Home » Posts tagged "Bram Stoker Award" (Page 4)

Book Review: Dracul by Dacre Stoker and J.D. Barker

Dracul by Dacre Stoker & J.D. Barker.

G.P. Putnam’s Sons. 2018

ISBN-13: 978-0735219342

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

There’s very little that can be added to the Dracula canon that would be deemed worthy of reading at this point, but when the great-grand-nephew of Bram Stoker pens a “prequel” to the original novel it’s worth making an exception. Dacre Stoker went deep into his research, discovering the many notes,  journals, and other documents in the family treasure trove, and emerged with an intriguing tale that is more a fictionalized “biography” of Bram than a true prequel.

Dracul chronicles the life of Bram Stoker, from a sickly young child to a man searching for the truth behind the mysteries in his life that laid the groundwork for his writing. Journals, letters, and narratives drive the novel, most notably those of Bram, his sister Matilda, and a man who is likely the inspiration for Van Helsing. Yet the true driving force in the book is Ellen Crone, the nanny who nursed young Bram back to health in mysterious fashion. Bram and his sister begin to notice odd things about the woman– until she suddenly disappears.

The search for her and the emergence of Dracul unfolds slowly, but in a manner that effectively builds tension, in a style similar to that of the original tale. The addition of J.D. Barker (author of The Fourth Monkey, a great thriller on his own), adds modern sensibilities to Dracul that help the pages turn more easily. Recommended for fans of classic horror fiction or any strong storytelling.

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

Editor’s note: Dracul is a 2018 Stoker Award finalist in the category of Superior Achievement in a Novel.

 

Book Review: Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill

Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill

William Morrow, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-0062663115

Available: Hardcover, paperback Kindle edition, Audible audiobook, audio CD

 

There’s something decidedly different about Joe Hill. His novels and short stories often defy categorization, eschewing the conventions of horror and tropes of speculative fiction in favor of something much more… interesting.

 

Strange Weather is comprised of four short novels. The worlds concocted by the author are far from perfect, but are intriguing; they are familiar, but ill-suited to reality. The protagonists are not sympathetic characters readers will want to root for, but they are fascinating.

 

“Snapshot,” the first story, introduces readers to an awkward teen who discovers his elderly neighbor has had her memories stolen by a man with a strange camera. When the boy attempts to foil the man’s plans, he discovers something demented within the device. Hill manages to twist this story into something heartwrenching.

 

The second story, “Loaded,” could be the author’s anti-Second Amendment tale. A mall cop goes on a ill-advised shooting spree while trying to stop a killer, until he can no longer be described as a “good guy with a gun”. The unraveling of the character as his sad world crumbles is intriguing.

 

“Aloft” is the oddest tale in Strange Weather, more reminiscent of 20th Century Ghosts than his horror material. A man afraid of heights decides to try skydiving but manages to fall straight into a cloud, and remains there. An unusual setting, to say the least. “Aloft” will challenge Hill’s fans.

 

Finally, “Rain” can be summarized as a classic Joe Hill tale, with plenty of weirdness and amazement in the setting and a strong, unique cast of characters. When the sky opens up over Boulder, Colorado, nails pound the town, skewering the citizens in a multitude of ways. The downpour is only the beginning, as the aftermath of the apocalyptic event brings out the worst in society.

 

Hill’s style resonates as always: rich and full of imagery that will stick to the psyche, yet never obtuse or indulgent. His depictions of the the everyday person, and lives, are outstanding, and he has an affinity for the weird that seems to be building with each release. That’s a wonderful thing. Strange Weather is reading that will breeze by but leave a scar. Highly recommended.

 

Editor’s note: Strange Weather is the winner of the 2017 Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection.

 

 

Women in Horror Fiction: Lisa Mannetti

 

Lisa Mannetti’s debut novel, The Gentling Box (2010 Shadowfall Publications), garnered a Bram Stoker Award. She has since been nominated twice for the award in both the short and long fiction categories: (“1925: A Fall River Halloween” and Dissolution). Her story, “Everybody Wins,” was made into a short film by director Paul Leyden starring Malin Ackerman, and was released under the title Bye-Bye Sally. Her work has appeared in Dead Set: A Zombie Anthology (2013 Nightscapes Press) and Zippered Flesh: Tales of Body Enhancements Gone Bad (2012 Smart Rhino Press) Recent short stories include, “Corruption,” in Nightscapes Volume 1 (2013 Nightscapes Press) and “The Hunger Artist” in Zippered Flesh II: More Tales of Body Enhancements Gone Bad (February 2013,, Smart Rhino Press).

