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Review of Patrick Rutigliano’s “Black Corners Of A Blood-Red Room”

Black Corners of a Blood-Red Room is a series of brief vignettes, or nightmares, if you will.  Each is like a taste of a bitter drink that first warms, then burns, as it travels down your throat, and then is gone, though you can still feel it there, itching in your gut, well after you have finished it.  None of these slightly less than fifty tales is more than ten pages long, and most are quite a bit less than that.  That the author is able to do much like the creature that adorns the cover and grab you by the throat with the stories that appear here speaks highly of his writing talent.  Short fiction can be tricky, and admittedly, not every single story here resonated with me, but again, with a selection as wide as Mr. Rutigliano has offered up here, his hit rate is quite impressive.
The stories on these pages are broken up into five different themes, though the author’s flights of fancy don’t really provide enough restraint that all of these stories can be easily categorized, though they are all horror, and there is a tremendous amount of diversity at work here.  Not often do you see a writer willing to plunge into such diverse territory.  We travel through history, alternate universes, and surreal environments.  This is definitely a dreamscape, and a wide ranging one at that.
I would like to see some longer tales from this author, but my guess is that he often gets the itch to create something short and abrupt, and finds it hard to spend time on larger works.  Again, he has done a great job at creating short, strong splashes of imagery that pulls you in and then drop kicks you rather rapidly when the tale is done.  So if you have a penchant for short horror fiction that tends to run into the fantastical, you should check out this book.  It is well worth the price of admission.

Black Corners of a Blood-Red Room can be found here:  http://www.amazon.com/Black-Corners-Blood-Red-Patrick-Rutigliano/dp/1453756531/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1294715754&sr=1-1


Living Dead Media’s review of Into The Dark

Living Dead Media’s review of Into The Dark has been posted and once again, I am pretty happy at the reception the second book in my trilogy has been receiving.  My biggest concern was how all the new characters that I introduce in this book would be received.  Thus far, most of the comments at the introduction of a bigger community of people that have given Jeff, Megan, George, and Jason new challenges to face has been positive, which I am thrilled with.

Check out the review here:  http://www.livingdeadmedia.com/zombie-books-and-fiction/208-dark2.html and keep looking for more of my Dark Stories that I will continue to post here on my blog-the new characters found in Into The Dark are now the focus of what will be posted from now on.  So check out the book, and then my Dark Stories page of this blog for more details on characters like Michael, Cindy, Frank, Ben, and the others.


Dollar Bin Horror reviews “Into The Dark”

The reviews are starting to really roll in for Into The Dark and I am happy to add Rhonny Reaper’s to the list.   When someone says ‘the second book of the Dark trilogy is even better than its predecessor in both content and pacing’ I think I can safely say I am pretty pleased and flattered by this review.  Check out the whole review here:   http://dollarbinhorror.blogspot.com/2011/01/dollar-bin-horror-spotlight-into-dark.html.  And of course, go ahead and check out Into the Dark!

 


Dark Stories: Michael, Frank, and Cindy

This is the first of the stories I originally wrote that would have appeared in Into The Dark had they made the cut.  Of course, I have revised this one a bit due to the fact that it is no longer integrated into the actual book.  This particular story is primarily flashback, with Michael being the main focus, but it also provides an introduction to both Frank as well as Cindy, explaining how he got mixed up with both of them.  Michael was always someone who was different than the people who were closest to him in the story, and this brief vignette hopefully explains why he was with them.

While this is primarily a flashback, it is mainly a story about Michael’s reflections on why and how he ended up with Cindy, and it is while he is sitting down at one of the tables in the RV camp on the morning after Jeff, Megan, George, and Jason have joined his group.

If you haven’t read Into The Dark as of yet, I won’t suggest that you don’t read this, but it might not make as much sense until you do have the chance to check it out.  The same applies to the rest of the stories that I will be posting from here on out.  I will do my best to avoid revealing anything that may come as a major surprise to anyone who hasn’t read further than Comes The Dark, but since none of these characters are even introduced until the second book in the trilogy, all of this is probably a surprise anyway.

As always, I must state that I have tried my best to catch all the typos and glitches that are in this story, but I am sure there are some still in there.  So forgive me for that.

Michael, Frank, and Cindy

He knew being with her was all wrong.  It wasn’t supposed to be like this.  Everything up to this point in his life had been regimented and controlled, structured to allow for the greatest amount of success.  Even when civilization crumbled, he had adapted and maintained control over the situation.  Now he was the leader of a small, but growing tribe of people.  The bloody lines on the map he looked at every day spoke of his triumphs: where he had come from (where they all had come from) and where they were heading.  They would continue heading east, away from large population centers, and find even more people to join them.  His power would grow as more people relied on him and trusted his leadership.  It was all working out as planned.

But all those visions, all those dreams, had been disrupted.  He still wanted the power, but there were other, darker things crossing his mind these days.  They hadn’t been there before.  They had been planted there recently.

Perhaps that was an excuse.  Maybe they had always been there, and it took the right, or more accurately, the wrong person to trudge them up.  So maybe if that person was out of the picture, maybe all those dark, hideous desires inside his head would disappear along with her.

Either way, he was sure that Cindy had to go.

*

Michael had been groomed for greatness by his parents from early on in life.  Private boarding schools, Princeton, and then Michigan for his MBA.  Business first, then politics.    There had been a stint in a corporate training program for Proctor and Gamble.  That was after they had wooed him and offered him the best compensation package amongst a slew of elite employers.  There were several rapid promotions leading to the executive level.  He was the youngest Vice President in the company and was expected to go much further with them … if he chose to stay.  The plan was to build relationships with various lobbyists, business leaders, and politicians, working those connections to his advantage.  His father was highly respected not only in Connecticut, where Michael had grown up, but had politicians in his back pocket from all across the country.  Between his own burgeoning relationships and those of his father, Michael would be ready to run for office either in Connecticut or Ohio shortly after turning thirty.  From there the sky was the limit.

He was to marry first, of course.  There had been a few respectable girls in Cincinnati he’d dated, but they were of the disposable variety.  Most were young and attractive, but interspersed with them were a few women of more … experience, who had helped him along his career path at P&G and with his political desires.  But he was from old money and the expectations were that he would marry old money.  There just was not enough of it in Cincinnati for his or his father’s liking.  So he had been shuttling back and forth between Cincinnati and New York on weekends for the past few months so he could court Ms. Penelope Warden.  Her father was a business associate of Michael’s father.  More importantly, Penelope’s family had political connections that ran up and down the east coast and it certainly didn’t hurt that as an only child, she was due to inherit substantial holdings in several Fortune 500 companies when dear old dad kicked the bucket.

That was about the time when things went haywire and the blasted virus came into play.  At first Michael reacted like everyone else, in a complete panic.  His world came crashing down around him.  His downtown Cincinnati condo was in jeopardy almost immediately and he found himself barricaded inside it as the city tore itself apart thirty stories below.  He tried to contact his parents and younger brother, but they were out of the country, somewhere in the Mediterranean on the family yacht.  When he couldn’t get a hold of anyone else back home or even any of the other P & G executives to see if he could snag a ride out of town on one of the corporate jets, he realized he was on his own.  He didn’t bother trying to contact Penelope.  Despite claims of undying love for him, she wasn’t going to be much help from over six hundred miles away.  In a way, it was a relief.  She was an insufferable bore and a hypochondriac that complained incessantly.  Michael could tolerate a lot to achieve his objectives in life, but having her at his side during the apocalypse terrified him.

As the world crumbled around him and he was certain his demise was eminent, Michael recalled something his father had said to him repeatedly as a young boy.  “Life is what you make of it.  When things go bad and you get knocked down, dust yourself off and get back up.  You were born with my blood running through your veins and I’ve never been a quitter.  So don’t bother with the excuses, because I’m not interested in them.”

Thinking back on it those words, they seemed trite and unimaginative to Michael as an adult.  But to a child of ten, they sounded far more impressive and scary.  It really was not the words anyway – it was how his father had backed them up.  He pushed Michael into every activity the private schools he’d attended had to offer.  Every sport, every extra-curricular activity.  He was never allowed to quit or perform at a subpar or average level.  He was expected to have stellar grades, leadership roles, and top notch girlfriends from well to do families.  Of course, nothing was ever good enough for dear old dad, and Michael spent much of his early life sniffing at his father’s feet for any sort of praise he could get.

