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Book List: Haunted Hotels

It’s summertime, which means vacations, and unless you’re staying with relatives or camping, you’ll probably stay in a hotel at some point. You might want to take care, though, because hotels are not always the safest or most relaxing places to stay; Lizzie Borden’s former house is now a bed-and-breakfast, and a boutique hotel, The Blackburn Inn, now stands where DeJarnette Sanitarium, the setting for David Simms’ Fear the Reaper, used to be. Below you’ll find a list of titles that take place in haunted hotels.

 

cover for The Sun Down Motel

 The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

The Sun Down Motel alternates between two points of view. Viv, in 1982, is a runaway headed to New York to become an actress who ends up unexpectedly left in the town of Fell, New York. With almost no money and nowhere to go, Viv takes a job as the night clerk at a seedy hotel on the highway, The Sun Down Motel, that she quickly discovers is haunted. Carly is taking a break from college to cope with her grief over her mother’s death and explore the mystery of her aunt Vivian’s disappearance, at age 20, thirty-five years earlier, in Fell. Following in Viv’s footsteps, Carly visits her apartment and befriends the current resident, Heather, who invites her to become her roommate. The two of them then visit the Sun Down Motel, where Carly takes the same night shift job Viv had.  Carly learns from Heather that Viv was not the only girl at the center of a mystery during the time she was in Fell; several girls and women of varying ages were murdered in the time just before Viv arrived in town. With hauntings, psychological disturbances, and a serial killer on the loose, the Sun Down Motel is a dangerous place to stay.

 

 

cover of The Shining

The Shining by Stephen King  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

I probably don’t have to go into detail about the horrifying events at the Overlook Hotel, which is based on a real hotel, The Stanley Hotel. Jack Torrance is hired to be the off-season caretaker at the isolated Overlook Hotel, where he will live in with his wife, Wendy, and his son Danny, who has psychic abilities, referred to as the Shining. As the hotel gets more and more cut off, Jack’s behavior becomes more and more erratic as the hotel reveals its secrets.

 

cover of The Silent Land

 The Silent Land by Graham Joyce  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

A couple on vacation at a ski resort surrounded by deep snow,  dig themselves out of a flash avalanche and discover they are completely alone and cut off from civilization. More than the characters, the atmosphere of complete isolation is what creates the suspense and creepiness of this book. I’ll be honest, I don’t remember a lot about the characters, but the world Joyce creates is one I haven’t forgotten.

 

cover of Ghost Stories of an Antiquary

Ghost Stories of an Antiquary by M.R. James  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

This collection contains two short stories that involve haunted hotels, “Number 13” and “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come To You My Lad”. The second one has been adapted for radio and television. “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come To You My Lad” is the story of a college professor who takes a room at a hotel for a golfing holiday, and while walking along the beach discovers a bronze whistle in the midst of a ruin. That night, when he blows on the whistle, he has a disturbing vision, and possibly supernatural events start to occur.

 

cover for Jacaranda

Jacaranda (The Clockwork Century #6) by Cherie Priest  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

The Jacaranda Hotel, on the island of Galveston, in southeast Texas, has seen two dozen deaths since it opened a year ago. A local nun, a disgraced priest, and a Texas Ranger, along with a handful of guests and hotel employees, are trapped at the hotel during a hurricane, with a hostile supernatural force inhabiting the building.  Gothic, creepy, and violent, Jacaranda is a gripping ghost story. When I read it, I didn’t realize it was part of a series, or part of a steampunk universe, and you really don’t have to have read any of the other books to visit this haunted hotel.

 

cover for All the Lovely Bad Ones

 

All The Lovely Bad Ones by Mary Downing Hahn  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

Maybe you’re looking for a book you can share with your kids? You can’t go wrong with Mary Downing Hahn.  Travis and Corey are visiting their grandmother for the summer. She runs a small Vermont inn that has a reputation for being haunted. The boys decide to pull some pranks to fool the guests into thinking there are ghosts in the inn, only to awaken actual ghosts. Travis and Corey must discover the story behind the hauntings in order to put the spirits to rest.

