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Summer Reading Is Killing Me! Part 2: Tween and Middle School Reads

It turns out I actually don’t have to do much work to provide you with a good list of scary books for summer reading. Andrea Lipinski has done most of the work for me in the New York Public Library’s blog with a post titled Dark, Creepy, Spooky, Scary Crossover Books.

We’ve actually reviewed a bunch of these here, although I’m not sure we completely agree with her age recommendations. You might check out our reviews to see what we thought. There are some great books on the list, though!

Reviewed here:

Eighth Grade Bites: The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod (first in a series)

Anya’s Ghost by Vera Brogsol (this was a Stoker nominee last year in the YA category)

A Tale Dark and Grimm by Adam Gidwitz

Tales from Lovecraft Middle School: Professor Gargoyle by Charles Gilman (first in a series)

Coraline by Neil Gaiman

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman (a Newbery Award winner)

Rot & Ruin by Jonathan Maberry (a Stoker Award winner in the YA category last year, and first in a series– followed by Dust & Decay)

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness (a Stoker nominee last year)

Three Quarters Dead by Richard Peck

Zom-B by Darren Shan (first in a series that will eventually comprise thirteen books)

Strange Angels by Lili St. Crow (first in a series)

 

Here are some additional suggestions from our own Middle School List. With a very few exceptions, we’ve reviewed nearly all of these:

 

Zombies

Generation Dead by Daniel Waters

Generation Dead: Kiss of Life by Daniel Waters

Rot and Ruin by Jonathan Maberry

The Dead by Charlie Higson

The Enemy by Charlie Higson

Zombie Queen of Newbery High by Amanda Ashby

You Are So Undead to Me by Stacey Jay

Zombie Blondes by Brian James

 

Supernatural Horror

The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin

The Egypt Game by Zilpha Keately Snyder

The Near Witch by Victoria Schwab

Cryer’s Cross by Lisa McMann

The Seer of Shadows by Avi

The Other Side of Dark by Sarah Smith

Blackbriar, Fingers and others by William Sleator

Stranger With My Face, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and others by Lois Duncan

Ghosts I Have Been, Thirteen Past Dead, and others by Richard Peck

Monster’s Proof by Richard Lewis

Skeleton Man and others by Joseph Bruchac

Demonglass by Rachel Hawkins

Bad Girls Don’t Die by Katie Alender

From Bad to Cursed by Katie Alender

Mercy by Rebecca Lim

 

Vampires

Sucks to be Me: The all-true confessions of Mina Hamilton, Vampire (maybe) by Kimberly Pauley

Still Sucks to be Me: The all-true confessions of Mina Smith, Teen Vampire by Kimberly Pauley

Parliament of Blood by Justin Richards

Blood Ninja by Nick Lake

Look for Me by Moonlight by Mary Downing Hahn

The Silver Kiss by Annette Curtis Klause

Vampire Loves by Joann Sfar (graphic novel)

 

Werewolves

Blood and Chocolate by Annette Curtis Klause

Wereworld by Curtis Jobling

Under My Skin by Judith Graves

 

Anthologies

Bloody Horowitz by Anthony Horowitz (collection)

Fear by R.L.  Stine

 

 

David B. Silva– In Memoriam

 

Three widely respected men who were writers of horror fiction died in March: David B.  Silva, Rick Hautala, and James Herbert. All three of these writers made a considerable impact on the horror genre, and on many of the individuals who counted them as mentors and friends.

One of  these was Dave Simms, a reviewer for MonsterLibrarian, who can trace the beginnings of his path as a reviewer and writer back to early (and consistent) encouragement from David Silva. Dave generously offered to share his thoughts and feelings about the impact of David’s life, and death, on his own life, and I hope you’ll read his heartfelt tribute.

 

David B. Silva–In Memoriam

by David Simms

 

Clichés are clichés for a reason. There’s usually some degree of truth and accuracy to them. The one which states that sometimes people come into another’s life for a reason is one that I’ve wrestled with for years. It can be an easy excuse for the departure of someone who meant something important – or it can be spot on in describing someone like David B. Silva.

There are people who aid others in their journeys, those who forge his or her own paths, and those who serve as a catalyst for greater things than themselves.  David’s role in life encompassed all three.  March saw not only his passing, but those of James Herbert and Rick Hautala, all of whom I knew to varying degrees. Each had an impact on my writing, and impressed on me a memory or two which will stick in my soul forever.

The full impact of their departures did not hit me until last week when a close friend, my college roommate, nearly died of a freak occurrence. As I prayed for his recovery, the words I had been searching for in writing of David finally came to me.  Thankfully, my friend pulled through, and left me with an even greater appreciation of the little things in life.