There was no sob story attached to his upbringing.  Michael did not freak out, rebel, or ever climb onto a therapist’s couch.  Sure, dad had his mistresses and because of that, mom was a functional alcoholic and pill popper, but none of that ever played out in public or really caused any uproar.  It was simply par for the course for a well to do family.

Instead, he grew up knowing he was better and stronger than everyone else.  If for no other reason, because of all the sweat he had to pour into all he did.  His childhood had been hard, but he knew anything worth having in life was hard.  His father’s philosophy had carried him this far and he knew it would carry him further still.

The sense of helplessness he felt while watching the city burn evaporated as he concocted a plan.  Once the fear left him, things became clear.  He grabbed the camouflage outfit he’d bought for some retreat he’d gone on with other executives at P&G.  For three days Michael had played paintball, got drunk out in the woods, and howled at the moon.  It had been an absolutely worthless experience, but at least he got some useful duds out of it.  He also grabbed the rather large knife he’d bought out of a catalog after training with edged weapons in his martial arts classes.  Tai Kwan Do had been studied more for keeping in shape than for self-defense, but now it appeared that he would have the chance to put that training and the knife to good use.

For one last time he scanned his place; all the expensive decorating touches he had spent top dollar for.  He glanced over at his wine collection and the few pieces of artwork he’d bought at auction.  The accoutrements of wealth and success.  It was all kindling for the bonfire that humanity was being tossed into now, nothing more.

Being able to accept that was what made Michael stronger than his peers, and he knew it.  So many of them would be desperate to save the trappings of their prior lives, believing that somehow that would make a difference.  They would all die clutching at scraps of that old world.  He could relinquish it all – the wealth, the prestige, the potential power … and recognize that in this new world there would be other types of power which would allow only few to stand out from the crowd.  And that power would not come from possessions or connections, but from the strength of one’s determination and ability to adapt.  Michael vowed to embrace this new world order and show his father and every other ghost living inside his head that he was up to the challenge.

The next couple of days were a blur of furious movement and hiding in any hole he could find.  He managed to escape the tower he lived in with a couple of other tenants, though neither of them made it too far.  They were convinced the police or military would save them, or that they would find a safe haven within the city.  Michael didn’t spare much regret when they were torn to pieces within blocks of their former home.

The running seemed endless, as did the uncomfortable and cramped spaces he found himself in to avoid detection.  He slept in a broom closet in the bowels of an office building at one point, with the mop bucket and several large containers of cleaning solution pushed up against the door.  He swiped bottles of water and smashed in vending machines to get food.  He avoided confrontations with both the living and the undead while moving steadily in the direction that appeared to be the safest: east.

The city was not only in flames, it a war zone.  The trick, Michael learned, was to be counterintuitive.  Other refugees migrated toward the shelters and where the National Guard was located.  They headed to the hospitals, police, and fire stations.  They were idiots.  Because not only were the living moving in that direction, so were the dead.

Michael listened to a portable radio he had taken with him from his condo, and every report about a shelter that had been set up in the city told him exactly where not to go.  And when the reports stopped, he continued listening for gunfire, and steered clear of that as well.  He slipped into areas that had already been overrun by the dead, because the stiffs had a pack mentality and followed their prey where ever they could sense them.  That meant that only the stragglers and those too feeble to walk were usually left behind once all the living had fled or been devoured.  Those few ghouls were far easier to manage than the large hordes attacking the National Guard troops and the frightened sheep the general population had become.

By the time Michael met Frank, the endless hiding and running had taken its toll on him.  He was wearing down and feeling dispirited, questioning whether his brilliant plans for the future were all just a bunch of crap he’d made up to keep him motivated to stay alive when there wasn’t much sense in doing so.

Michael almost killed the other man by accident, thinking Frank was a rotter.  He was beating the brains in of a woman with his bare hands out on the street, and it was hard to tell which of the two was alive.

Michael tried avoiding situations where things might get out of control on him.  He had no interest in playing the hero or drawing a crowd, but this was in a quiet residential neighborhood that he was walking through – there was no one in sight beside the two people a dozen yards in front of him.  It was, in fact, one of the first streets he’d been on that didn’t have at least a half dozen stiffs wandering aimlessly on it.

He’d come down this road because he saw several cars and even a work van that appeared to be in working condition out in plain sight.  Looking for a vehicle he could drive out of the area had preoccupied Michael’s mind during much of his journey.  Walking was getting old, and being out in the open and vulnerable was making him a nervous wreck.

As he came up on the two struggling figures, Michael wondered if the man, or maybe the woman he was beating on, might have a set of keys to one of the vehicles nearby.  Looking around, he spotted a heavy tree branch that had snapped and fallen to the ground.  There was, in fact, plenty of debris all over the street to choose from.  Shattered door frames, discarded house wares, and even a few broken road signs.  The area, an old, rundown neighborhood filled with dilapidated row houses, looked like a tornado had hit it.  The two people doing battle appeared to be the last remnants of whatever madness had passed through the area.

Michael crept up behind the man and raised his weapon, ready to strike.  Frank chose that moment to turn his head, perhaps having spied Michael’s shadow from the corner of his eye.  That probably ended up saving his life.  He turned white as a sheet and raised an arm to ward off the blow as he scrambled backwards.  He stumbled over the woman he’d been pummeling and fell on his ass beside her.

The woman, no longer pinned to the ground, turned over in an effort to reach Frank, who scrabbled away from her.  Her face was an open wound.  A flap of skin that contained most of her facial features slapped at her skull with every jarring movement she made.  She was a heavy set, matronly woman with thick arms and legs.  She was trying to hiss out something through her lips, though nothing intelligible.  With it, there was a shower of spittle and blood that came from the depths of her throat.

Frank was babbling as well as he pressed up against one of the cars parked at the curb.  Reaching behind his back, he made an effort to hook his hand onto the bumper to help elevate his corpulent frame to a standing position.

Michael slammed his booted foot down on the small of the woman’s back and drove her chest toward the pavement.  One of the hands she had used to elevate her body skidded out from underneath her, leaving most of the skin from her palm on the asphalt.  Her other arm snapped, braking below the elbow, which caused her to collapse.  Swinging the tree branch, Michael landed several blows as the ghoul struggled to get back up.  A scattering of teeth sprayed from her mouth as the abuse rained down on the back of her skull.  After a minute or so, the matronly woman’s movements stilled.

Michael studied the corpse for a moment before looking back at Frank.  The expression on the filthy man’s face would have been amusing, if it weren’t so pathetic.  Frank looked about as terrified of Michael as the monster he’d been brawling with.

The fear turned into nervous appreciation as the two men traded introductions.  After that, Frank’s story came out in a tumble, as if he was relieved to have the chance to speak to a live human being.  He’d been stuck in his basement for several days, and had been forced to “deal” with his wife, who’d been bitten early on.  They had no children, so he had been all alone ever since.  After a while, the itch to see what was going on outside as well as a chance to grab something beside the pork n’ beans he’d been living on caused him to climb the stairs, pry open the door he’d nailed shut, and take a look around.  Most of the stiffs out of the street had migrated elsewhere by then, since a lot of Frank’s neighbors fled in the first couple of days of the madness that had gripped the city.  So he went on the hunt for food in his neighbor’s houses.  That was when he happened upon Lila, the woman he’d been attacking when Michael wandered by.  She lived a couple doors down from Frank.  He had entered her home and found her in the kitchen, snacking on Stanley, her husband.  “I guess she wanted fresher meat, ‘cause ol’ Stan smelled a mite sour, so she went after me,” Frank said with a crooked grin.

He rushed to leave the house, but Lila followed, smashing through the front door he’d slammed shut behind him, forcing him to deal with her out on the street.

“I never liked that bitch much anyway,” Frank said with a nervous chuckle as his story came to an end.