 

Book Review: Indigo by Charlaine Harris, Christopher Golden, Jonathan Maberry, et al.

Indigo by Charlaine Harris, Christopher Golden, Jonathan Maberry, Kelley Armstrong, Tim Lebbon, Kat Richardson, Seanan McGuire, Cherie Priest, Mark Morris, and James A. Moore

St. Martin’s Press, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-1250076786

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

The authors of this book all have produced amazing dark fantasy and horror fiction, both novels and short stories.  In this shared world anthology, they collaborated to tell a novel-length story, with each writer taking a turn to continue the narrative to its end. These talented storytellers have come up with an entertaining tale that can be enjoyed both by casual readers and by fans of the individual authors, although identifying which author has written which section is not as simple as it seems.

Nora Hesper works as an investigative reporter. She’s an intriguing character, with a curious backstory, and considerable personality. When she was a teen, Nora’s parents died, and to cope, she studied the occult at a monastery to deal with the pain and solitude. That plot summary suggests a tired retread of superhero origin stories, but then the story diverts.

Nora learns to harness the powers of the night.When the light is pulled away by the shadows, she becomes Indigo in the slivers of the moonlight. Indigo can use the shadows to manipulate the darkness into weapons and slip into the passing shadows to transport herself in and out of trouble across the globe.

Nora’s opponents are the Children of Phonos, a sadistic group who hold a darkness inside that rivals that of Indigo. The Children of Phonos are murdering children across New York City, and Nora realizes that she must eliminate all of them to protect the children. Then an event occurs that sheds light on her origin and family that throws her into chaos, a mess that she must solve to find the peace again in her life.

Combining all of these voices in one novel is tough. It’s not perfect, but it is entertaining. Go into it with that mindset, and you may find an enjoyable tale.

Contains: violence, child sacrifice

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

Book List: 21st Century Lovecraftian Fiction

A lot of people have had limited (or no) exposure to the work of H.P. Lovecraft. Maybe they’ve seen those memes that go around at election time that say “Cthulhu for President: Choose The Lesser of Two Evils”, or have an adorable tentacled plushie, but that doesn’t mean they have ever actually read his stuff (and in addition to being creepy and terrifying, his writing can get pretty cumbersome). And once you toss in the really problematic aspects to his work, those people are probably not going to seek it out.

But you do not have to be a fan of the man to appreciate the imaginative worlds he created. Way before the Internet made fanfiction communities possible, people took his words and ran with them to create their own stories, and they are still doing it. I think he’d truly be astonished to see what people today have done with what little he wrote.

I will admit that I am not his biggest fan, mainly because his work gave me the heebie-jeebies in high school and I’ve never been able to get past that. But as an adult, I have read books that are grounded in the universe he imagined, and some of them have been really, really good. Books that are outstanding on their own merits, but that would never have existed if he hadn’t written down his own stories first.  Also, there are many authors that have approached his work in different ways, some more inventive than others. It makes me curious as to what will come next!  I’m going to share a few titles with you here that either I have read and enjoyed or that our reviewers have recommended. If you’re ready to move on from the past,  here are a few books you can try to check out what’s new in the world of Lovecraftian fiction.

 

 

Winter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys

 