 
Mannetti has also authored The New Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn (new adult and YA editions from Smart Rhino Publications), Deathwatch, which includes two companion novellas in a single volume, (new edition  December 2013 Nightscape Press), the macabre gag book 51 Fiendish Ways to Leave your Lover( February 2010, Bad Moon Books), as well as non-fiction books and numerous articles and short stories in newspapers, magazines and anthologies. Forthcoming works include additional short stories and a novella about Houdini, The Box Jumper. She is currently working on a paranormal novel, Spy Glass Hill.

Lisa lives in New York.

 

As a side note, Lisa’s story about writing her first book, with 64 pages and 64 chapters, at the age of ten, made me smile, as the Monster Kid is currently involved in a writing project that at this time is about 44 pages and stands at about 15,000 words, with about one chapter per page. Thanks for participating, Lisa!

 

1.) Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

 

I’m five feet tall, weigh 112 pounds, have brown hair and brown eyes—oh wait. You didn’t mean that sort of introduction, did you? Probably not. <Sigh.> I guess it pays to glance at the rest of the questions before plunging in—but you’re absolutely sure you don’t want to hear about my twin cats? No? <Sigh>.

Okay, I learned to read when I was very young (my older brother taught me), and started writing when I was about eight years old. The first novel I wrote (never finished it, because even at age 10 I knew that no matter how I spiced it up with scenes in exotic tombs and with words like “sarcophagus,” and I did, that it wouldn’t work) was only 64 pages long. It also had 64 chapters. It was about twins—but I already know you’re not interested in my obsession with twins—feline or otherwise. Anyhow, this half-baked novel (and its title blessedly escapes me) was a good lesson about listening to your inner voice and knowing sometimes when you hear the words in your mind, “This is crap,” you’re absolutely right.

I wrote the next book (completed and currently and forever abiding inside a trunk, as they say) when I was 24. After that, I wrote more books (fiction and non-fiction—the latter for filthy lucre) and finally, the third novel I completed clicked, was published (The Gentling Box) and garnered a Bram Stoker Award.

 

2.) Why do you write horror?  What draws you to the genre?

Well, for one thing, no matter how bad a day (or year, for that matter) you’re having, you can spread the misery via the creation of your own nasty little literary world, and as a result, you’ll begin to feel that what you’re personally going through looks like a beach picnic.

Seriously—technically, of course, I do write horror. But I like to think of myself (however accurately or not) as a writer per se, first. Not just because I also write satire and black comedy, but because what always interests me most is the true dark side of life—the inherent drama (and sometimes tragedy) that intersects with and sometimes overwhelms my characters’—  and indeed, all—  human situations.  While fear and terror play a big part when tragedy strikes, they are intellectual and visceral by-products of the catastrophe or heartbreak itself. Some characters will be defiant in the face of calamity; others will struggle but eventually succumb—usually because of some inner weakness. A great example is George Hurstwood in Dreiser’s Sister Carrie (for me, a horrific book, and technically mainstream, not horror) who can’t cope, and declines at the same time that Carrie’s arc is in the ascendant.

I have no qualms about including gore to scare the crap out of my readers, but personally I’m more interested in exploring psychological and emotional fright.

 

3.) Can you describe your writing style or the tone you prefer to set for your stories?

I write literary horror—  and words and phrasing are really important to me—  but my work is eminently readable. I’m also drawn (mainly) to historic settings—  but in a way that makes the period and place come alive for my audience. It’s a bit of a personal quirk—  I feel that frequently my imagination expands when I write about other time periods. I do a tremendous amount of research, but it’s really crucial for me to have it evolve naturally and as part of the characters’ points of view and perspectives. There are a lot of tricks an author can employ that make it all seem very immediate and not at all difficult to sink into. One simple way is to pick a topic you’re personally smitten with, and to choose the facts that help the story play out. For the novella about Harry Houdini I’ve just completed, The Box Jumper (39,600 words) I must’ve read 50 books or more, (about Houdini and by Houdini, of course, but also on all kinds of ancillary topics like mentalism, ghosts, demonology, and Spiritualism—to name a few) and I also researched on the fly right through to the very last sentence because I needed to check which anti-psychotic drugs would have been administered in 1956 in asylums.