Michael patiently listened to the sweaty, smelly man’s tale and tried to ignore the fact that Frank looked like the type of person he wouldn’t have spoken to on a bet just a week prior, unless it was to pay him to do plumbing work or some other menial task … not that someone in Frank’s condition (even if he had showered and had on clean clothes) would have ever made it past the doorman of Michael’s building.  But things had changed, and the need to adapt to this new environment, and to the people who remained in it, was imperative.  There would be a need for men like Frank, like there always had been.  He was the type who took orders and was willing to get his hands dirty … very dirty, if necessary.

Nodding politely, Michael did his best to seem interested in what Frank had to say as his eyes kept gravitating to the work truck sitting in the driveway nearby.

Frank invited Michael into his house and they shared a sparse meal of the beans remaining in Frank’s stash and a few of the candy bars Michael was carrying.  He did his best not to cringe at the smell of the decrepit house, noticing all the while that Frank didn’t seem to mind the foul odor emanating from his basement.  Michael’s guess was that Frank’s wife was still down there, and his new acquaintance had grown used to the smell of her rotten corpse.

It didn’t take more than an hour with Frank for Michael to make up his mind.  Frank wasn’t too sharp, but he was malleable and appeared willing to do just about anything to get out of the stink trap he’d been living in for the past week.  The idle promise of some booze and the assurance that together they could forge a new existence for themselves and anyone else they found sounded pretty good to Frank.  He was a pig, but Michael knew he would be a loyal pig, as long as he was given some mud to root around in on occasion.

Before the day was over, they were on the road in the truck, which happened to be Frank’s, maneuvering past the most of the wrecks and areas crawling with mobile corpses as they headed east, away from the city.

Frank was just another piece of the puzzle Michael had been working on in his head.  Getting used to the filthy, disgusting man would be easy, since he was willing to follow orders and grew excited at the prospects of a lawless world that would need men like them to set things straight.  They might have to do a few questionable things along the way, but that would be okay – in the end, those living under their protection would thank them for what the two men were willing to do for them, with no questions asked.

As they avoided the hordes of undead and the few clots of National Guardsmen still alive and still willing to fight, they passed their time capturing a few of the individual ghouls they came across.  Michael felt it was important to understand the enemy, to see if anything could be done to salvage these inhuman wrecks.  He tried to see if they would respond to any stimulus besides warm flesh, and if, given enough time, they could be turned into some sort of slave labor or mindless work force.

They would lure a single stiff into the back of the van.  A dead dog or cat carcass was usually enough to get them moving in the right direction.  The truck had a wire-reinforced barrier between the driver’s area and the back, which made it easy to collect specimens without fear of getting bit.  A couple of hockey sticks, a fishing net, and some padded gloves acquired from an abandoned sporting goods store were the only equipment they needed to manage the task, along with some stout rope.

When every experiment Michael did failed, he turned the monsters over to Frank, who enjoyed torturing the creatures.  Michael suspected it wasn’t because of some twisted desire for revenge that the small-minded man had, but because Frank got his rocks off that way.  Michael tolerated the behavior, though it repulsed him, because it gave his partner a little bit of joy in an otherwise dreary existence.

Over the next few days, they had run-ins with both the living and the dead, and managed to come out on top in each situation, adding to their level of confidence as well as their arsenal.  Frank laid claim to a double barreled shotgun while Michael got an M16 and 9mm pistol from some stubborn soldier who took a little bit of prodding before he gave them up.  Not long after that, they were also gathering people; stragglers more than happy to let Michael take the lead in their efforts to survive.  They ditched the van as their contingent grew in size, finding a small plastics factory that they could fortify until they could find more adequate transportation.

The battle to survive was a daily grind.  The group spent their time foraging for food, water, and other supplies that would help them make a go of it.  Everyone who joined Michael’s group was thrilled to be with other survivors and asked few questions about his methods, which was just how he liked things.  He doled out the responsibilities and Frank made sure everyone did as they were told.  It seemed that everyone was more than happy to be following orders – it gave their existence meaning and the confidence Michael exuded gave them hope.

Then Cindy came along.

Michael couldn’t say that she ruined everything.  To say that she had even changed his plans would be an exaggeration and a lie.  He knew Cindy didn’t change one single thing about his vision for the future.  They would still find a permanent home for the living that Michael preached about, and he would continue shaping everyone’s vision of the future.  Each step they took as a group was still as he dictated.

It wasn’t his vision that had changed with Cindy.  It was him who had changed.  After spending just a little time with her, he knew what she was.  She was a succubus, taking great pleasure sucking the life force out of him bit by bit.  But that wasn’t all.  She was not so indifferent to his suffering that she wanted to take everything away until he withered and died.  Instead, for every bit of him she took, she gave back piece of herself.  It was her gift.  For every rational thought, for every piece of compassion he tried to maintain a grip on but lost, there was something new put in its place.  Something that was dark and squirmed beneath his skin.  It burned in his gut and made it feel like his bones were turning to ash.

Cindy’s gift to Michael was her pure and unadulterated hatred for everyone and everything in the world.  And as much as he wanted to deny it, he had to admit that a part of him liked the gift she had given him.

Cindy had stumbled into the factory a couple of days after they’d set up camp and told a muddled story about a boyfriend who she’d shared a camper with until he was bitten.  The story was vague, but it didn’t bother Cindy that no one seemed to buy it – she stumbled over what her boyfriend’s name was and she was even vaguer about her existence before the virus had hit.  It was easy for Michael to dismiss; several of the people with them found it hard to talk about their past.  What was clear to him was that Cindy enjoyed the rough, harsh existence brought on by the plague, and didn’t have any problem killing infected.  She was good at it.  She was a strong, remorseless killer, and that appealed to him.  Most of the people he was surrounded by had an almost crippling fear of the undead, but not Cindy.

Almost immediately after being welcomed into the group, Cindy began the process of insinuating herself into Michael’s life.

Despite her outward appearance as a tattooed, rebellious free-spirit, Cindy was, in her own way, even more power hungry than Michael.  She recognized him as the person in charge and did everything she could to learn what made him tick.  Michael, who had rubbed elbows with politicians and the well to do his entire life, realized too late that he had no built in defense mechanisms to hold off the advances of someone so … raw, for lack of a better term.  Cindy had no fears, no boundaries, and a depraved, lusty nature that attracted Michael like a moth to the flame.

She was his girlfriend before he even realized it.  And from the first moment he did realize it, he understood that he needed to figure out a way to be free of her clutches.

Cindy scared Michael.  She could see right through him and knew from the get go that there was a repressed knot of rage buried deep inside that he rarely displayed.  She massaged that rage to the surface, prodding him into directing his anger toward her.  What scared Michael the most was that Cindy enjoyed it when he was mad at her.  She didn’t stop there, and pushed him into getting violent with her when no one else was around.  It was a sick trip, but the desire that burned in her eyes when she provoked him made it all the more frightening and appealing.  When he tried to restrain himself, she would push harder.  Lacing the violence with sex made it all the more confusing.  It was exhilarating and terrifying, and felt like they were in some sort of sick, symbiotic relationship; Cindy fed on his anger while at the same time encouraging more of it to grow inside of him so the supply she craved would be never ending.

The urge to resist Cindy weakened in time, though never disappeared.  There were far too many other things going on for Michael to worry about their relationship and what it was becoming.  About a week and a half after they claimed the factory as their own, it was overrun and several members of the group died as they escaped.

Michael’s group was once again out in the open and that was when the idea of getting a hold of an RV or two popped into his head.  Ben, one of the newcomers and a massive giant of a man, suggested they get more than just a couple, and set out to find a place they could bring them which would keep the group hidden away from danger.  He alluded at the fact that getting diesel to fuel those beasts would be tough, and become next to impossible in the upcoming months, but they would be incredibly useful even if they weren’t able to go that far.  They needed to find a place to hunker down that was defensible, and if they had enough RVs, they could create a barrier that would be difficult for the undead to penetrate.

It took several days, but they found an RV dealership not too far away while Ben found an ideal place to move the motor homes to near a small town called Manchester.  Things got messy and a few more members of the group perished during the process of moving and transplanting the RVs, but afterwards they were safe again, hidden behind massive metal walls and buried in a wooded area that would keep prying eyes, both living and dead, from seeing their new home.