Emrys flips Lovecraft’s view completely, by giving the narrative voice to Aphra Marsh, one of the “people of the water” who inhabited Innsmouth until the government destroyed it and took the survivors to an internment camp in the desert in 1928. Aphra and her brother Caleb are the only survivors, and are adopted by the Koto family, Japanese-Americans interned there during World War II. After the war is over, Aphra is contacted by a Jewish FBI agent, Ron Spector, who has reason to believe that the Russians may have learned the dangerous ability to body-switch, a power possessed by the Yith, long-lived time travelers who archive as much of history as they can. Spector wants Aphra to visit Miskatonic University as part of a research delegation and attempt to discover who at Miskatonic might have presented the Russians with the information. Aphra and Caleb jump at the opportunity to visit the Miskatonic library, where all books and documents remaining after the destruction of Innsmouth are stored. All this is just the beginning of a suspenseful and creepy mystery with more than its fair share of terror. A second team of FBI agents working at cross-purposes with Spector, a mysterious Yith, and an unexpected family reunion all feed into the chaos and pain, but there’s also love and loyalty, coming from unlikely places. With survivors of Innsmouth, formerly interned Japanese-Americans, a Jewish FBI agent, and an African-American informant, as central characters, genocide and racism must be faced head-on, but Emrys handles it without ever getting didactic. From Aphra’s point of view, we are all monsters, and it’s the choices we make that matter.

 

Dreams from the Witch-House: Female Voices of Lovecraft edited by Lynne Jamneck

 

This feminist anthology of Lovecraft-inspired horror received a rave review from Monster Librarian reviewer Lizzy Walker. Read her review here.

 

The Dream-Quest of Vellit Boe by Kij Johnson

 

This novella by Kij Johnson is her response to Lovecraft’s The Dream-Quest of  Unknown Kadath. It has an unreal, dreamlike feel to it, reminiscent in places of Ursula K. Le Guin, and draws the reader in to that dimension where uncaring, destructive, and capricious gods determine the fate not just of individuals but of entire communities. Vellitt Boe is a professor of mathematics who goes on a nightmare quest to retrieve one of her students, who has escaped to the waking world, before her grandfather, an insane god now deep in sleep, awakes and destroys the women’s college Vellitt works at, out of vengeance. An  adventurous traveler earlier in her life, Vellitt, now middle-aged, sets out again to find her student, a rare woman traveling through dangerous places, forced to face her regrets and past decisions as she moves closer to her goal. In a note at the end of the novella, Johnson writes that her first experience with Lovecraft was with The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, and that while she was uncomfortable with the racism, it was only later that she noticed the absence of women. Even though there are women in Johnson’s story, that absence is notably obvious. It’s also rare to see an adventure story with a middle-aged woman as protagonist, and it’s pretty cool that Johnson chose to center her in this novella.

 

The Ballad of Black Tom by Victor Lavalle

 

This is Lavalle’s response to Lovecraft’s “The Horror at Red Hook”. It’s been featured in many major review sources and has won multiple awards. Read our review here.

 

Maplecroft: The Lizzie Borden Dispatches by Cherie Priest

 

Lizzie Borden lives with her sister Emma, a disabled, brilliant, mad scientist, near the town of Fall River, Massachusetts, in the remote estate of Maplecroft. Although she’s been found innocent of the crime of murdering her parents with an ax, she can see malevolent entities from the ocean infecting the people of her community with nightmares and insanity, and she is not afraid to take them on, with every resource at her disposal. This is an epistolary novel, made up of journal entries and letters, and it’s easy for a story told using this method to drag. In this case, though, the plot is fast-paced, descriptions are vivid and horrific, and characters are revealed as in the peeling of an onion. Priest climbs inside the minds of characters who are slowly going insane, and we see through their eyes– it is a riveting, disturbing, trainwreck of a book. Priest does a great job of integrating historical details and Lovecraftian elements into her story. In addition to being ruthless and brutal with an ax, Lizzie also has a lover, Nance, who adds to the tension of the story. With complex women at its center, Maplecroft is a take on Lovecraft that would blow him away. A second volume, Chapelwood, is also available.

 

Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff

 

This is a series of interlocking stories taking place during the Jim Crow era,  about two African-American families threatened by cultists. Some critics have said it’s short on the existential dread and wiggly creatures, but an argument can be made that African-Americans in segregated America had more immediate terrors as part of their daily lives. This book is being made into an HBO series produced by Jordan Peele, the individual responsible for the excellent movie Get Out.