mine that vibe, while still feeling modern. There is subtle humor at times, and some stories take  on a nearly mystical feeling.  My three favorites in the collection were “Graffiti Ghosts,”, the creepy tale “When Clown Face Speaks,” and the thoughtful “The Four Transitions of the Soul Upon Death by David P. Reichmann,” but every story was excellent. Reality is always in question during this collection, but the quality never is. Every library serious about intelligent high brow horror must get this book. Highly recommended for adult readers of horror fiction and weird tales.
 
 

Reviewed by David Agranoff