As things settled down, Michael found himself with more free time, and more time to reflect on his existence than he’d had since he left his condo in downtown Cincinnati.  Marcus, who’d joined the group after they fled the factory, became Frank’s drinking buddy, which kept the lout preoccupied most of the time.  Ben volunteered to collect the supplies they needed and spent much of his time beyond the walls of the RV fortress hunting and scavenging around Manchester.  Lydia, one of the more recent additions to the group, was more than willing to take responsibility of managing the food and water and tending to the children.  All of this meant that Michael had more time to spend thinking … thinking about the future of the little civilization he was trying to create … and about how imperative it had become that he sever his ties with Cindy.

It couldn’t happen yet, not with the batch of newcomers that had just arrived, but soon enough.  No reason to give any of them any doubts about the stability of the pecking order in the camp.  Even if he did find Megan intriguing.

She wasn’t attractive … at least not at first glance.  She was physically weak and sickly looking, with dark circles beneath sunken eyes and pallor that was the norm for those who had spent the past few weeks either hiding or running in fear.  And yet, there was a sparkle in her eyes which was hard not to notice and traces of what she might have looked like before her world had been shattered haunted her face.  There was beauty hidden there, and given time and nurturing, it would return.  And for Michael, more important than any physical potential she possessed, she was a normal human being.  Megan was feisty, no doubt about it, but she wasn’t a sociopath, which elevated her status dramatically in his eyes.  She was a suitable match for him, and he doubted that anyone except Cindy would disagree with that.

But that could wait.  He could woo Megan after she, Jeff, and George understood their place in his little world.  It wouldn’t take long for them to realize they were better off doing things his way, rather than resisting the inevitable, or they would suffer the consequences.

Given enough time, Megan would regain the weight she’d lost and a healthy glow would return to her skin.  She would also come to her senses.  Life was a struggle, but it would be much easier with Michael at her side.  No amount of animosity she felt for him now would keep her from seeing the truth in the coming weeks.

The only thing standing in the way of that vision was Cindy.  She would have to be dealt with.  It had to happen soon.  Their relationship had grown more and more twisted with every day and night they spent together.

Michael knew that “dealing” with her wouldn’t just be a matter of kicking her out of the RV they shared or telling her it was over between them.  No.  It would require something a bit more drastic than that.

Perhaps a trip beyond the walls of their little fortress for just the two of them might be in order.  A trip she wouldn’t return from.  It wasn’t as if anyone would miss her anyway.

As he ran his finger along the razor sharp edge of the knife he kept strapped to his wrist, a nervous smile twitched at his lips.  He could deal with her.  He just had to work up the courage.

Then everything would return to normal inside of Michael’s head.  All the sinister urges Cindy had put in there would evaporate, disappear.  The dark cravings would be gone, and he would become the leader he had always wanted to be; the one everyone admired and respected, and not just feared.  All he had to do was get rid of her vile influence on him and everything would be just fine.

Soon.  He would do it soon.


Revised cover for Strange Tales of Horror Anthology

One of the anthologies that I am in, which is being released shortly, is Strange Tales of Horror from Norgus Press.  It is their first anthology and I am thrilled to have my story, “VRZ” in it.  It should be released fairly soon, and the table of contents promises a pretty diverse range of stories.  Be sure to check it out, and of course, once it hits the shelves, I will be posting a link for where to get it.

They have changed the cover, and I think this one is pretty wild looking and I like it quite a bit.  So check it out!


Dark Stories: Fred and Bobby

Well, I have come to the point where the main characters from Come The Dark have been all detailed out via the Dark Stories I’ve posted thus far.  As I mentioned in the past, I wanted to continue this trek, and shed some light on some of the other characters that are introduced in Into The Dark.  But before I do that, I decided that I would post this little tidbit.

I realize that this isn’t much of a short story, really.  It is more of an information dump on two characters that show up briefly in Comes The Dark, but have a profound impact on the four survivors in the story.  Fred, the father who ambushes Jeff and Megan at the farmhouse, and his son Bobby.  I had originally written this bit as an extensive explanation of who they were in my manuscript, but for what seems like obvious reasons now, it seemed unnecessary to the main story as I started doing edits.

I will freely admit that this brief overview of these two may not resonate that much with any of you.  More or less, it is information on two peripheral characters to make them hopefully feel more human to you, given the circumstances with which they are introduced in story.  I guess my objective was to make sure that everyone had a reason to exist that I introduced.  I wanted everyone, even these two guys who are in the story for all of a chapter, to have a real existence and real lives.

I guess it is up to you to see if I achieved that or not with this brief introduction to Fred and Bobby.

As always, I would like to point out that I did my best to make sure I edited this piece properly, but I am sure there will be a few typos here and there.  So forgive me those.  I hope you enjoy:

 

Fred and Bobby

Fred had spent his career as a mailman in Lawrence Park, where he and his wife Carol had lived for several years.  It was located near Milfield, but closer to the city.  Considered a more upscale address than most of the outlying suburbs, several recognizable local celebrities called it home.  Old, trendy neighborhoods with half a million dollar plus homes were the norm, and the Harrington’s liked the status they gained when they moved into the area.   While Fred’s salary wasn’t impressive, Carol was a marketing executive for a large downtown Cincinnati Fortune 500 company, which afforded them a pretty decent lifestyle.

Despite the ease with which Fred handled the expensive hunting rifle he was carrying when he ambushed Jeff and Megan, the first time he had handled the weapon had been only three weeks earlier.  In fact, he had never touched any sort of firearm until he met Carol.  Carol might have enjoyed her urban, yuppie existence, but she was still a country girl at heart with a family that loved to hunt and fish.  Fred’s boys, Bobby and Charlie, had gone out with Carol’s brother Teddy on many occasions.  He took them hunting near his place near Hillsboro, which was about forty five miles east of Cincinnati.  He was the one, with Carol’s permission, who had bought the boys their rifles a few years earlier for Christmas.  Fred had been hesitant about the idea at first, but Carol had convinced him that Teddy would teach them all about gun safety before they ever got to use them.  He had agreed, reluctantly.

The rifle Fred was carrying had been Charlie’s.  After his older son had died, Bobby managed to teach his father how to use it.  That knowledge had helped him and his son out of several tough jams with the undead.

Up until coming across Jeff and Megan, Fred had handled the rifle fairly well.  He’d been willing to pull the trigger when his wife had been bitten by several of the infected.  When her eyes opened back up after her heart had stopped, he had taken aim and put her out of her misery, despite the sensation that the world was caving in on him as he did it.

Fred had managed twenty headshots on the undead at long range with Charlie’s rifle.  Bobby had shot even more of the stiffs during their travels.  Still, it was Fred, the novice, who came into his own during the apocalypse.  He had become a survivor, able to deal with anything that came his way, or so he presumed.  That rifle had given him a sense of confidence he’d never had before in life.

Back when everything started, when the first reports of the virus showing up in Ohio had hit the air, Fred didn’t have much of an assertive personality.  Carol had been the one who ruled the roost in the Harrington household, which had been just fine with Fred.  When the soldiers with bullhorns had rolled down their street urging everyone to head to the local community center where a shelter had been set up, it was her who had announced that they would be hunkering down in the house and not bothering with such a place.  She believed that all of this nonsense would blow over within a few days.  Fred didn’t have much to say about that, despite his unvoiced concerns.

And when everything continued to go downhill, and it was too late to do much except sit and watch as the amount of infected in Lawrence Park grew exponentially, it was Carol who decided it was time for the Harrington’s to make a run for it.

Up until that point, the boys hadn’t the need to fire their rifles in defense of the house.  They’d learned by watching some of the neighbors as their houses were turned into something like the Alamo that just about any loud noise could set off the rotters.  They would swarm and within minutes, there was typically nothing left of the people hiding behind their locked doors.  But as long as things were quiet, the stiffs seemed willing to leave things well enough alone.

Their food and water supply had shrunk to a dangerously low level by the time Carol suggested to Fred that they get in the Acura SUV parked in the garage and head out to Teddy’s place.  Fred, as he typically did, deferred to his wife’s judgment, which pleased the boys tremendously.  Before their parents could say anything else, they were rushing around the house, collecting up everything they wanted to take to their favorite uncle’s ranch.