In several files, which I kept separate from the manuscript, I had something like 30,000 words in notes I gathered from all the books and articles I read; I kept boiling then down as I wrote until, at the end, I had less than 1200 words in the notes with facts or concepts I actually needed to use. By then of course, I was totally immersed in the two periods the novella is set in: the 1920s and the 1950s—i.e. thirty years after Houdini died.

But to me,  immersion doesn’t mean being slavish to the literary style of the time period. I think it means using just enough detail to create verisimilitude, just like when you write any other fiction, to pull the audience into the world you’re constructing.

Last, but not least, it’s also really important to me that my work resonates on many levels—that readers know going in they’re not about to get sucked into the literary equivalent of a B movie, but they’re also in for one hell of a thrill ride.

 

4.) Who are some of your influences?  Are there any women authors who have particularly inspired you to write?

Peter Straub has influenced me the most. Other literary horror writers that captivate me include Robert Dunbar, Tom Piccirilli, Gary Braunbeck, Shirley Jackson, Joe Hill, Elizabeth Massie and Mary Shelley. I’ve also been drawn to the works of Stephen King and reread my favorites often.

Of the writers (not considered part of the horror genre) who inspire me delve into the human dilemma, two stand out: Tennessee Williams and Truman Capote.  I’m also indebted to William Styron, Flaubert’s Madame Bovary (a book that terrifies me right along with Dreiser’s Sister Carrie), the Bronte sisters, Lillian Hellman, and John Irving. Humorists like Mark Twain, Evelyn Waugh, Lilian Hellman, J.P. Donleavy, Jean Kerr and Kingsley Amis have been lifelong favorites.

Nabokov’s Lolita gave me the “permission” to set aside anxiety over salability and questionable subject matter, and go ahead and write my novella, Dissolution, which eventually received a Bram Stoker nomination.

Poets who haunt me include Coleridge, T.S. Eliot, Anne Sexton, and Sylvia Plath.

And I know I’ve left out at least fifty authors I venerate and should be including (and this is no excuse, but I’m getting hungry and have to go fix chicken Genovese for dinner pretty damn soon).

 

5.) What authors do you like to read?  Any recommendations?

I read different types of books depending on what I’m in the mood for—and my interests span the gamut from non-fiction to all types of literature. I think it’s crucial to read in and out of the genre you write in. If I want to read something I’ve loved since childhood, I’ll pull out the Oz books, The Wind in the Willows, Jane Eyre (yes, it’s true, I first read it was when I was about 8 or 9), George MacDonald (especially The Princess and the Goblin) or, say, Grimm’s Fairy Tales. If I feel like having a good laugh: Jean Kerr, Phillip Roth, Heller’s Catch-22; almost anything by Donleavy, Amis, Twain, or Waugh. (Not that they aren’t deadly serious, too). When I crave dark work I read/reread anything by Straub or King—along with whatever new pieces they write.

I almost always have three to five books going at the same time. (Currently reading American Exorcism, by Michael Cuneo; Le Fanu’s Carmilla; Trying to Save Piggy Snead by John Irving, Ghosts of Everest: The Search for Mallory and Irvine; and an old fave, My Antonia.

Contemporary writers I’ve read and enjoyed recently include: Elizabeth Massie, Charles Colyott, Michael Hughes, Corrine De Winter and Sephera Giron in the genre (and again, I know I’m forgetting to mention a ton of people).
6. Where can readers find your work?

On their very own bookshelves and in their e-readers, I hope. No seriously, Nightscape Press has just come out with new digital editions of The Gentling Box and Deathwatch—with print versions due to be released in the next month or so, and available on Amazon, etc.  Nightscapes Vol 1 contains a short story, “Corruption,”) I recently wrote. Weldon Burge of Smart Rhino Publications is re-issuing new digital and print versions of The New Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn (both YA and Adult) in a few weeks, and has also published several of my short stories (also available on Amazon, etc.) in Uncommon Assassin, Zippered Flesh and most recently, “The Hunger Artist,” in Zippered Flesh 2.

 

Before I sign off, here’s a quick thanks to Colleen Wanglund for inviting me to be a part of the Women in Horror Month celebration over at Monster Librarian!

And now, I really have got to get that chicken Genovese started—or I’ll end up having to cook it tomorrow; and since I’m famished, I’ll be stuck tonight meanwhile with a goddamn tuna fish sandwich….

____________

Interested in Lisa Mannetti? Check out Lisa Mannetti’s Amazon page, her website, and this great interview at Little Miss Zombie. With several other authors, Lisa also runs a virtual haunted house inspired by her book The New Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. Here is a link to The Chancery House.