Many in the horror genre will remember David for his creation of The Horror Show, a magazine which followed OMNI and The Twilight Zone, and which influenced Cemetery Dance and many others.  Many have credited him with getting their feet in the door. While it showcased all the big names, The Horror Show also introduced the world to many newcomers who eventually carved their name in history, many in Stoker statues.

Too few know him as an author. Novels such as All The Lonely People and Come Thirteen showed his lyrical, understated style but it was his Stoker-winning short story, “The Calling” which resonated with me the longest. That story, written in response to his own mother’s death, emerged in the first Borderlands anthology, epitomized his haunting voice with a tale about an all too real evil. He followed this with Hellnotes, a weekly online newsletter about the genre, complete with interviews, trivia contests, and book reviews.

This is where he and I first connected.  As a Jeopardy and Trivial Pursuit geek, I jumped every week at the contest. I believed I annoyed the heck out of David by winning several times and waiting for the mail to see how cool the prize was that he sent, usually a rare mag or novel by someone I hadn’t heard of, but should have.

A few years later, he posted a note that he was looking for a reviewer or two.  Again, I jumped. Instead of shooting down the nobody I was (and still kinda am!), he asked for a sample and quickly mailed me a book to try. Within a week, he had the review in his inbox and posted it immediately. I wrote to him and asked if it was okay. Within minutes, he answered, stating it was what he was hoping for and asked what else I would like to read and review. This relationship lasted until he took a break from Hellnotes, and it gave me the opportunity to fall into reviewing for Horror World, Cemetery Dance, Monster Librarian, and FearNet.

At the same time, my stories had begun to pop up in a few anthologies, and David read a couple. Waiting on his critique often was stressful, as I knew he had worked with several icons of the business. Yet he took the anxiety out of the equation, offering his praise and comments. Even his criticism sounded positive to my ears.

As the release of my first novel grows near and I turn in the second, beginning work on the third, I think of Dave Silva.  I wish I could send him samples to hear what he thinks.  I wish I could email him about trying new techniques. I wish for several things but am left only reality.  Maybe if I put my ear to the wind, I’ll hear “the calling” once more.

 

David Simms’ first novel, Dark Muse, will be released  in June.

 

Guest Review by Rocky Wood: The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy by Bev Vincent

We are lucky today to have a review by Rocky Wood, an expert on the work of Stephen King, of  Bev Vincent’s reference work The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy, which will be released in April.  Thanks very much, Rocky!

 

The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy by Bev Vincent (New American Library paperback – April 2013)

The Dark Tower Cycle is Stephen King’s magnum opus – an epic dark fantasy contained in eight novels and a novella. The ‘Cycle’ also leaks over into many of his other books and short stories; so that it can be argued King’s entire canon is Dark Tower-centric. We all know King’s popularity with readers but many have yet to be exposed to this complex tale – so much so that many readers would benefit from a Guide to the series. The protagonist is Roland Deschain – a sort of gunslinger knight from a fallen empire on a quest to save the central hub of the Universe from destruction. Along the way he gathers a group of followers and we learn more about the flawed hero as each novel passes.

Robin Furth, a former research assistant for King, has previously published a work closely aligned with defining each character, place and things like social aspects of Mid-World (the setting for Roland Deschain’s search for the mysterious Dark Tower) – Stephen King’s The Dark Tower: The Complete Concordance, Revised and Updated.

Bev Vincent, author of The Road to the Dark Tower, takes a different tack – explaining each novel and related story in a clean, easy to follow narrative style. Allied to these are a number of small chapters dealing with such things as Roland’s enemies and a fascinating section about settings from our own world (there is a definite transfer between Roland’s world and ours).

The book will be a boon to new readers, as well as those who are familiar but find some of the complexity and what King admits are loose ends daunting. There’s even an interview with King, in which he reveals some interesting background. Possibly less useful to the average reader but of value to Dark Tower junkies is the Dark Tower artwork section (each book has ‘Artist’s Edition’ featuring exquisite imaginings of many characters and the Dark Tower itself); although the section on the many graphic novels the series has spawned will be particularly useful in libraries carrying that popular form.

Libraries should benefit from carrying this book in two ways. Firstly, it will assist new and even seasoned readers of the Dark Tower Cycle to a better understanding and enjoyment of the tales. Secondly, it should help those who haven’t dabbled in the King of Horror’s fantasy master work to decide whether to jump in and borrow those novels and graphic novels and commit to the series. Vincent has a clear eyed commitment to providing these readers with a portal into Mid-World and its never ending reading pleasures.

Reviewed by Rocky Wood.

Rocky Wood is the Bram Stoker Award winning author of Stephen King: A Literary Companion and other works. He lurks at www.rockywoodauthor.com