Later on, Fred could never quite recall what it was that had set the stiffs off.  Perhaps it had been the suitcase Bobby had dropped down the steps, or the vase Charlie knocked over in the front hallway.  It might have just been the fact that everyone seemed to have forgotten where they were and let their voices rise with excitement at their eminent departure.  All he knew for sure was that one minute they were talking about what route they should take to get to Uncle Teddy’s, and the next the doors and windows were being bashed on by several of their undead neighbors.  Within moments, the sounds of smashing fists had increased tenfold and there was a huge crowd surrounding the house.  It sounded something like a hailstorm going on outside.

The Harrington’s had attempted to grab what seemed like all their worldly possessions for their departure, and only in hindsight did Fred realize how incredibly foolish that had been.  Besides their weapons and the food and water they could carry, grabbing anything else hadn’t made much sense.  Still, it seemed like the logical thing to do at the time.  That, Fred decided, was the real culprit for what happened next.

As the front door threatened to collapse under the strain of a dozen bodies, Fred commandeered Charlie to help him drag more furniture in front of the door while Bobby and Carol scrambled to collect the suitcases and bags of clothing that had been tossed into the kitchen so they could move them to the SUV.  Before they could get very far, the large picture window at the front of the house shattered and the feeble plywood sheet covering it was threatening to snap into kindling.  Foolishly, everyone chose to rush to the window in an effort to hold off the onslaught, but it seemed like a hundred arms were already grabbing and pawing at them through the growing gaps in the barricade.

A stray arm clutched at Charlie’s neck, and before he could even cry out, he was being pulled through the rapidly increasing gap in their defenses, head first.  It was just that quick. There was no slow, dreadful struggle, no failed tug of war between his family and the undead.  It happened so fast, Fred didn’t even realize Charlie had been attacked until Carole screamed out a few seconds later.  By then, it was too late.  Charlie’s body didn’t even have much of a chance to twitch in its death throws as it was dragged ruthlessly out the hole.  The instant his head had been yanked out the window, several ghouls had torn into his face and neck, killing him almost instantly.

The moments following Charlie’s death were a blur.  Fred might not have believed in miracles before then, but he did after he somehow managed to drag his wife and other son to the garage as the rotting horde on their front lawn poured into the house.  Bobby and Carol both fought him every step of the way, believing in their stunned state that Charlie was somehow still alive and they needed to save him.

Something snapped in Fred after Charlie’s death.  His voice, always quiet and unassuming, thundered as he exhorted his family to get to the SUV.  And for some reason he couldn’t quite comprehend, they listened to him.  They managed to grab their weapons, but little else, before they climbed into the vehicle.

The back end of the Acura took a beating as it plowed through the garage door and several stiffs that had been in the Harrington’s driveway.  Their race through the neighborhood was a chaotic obstacle course that forced Fred to navigate through several of their neighbor’s yards in an attempt to escape the horde.  Tucked away inside their house, it had been hard for Fred to believe that most of the people in the world had turned into savage monsters, but the moment he saw how many of foul, rotting monsters were shambling around outside, all his doubts about the magnitude of the plague evaporated.

The sounds of Bobby’s howled curses was barely audible over the caterwauls of the deceased as Carol wept silent tears next to Fred.  Despite the din, all Fred could hear was the pounding of his heart as he was forced to slalom around another clot of bodies in front of him.

The Acura suffered a few more dents and dings before Fred managed to plow through the twelve foot tall hedges lining the edge of their subdivision.  As a mailman, he was familiar with most of the back roads in the area, and was able to navigate the SUV to an area not clogged with the wrecks choking the major roadways.  Despite his desire to head straight for Hillsboro and Teddy’s place, he knew that wasn’t feasible.  His knowledge of the local area gave Fred only a bit of an edge, which diminished as they left Lawrence Park.  The GPS in the Acura was on the fritz, so their path became more convoluted the further away from home they got.  Fred waited patiently for Carol to say something to him, to offer him some sort of guidance, but she sat in stony silence on the trip, leaving the decision making up to him.

After an hour or so, thoughts of getting to Teddy’s place took a back seat to survival.  The world had been wrecked, and Fred was beginning to doubt that getting to Hillsboro was going to be something they would be able to do very easily, or perhaps at all.

The journey that first day consisted of a series of misguided attempts to stop and collect food and water, along with a failed attempt at seeing if there was any gas left in the pumps at a convenience store several miles from their house.  The undead were everywhere, and every time they stopped the Acura and stepped outside, it never took more than ten minutes before the surviving members of the Harrington family were forced to rush back to the SUV before getting surrounded and overwhelmed.

Originally, Fred had believed the news reports that stated that most of the infected were confined to certain areas of the city, while outlying suburbs and rural areas were relatively safe.  No such luck.  There were deaders as far as the eye could see, in every direction.  Many hadn’t stirred since the last of the living had departed or died days and weeks earlier, but when the sound of the Acura’s engine roared through the area they woke out of whatever stupor they were in and swarmed the vehicle.  It made for some messy getaways.

They somehow managed to find a place to hide outside of Gallatin, deep into the night.  They sat in the SUV, buried in a stand of trees for several hours with the engine turned off.  They had been forced to leave the Acura where it was parked as they hoofed it to a house a hundred yards away that had been abandoned.  They spent the next day silently fortifying the house the best they could, dismantling furniture and using it to barricade the doors and windows.  The only door that wasn’t blocked off was the one off the back porch, which Fred and Bobby used to sneak out to go hunting over the course of the following week.

That was when Bobby taught his father how to use Charlie’s rifle.  Hunting was a challenge, but they managed to scare up some game.  It seemed that most of the wild animals were still plentiful despite the fact domesticated animals had been slaughtered just like the human population.  They saw more than one dead cow, its bones picked clean by the combination of the ravenous undead and the scavengers that made sure whatever they left behind was devoured.

Unfortunately, with every shot of the rifles, the infected became aware of their position and tracked the father and son to their location within minutes.  It forced them to travel further afield on each trip, away from the house they had commandeered, to insure they didn’t bring any stiffs back home with them.  Even with a thorough effort to insure that the surrounding area was corpse-free, it was only a matter of minutes before the first trickle of rotters would appear off in the distance after a trigger was pulled.  It was even worse when they got a kill.  The scent of fresh blood was like a magnet that pulled and compelled the monsters.

Despite all their precautions, it was after one of their failed hunting trips that they returned to the house to find the windows smashed in and the back door wide open.  Rushing inside, they discovered Carol had killed eleven ghouls with her small handgun.  It had taken sixteen shots to take them down, which meant she had been forced to reload the semi-automatic in the middle of the fight.  During the battle, she had been bitten, but even after getting her arm gnawed on, she managed to continue fighting the rest of the pack off.  She let the one that had latched onto her arm clamp down tight while she fired the gun with her other hand, shooting the three other stiffs surrounding her.  Even then, she didn’t shoot the one on her arm.  Instead, she slammed the butt of the handgun down onto its skull until she heard the bone cracked, firing at several other stiffs between each downward strike.  Finally, when she was out of immediate danger and the one that had bitten her was twitching on the floor, she put a bullet in its head.

Carol Harrington was a tough woman.  Her husband would be the first to tell anyone that.  It was forty hours of labor with no painkillers for the birth of Charlie and then a c-section with Bobby.  Never a complaint in either instance and she was up and moving around the next day like nothing had happened.  Any pain she had was suffered through in silence.  This time was no exception.  After all the ghouls were dead, she wrapped her arm in a bed sheet and waited for her son and husband to return to the house.  Once they did, she was the one who insisted they leave right away, without any time for her to rest from the assault.  Carol was nothing if not practical.  They had to find another hiding place before more of the infected found them.

“Get off your asses, quit whining about me, and head for the Acura!”  It was as simple as that.  She made the pronouncement and there was no questioning her on it.

They drove the SUV until it ran out of gas, which unfortunately didn’t take long.  After that, they walked for two hours, moving with as much stealth as they could manage.  Carol, who refused any assistance, stood tall and kept walking until they found the old farm house with the grain silo next to it.  It was surrounded by several large, barren fields and much like their previous hiding place, it had been abandoned weeks before.  Given their ability to see what was coming at them for nearly a mile in every direction, they knew it was their safest bet.

Carol died a day later.  She was strong, but like every other human being that had been bitten and infected with the virus, she couldn’t resist its deadly pull.

Less than thirty minutes after her demise, she sat up in the bed that Fred and Bobby had laid her down on in the farmhouse.  The first thing she did after opening her rheumy eyes was to hiss at her husband.  Fred, who had wrapped the rifle in a towel to muffle the sound, waited until the very last second before putting a bullet through Carol’s head.

They buried her an hour later, putting up a makeshift cross to mark her grave.

Fred and Bobby spent the next week or so at the farmhouse, living in silence, rarely speaking to one another.  They saw more and more of the dead creeping around off in the distance, but none ventured too close.  Even so, it was getting worse every day.  There would be long stretches of time where they would see nothing, but then would spot a pack of twenty or thirty of the diseased vermin roaming near the property.  At the same time, their ammunition was running low and they wanted to preserve it for hunting, so they had to continue keeping their heads down.  Bobby found a bike out in the shed, but didn’t bother riding it anywhere.  It was too dangerous a risk.

It was on one of those drab, muggy summer days that seemed endless when they heard a sound that was almost alien to them anymore.  The sound of a car engine rolling down the road that ran next to the property.  Even off in the distance, the engine was clear as a bell.  There were no other sounds to interfere with it: no other cars, no people, no machines … nothing.  There hadn’t been anything but the moans of the dead and chirping of birds for as long as they could remember.

The two of them watched as the blue Honda stopped in front of the huge property.  At that point it was just some far away dot.  It wasn’t until it turned up the road, moving closer, that Fred came up with a hastily outlined plan that would help him and Bobby escape the farmhouse and make one last attempt to get to Hillsboro and Teddy, if he were still alive.

Bobby had been hesitant about trying to hijack the van and wanted to see if they could just talk to the people to see if they might be able to hitch a ride with them.  Fred steamrolled that idea without a moment’s hesitation.  He was a changed man, no longer afraid to assert himself.  The death of his older boy and wife of twenty three years had done that to him.

He reminded Bobby that the few people they’d seen since the escaped from their house in Lawrence Park had been none too friendly to them.  If his family hadn’t been armed, Fred knew that there was no way they would have made it this far.  They would be dead on the side of some road, left as bait for the rotters as their fellow survivors picked over their meager belongings.  People were desperate, crazed, and none seemed to be in the mood for small talk or hospitality these days.

After a few seconds of heated discussion with his father, Bobby gave in and reluctantly nodded his agreement to the plan.  Fred moved into position behind the shed and told Bobby to wait at the door.  They would be ready for the people in the van, no matter how dangerous they were and how well armed they might be.

Despite the argument, and despite the lack of communication between the father and son, the two had grown much closer after Carol’s death.  Before, their relationship had been okay-as best as could be expected between a rebellious teenager and his dad, but their level of trust and appreciation for one another had grown dramatically in the past few days.  Despite the cloud of despair hanging over them, they knew they could count one another for anything.

Charlie had been a great older brother.  He liked to heap abuse on his kid brother when they were younger, with wedgies and Indian burns being his favorite form of torture.  But as they got older, they had learned to watch out for one another, to watch each other’s backs.  Somehow, after Charlie died, Bobby managed to stay strong, despite losing his best friend.  He had clung to his mother, knowing deep down that he had been her favorite, whereas dad had favored Charlie.  So when she died, it had felt like his guts had been ripped out.

It had been the same for Fred.  Somehow, out of their combined pain and anguish, they were able to form a new bond.  Part of it had come from the last conversation Bobby had with his mother before she passed.   When they had arrived at the farmhouse, Carol had sat her son down next to her.  She had looked him straight in the eye and told him that it was his job to watch out for his father now.  They were each other’s responsibility and no one else was going to take care of them if they didn’t take care of each other.  The entire world was out to get them and they had to stick together if they were going to make it out of this alive.  She made him swear to her that he would.  Bobby had, and when he did, he meant every word of it.

Bobby didn’t realize it, but moments after he said his last goodbye to his mother and rushed from the room to weep silently in the shed, and before she took her final breath, Carol had the same conversation with her husband.  And Fred had made the same promise to her that his son had.

They would stick together until the bitter end.

 


Review of Craig DiLouie’s “Tooth and Nail”

Tooth and Nail is blistering fast military-focused thrill ride into the apocalypse.  I scanned some of the other reviews and a comment that comes up with some frequency is that the nemesis here are not technically zombies.  From a purist perspective, that is certainly true.  The Hong Kong Lyssa Virus does not kill its victims…the ones that go “Mad Dog”, as they are called, have symptoms similar to someone infected with rabies…along the lines what we saw with 28 Days Later and Rec, as far as movies are concerned.  They are fast, they are lethal, and their desire is to spread the virus rather than devour the living, although they are not above tearing someone apart that gets in their way.  The effect of this is that the author went to some pretty good lengths to detail out this virus and its effect, giving it a realistic edge where the science felt pretty solid.
That is not where the realism in this tale stops.  The story focuses on Charlie Company, who are stationed in Manhattan, guarding one of the hospital where Lyssa patients are being attended to.  As the story starts, the city is already on lock down.  The U.S. troops have been recalled from all across the globe to deal with the growing threat in America and we are just getting a small taste of what these Mad Dogs are capable of.  The Lyssa Virus itself is just like any other flu, or so it seems, but with a small percentage of those getting sick turning into rabid killers.  But that number is increasing as it is discovered that this isn’t just an airborne virus and the Mad Dogs are growing as a part of the sick population at an exponential rate.  At the same time we are seeing what Charlie Company is up against, we are also introduced to a research facility in Manhattan, where a Russian Doctor is discovering the truth about the virus and more specifically, the Mad Dogs, and trying desperately to come up with a vaccine or cure.
Craig DiLouie has created a very tightly knit story here with a great deal of depth of detail when it comes to military protocol and actions.  Since I haven’t served in the military, I can’t attest to the specific accuracy of everything, but clearly, the author knows his stuff.  There is no one single main character here, instead, the cast is more like an ensemble and the story reminded me, in parts, of the movie “Black Hawk Down”, where it seems at every turn things are getting worse and worse and the local population is turning more savage by the minute as the military tries to complete their mission.  Despite the lack of a main character, the author did a great job of providing the reader with some fully fleshed out characters that were easy to grow attached to for me.  Their interactions felt real and natural given the circumstances, not awkward or forced.  If I had a complaint about this story, it was with the tense change that occurred at a few points of the story.  I can understand the merits of going present tense with a book that moves at the hectic pace of this one, but there are some parts of the book that are in past tense and others in present, which is a shift that isn’t always easy to adapt to as a reader.  Despite this minor quibble, the book is solidly written and the story well paced.  I do hope to see a sequel to this book, but it certainly can stand on its own as a excellent entry into the infected/zombie apocalypse genre.

Tooth and Nail can be found at: http://www.amazon.com/Tooth-Nail-Craig-Dilouie/dp/1930486987/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1294151082&sr=8-1


Check out my interview with Heather over at Doubleshot Reviews.

Heather over at Doubleshot Reviews was kind enough to interview me after reviewing Comes The Dark recently.  So give it a looksee here:  http://doubleshotreviews.com/2011/01/03/interview-with-patrick-dorazio/


Review of Todd Brown’s “Zomblog II”

Zomblog II slides the reader into the story started with Zomblog with ease, with a second character having taken up the challenge to provide a journal about the ongoing zombie apocalypse.  Meredith, who actually became the narrator perhaps halfway through the first book, continues to tell of her experiences as she moves from place to place and meets new survivors along the way, while trying her best to keep those she cares about alive.  I thought the way the author shifted perspectives was quite creative and surprising in the first book.  I won’t ruin the surprise here by giving away what happens in the second book, as I tend to prefer not to give away the overall plot.  So if you are expecting the same type of shakeup here, you will have to read the book for yourself to find out what happens to the main character and if they make it through to the end.
Zomblog II moves at the same breakneck pace as Zomblog did, but Todd Brown has upped the ante with even greater challenges and darker realities for the narrator of this tale to face as the initial days of the zombie apocalypse fade into the distance. The most compelling aspect of this book is the author’s willingness to show both the absolute best and worst aspects of humanity and keeping you glued to every page as the story unfolds.  Make no mistake, this is a gritty, raw tale that expects the reader to accept how depraved mankind can get when things go bad.  Certainly, there are those who retain elements of their humanity, but while living in barbaric, ugly times, the bad seems to shine through, and those that are willing to do anything are the ones who tend to survive.  Not that there aren’t good people still around, but even those people are forced to do questionable, brutal things, including the main character.  Perhaps the dark, dim nature of this tale might be too grim for some, and fair warning if you like coming out of a tale like this with a strong sense of hope.  There is perhaps some, but nothing that will reaffirm your faith in mankind, that is for sure.
Despite the fact that this is a diary approach to writing and there really isn’t dialog because of that, we are able to get to know Meredith and some of the key characters that surround her quite well and what drives and motivates them through her words and the emotions that resonate off her journal pages.  Meredith is a fleshed out, hard nosed character that keeps the story moving forward every step of the way.  This book kept my interest from start to finish, and I look forward to checking out how the story continues with the next Zomblog journal entry.

Zomblog II can be found at http://www.amazon.com/Zomblog-II-T-W-Brown/dp/0984537252/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1294071777&sr=1-1


Review of “Into The Dark” from Buy Zombie

Buy Zombie posted their review of Into The Dark today.  While the reviewer had some issues with parts of the story, overall, I think this was a positive review.  I appreciated the opportunity to have them read it and hope you will do the same.  Check out the review at:  http://www.buyzombie.com/2011/01/03/reviews-of-zombie-related-things/into-the-dark-review/.


“A Soldier’s Lament” now in e-book form!

I am happy to announce that my short story, A Soldier’s Lament, has been published as an individual story available for sale for your e-book reader.  May December, who originally published the story in their first person zombie anthology, Eyewitness: Zombie, has made it available via Smashwords.  You can check out Fangoria’s review of Eyewitness: Zombie, which specifically mentions A Soldier’s Lament in it, here:  https://patrickdorazio.com/2010/12/04/great-review-of-eye-witness-zombie-on-fangoria/.

I am quite excited about this, and part of the reason I am is because this particular story takes place in the same world as my Dark Trilogy of novels.  Without ruining anything, if you have read Into The Dark, you might recognize a couple of the characters when you check out this short story.

At $2.99, this is a pretty cheap price as well.  So check it out!

There is no specific cover art work for this short story, but the publisher did commission this killer drawing that ties into the story quite well for Eyewitness: Zombie.  Just click on the image to head over to the link at Smashwords.


Review of “Comes The Dark” from Double Shot Reviews!

Heather over at Doubleshot Reviews was kind enough to take a look at Comes The Dark and after reading it, seems to also be interested in checking out Into The Dark as well, which is great!  I guess that means she liked it.

Besides doing a review of my books, I will get the opportunity to be interviewed by Heather on zombies, writing, and the experiences of getting published.  Stay tuned as I keep you updated on that.  In the meantime, check out Heather’s review of Comes The Dark here:  http://doubleshotreviews.com/2010/12/30/comes-the-dark-a-zombie-novel/


Buy Zombie review of “Comes The Dark”

Buy Zombie has written a very detailed and in depth review of Comes The Dark, and my understanding is that their review of Into The Dark is soon to follow.  Perhaps within the next week or so.  I always appreciate a review that gives specific reasons for what the critic liked and disliked and I can appreciate the commentary.  It is always fun to see a review that spends a solid amount of time with the book, and I look forward to the follow up for Into The Dark.  I hope you do as well.

So check it out here, and I will make sure I post when their review for Into The Dark is online.  http://www.buyzombie.com/2010/12/30/reviews-of-zombie-related-things/comes-the-dark-review-2/


Review of “Barriers Beyond” by Tim Long

Barriers Beyond is a Kindle novella that I decided to check out once I got a kindle for Christmas because I’ve read plenty of Tim Long’s other works and have enjoyed them.  Barrier’s Beyond tells the first person perspective of one survivor during the zombie apocalypse, a former military man who shares his experiences during the first few months of survival after the dead rise.
Tim adds a nice twist to the story by giving us a new form of undead-the ghoul.  Zombies in this story are your traditional undead flesheaters, while ghouls are humans who get desperately hungry enough to eat zombie flesh to survive after things go south and food is scarce.  The taint of that flesh turns those who eat it into something along the lines of a half undead, half human creature (or at least some of them, while others go the full zombie route).  These ghouls retain some of their smarts, craft traps, and crave the flesh of humans and other ghouls.  They lead the undead in their charge on those few humans who remain.  It was a nice little addition to the zombie pantheon.
The story itself is a pretty straight forward apocalyptic thriller-Erik, the main character, reacts to the initial days of infection and prepares for the impending end of humanity by traveling up to the mountains to a friend’s log cabin to escape the assault of the undead.  While he is safe there, he finds the loneliness enough to drive him back to civilization, or what remains of it, several months later.  The story at that point goes into overdrive and the action gets amped up quite a bit until the end of the story.  Again, this is a novella, so it is a quick read and the storyline not too complicated, but it is fun if you enjoy stories about the zombie apocalypse.  The window is left open by the author for future novellas, or perhaps a tie in of this story with one of his other apocalyptic novels.

Barriers Beyond can be found on Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/Barriers-Beyond-ebook/dp/B0042G0QZ2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&s=digital-text&qid=1293518750&sr=1-1


Dark Stories: Jason, Alone

I hope everyone out there is having a great holiday season!  I wanted to post this little stand alone introduction to Jason that actually takes place before he meets George.  I probably could have posted this before the prior string of stories about the two of them together, but I guess this will work since it does relate to only Jason.  This is fairly brief, but was my introduction of him as a character and delves a little deeper into his relationship with his mother and what happened to her.

There will be more Dark Stories to come, but this finishes the stories that introduce the initial characters that Jeff meets in the first book.  Now that the second book is released, I will probably focus on stories about the characters introduced there from now on.  Stay tuned.

Again, as always, forgive me for any editing misses-I try to clean these up, but I know I will end up missing  a few bits and pieces here and there.

Without further ado, here you go:

 

Jason, Alone

Everything had been screwed up since momma dragged him out of school up in Detroit and moved him down to this white bread hillbilly paradise.  They sure as heck hadn’t been rich up in Dearborn, but he’d gotten to see his father every now and then and they had a nice apartment.  Jason didn’t want a house, even if momma insisted that they needed a place where they weren’t crammed in next to twenty other families.  He didn’t want to leave his school either.  It wasn’t like he had lots of friends there, but he was comfortable with his teachers and knew what was expected of him.  Here, he stood out like a sore thumb.  They had gotten a house like momma had always wanted, but there were even more trailer parks in the town they lived in than he’d ever seen back home.  That momma somehow thought moving to Gallatin, Ohio was a step up from Dearborn, Michigan was beyond Jason’s ability to understand.

After living in the small town for a while, things leveled out, though they still sucked.  The kids in Gallatin more or less ignored him.  There was a good share of white trash, but most of the kids were nice enough.  There were only a few black families in town so it was almost like most of the white kids had no idea of how to act around him.  He could tell that they’d been taught that racism was bad and yet they were still uncomfortable being around someone who wasn’t the same color as they were.  The school was okay.  Jason had always been smart and adjusting academically wasn’t too challenging.  His mother insisted he was getting a better education here, though he kind of doubted it.

He was getting used to things in Ohio, even though his father hadn’t called or written since the move.  He didn’t like the nasty things momma said about dad, but didn’t argue with her about it.  With as many times as she called him worthless, it didn’t seem all that surprising that Jason’s father chose to forget about his son once they moved away.

Momma never accepted any blame for anything in regards to Jason’s father, even after deciding to pick up and move almost three hundred miles away from him.  She insisted that it was her ex-husband’s fault he couldn’t pick up a phone or try to arrange to have Jason go back up to Detroit for a week during the holidays or in the summer.  She didn’t accept any blame, but Jason silently affixed much of it on her.  But as with everything else, he suffered quietly and didn’t act out or complain.  He was her good son, well behaved and shy.  He loved his momma and even if he wished she wouldn’t have made some of the choices she did, he was smart enough to know that she was the one person in the world who would always be there for him, no matter what.  He still loved his dad, but he’d known for years that the man was unreliable.  That was just the way it was.  Momma could always be counted on.

That was, until the world fell apart.

Jason was watching TV that morning, the morning when everything changed.  He already knew things had been getting bad over the past few days, but with all the special reports breaking in on every channel, things had boiled over.

Yvonne, his mother, had been concerned about what was going on around the country and around town, but that concern didn’t mean she was interested in skipping out on work.

“They need me down there, especially now.  You stay home today-no playing outside.  Lock the doors and don’t answer the phone.  I’ll be home after my shift.”

She hugged him tight and left.  Jason wasn’t concerned for himself.  Things had been quiet in their neighborhood, but there were some terrible stories on the news about what was happening in the cities, like where momma worked.

As the day wore on, Jason found himself glued to the TV, watching news reports that were getting harder to believe by the second.  Every program he switched to was talking about the same thing.  The virus had gone global and there were reports of infection everywhere.  Doctors were baffled, despite the government’s reassurance that they were working on coming up with a vaccination or cure.

People were dying everywhere, and the televised attacks by the infected were hard to watch.  Still, Jason was mesmerized by the violent images as they rolled by on the screen.

More than once, he was tempted to call the hospital where momma worked, but resisted the urge.  He was only supposed to call in case of an emergency.  This was a worldwide emergency, no doubt about it, but it wasn’t as if someone was banging on the front door, trying to get inside the house to attack him.  So instead, he continued watching the stories about the virus spreading, maps with containment vectors discussed by Army Generals, and the riots breaking out in towns and cities across the country and across the globe.

Jason was still in front of the TV when Yvonne, his mother, came home five hours before her shift was supposed to end.  He was thrilled she’d returned early, until he saw the bandage on her arm.  She had been scratched by a patient at the hospital.

She had been plain unlucky.  That was how she described it.  Jason’s mother was a nurse a big downtown Cincinnati medical center and was taking the vital signs of a patient who’d come into the emergency room after claiming to have been bitten.  The man was delirious and he freaked out when she put a stethoscope against his chest.  He’d been lying on a gurney in one of the hallways off the ER, because people were jammed to the rafters in the place and the nurses and doctors had to deal with patients where they sat or stood.  Yvonne had been commandeered from her post on the Cardiac ward to help with the overflow.

The man had reached up to grab her wrist as he babbled unintelligibly at her.  When she tried to remove his hand, he raked his fingernails across her forearm as he spit up blood and frothed at the mouth.  With the help of a couple of orderlies she got the man under control and sedated, but not before his spittle and blood and gotten all over her, including into her brand new wound.

Yvonne Samuels told her son that she’d had the suspicion that things were going to hell the moment she had walked into the hospital six hours earlier.  It’d taken less than an hour before she’d been called into the emergency room.  The rumor mill among the nurses had gained a full head of steam, and while much of what she was told sounded ridiculous, it was getting easier to buy into the various stories they were feeding her as the day went on.

A particular one stuck with her.  One of the regular ER nurses indicated that she’d heard that the National Guard was planning on shutting down most of the hospitals in the area and not letting any more patients into them.  In addition to that measure, rumor also had it that any of the people already in the hospitals, including staff, were to be quarantined.

It had sounded like an unlikely possibility the first time she heard it, but by the time she was scratched a few hours later and the emergency room had turned into an utter madhouse, it was getting hard to deny that something was about to happen.  Fear, like the virus, was spreading across the hospital at an exponential rate.

No one really knew for sure how the virus spread.  Bites without a doubt, but no one knew if it was also airborne, could be transmitted through drinking water, or if there was some other route to getting sick.

Paranoia and panic were engulfing the hospital.  Both the patients and staff were rapidly losing their minds.  Yvonne suspected that whatever plan the National Guard had in mind to restore control would be acted on far too late to do any good.  The situation had deteriorated far too fast.

There had been several attacks when bitten patients died on operating tables or while waiting to be checked out in the ER.  Far too late, someone in a position of authority decided that anyone who came in bitten was to be restrained.  Unfortunately, that wasn’t before several nurses, doctors, and other patients were attacked.

Jason’s mom had never been one to pull her punches and she didn’t do so as she relayed her tale to him.  She had a pretty good idea how much trouble she was in after bandaging her scratched arm.  The wound had felt like it was on fire mere seconds after the attack.  Since it wasn’t a bite, no one paid the wound much attention, but there was no doubt in her mind that she would be getting curious glances in no time.  She was already running a fever.  She had to get the hell out of there before she ended up tied to some bed while she waited to die.

Taking one last look around, Yvonne decided to make a beeline to the garage where her car was parked.  There was no way she was going to let them quarantine her or tie her up; not with her boy waiting for her to get back home.  She had been prepared to do anything, up to and including blasting through the gate at the edge of the employee lot with her beat up old Buick Skylark.  It didn’t matter that there were two police cruisers parked on the street outside the garage-nothing was going to stop her from leaving that place.

Fortune smiled on her.  The attendant waved her through without even looking up from the portable TV he had in the booth with him.

On the drive home, Yvonne listened to traffic reports that indicated every highway in and out of the city was either clogged or blockaded by the military.  Even many of the major roads were backed up, but Yvonne had been driving in the city long enough to have learned about several lesser known routes that would get her home without all the traffic headaches the main routes tended to provide.  It was clear as she headed east out of Cincinnati that the city was shutting down, and soon there wouldn’t be any roads open to traffic anymore.  There was unchecked chaos and destruction everywhere she looked.  People running in the streets, gunfire, and the sounds of screams she heard through the rolled up windows.  She didn’t see any of them, but suspected they were there, nonetheless.

Perhaps it was a miracle, or just dumb luck, but she managed to get back home without incident.

She told Jason her story in a breathless rush.  By the time she was done, her skin had gone an ashy color and she was drenched in sweat.  When he suggested they find a doctor in Gallatin to check her out, she waved him off.

“What we need to do,” she replied, “is find someone to take you in while I deal with this.”

Jason had learned over the years that there was no use arguing with momma, especially when she gave him the “look”.  The woman could be downright scary when she wanted to be.  So when she picked up the phone and tried to reach out to some of her friends in the area, he remained silent, even as he felt terrified about what was happening to his mother.  She was still in charge, and until she said different, there was nothing her twelve-year-old boy could say about it.

After the final call, when Yvonne was unable to reach a single other person, she sat in a chair in the living room and took a deep breath.  A few seconds later, she slapped her hands on her knees, announcing to Jason that she had come to a decision.

“There’s just one thing left we can do.”

Jason would never forget when his mother directed him to tie her arms and feet to her bed.  She told him that if she got delirious, like the man at the hospital, she didn’t want him to be in any danger of getting scratched or bit.  She also joked that it was ironic that she had been desperate to avoid that fate at the hospital, but now felt it was the only solution she had remaining at home.

“If I turn into one of those monsters, and I doubt I will, I don’t want to be able to hurt you.  I don’t want to bite you like all those people you’ve seen on TV.”

Once again, Jason had the urge to argue with his momma, but even with her eyes getting cloudy with infection, she wielded an authority that bucked no debate from her son.

So he helped get her into bed, taking several extension cords and wrapping them around her wrists and ankles and then the bedposts.  When he tried to be gentle with the knots he made, Yvonne chastised him, insisting he make sure she couldn’t break free.

“I plan on fighting like crazy against this virus, baby, but I’m not taking any chances with your safety.  If I turn, I need to know you’ll be safe.”

After the knots were tied and before the tears could come, Jason’s momma told him to sit down next to her on the bed.

“Jason, you’re a stronger boy than you realize.  I’ve always known that about you.  I also know you resent me for taking you away from your father, but I think, deep down, you understand why I had to do it.  He could never take care of you, even if he thought that what he was doing was good enough.

“I didn’t bring you to Ohio to make your life miserable, I brought you here to make you stronger.  You needed to get away from that place and learn to stand on your own.  I didn’t realize how quickly you would need to be able to do that, but God gives us challenges we think we aren’t prepared for because he knows better than us how strong we are, and how much we can handle.

“I’ve done the best I could for you.  It wasn’t enough, but there isn’t any time left for me to do any more.  Now I don’t want you crying for me.  Instead, I want you to do exactly as I tell you.”

Jason’s mother tolerated no back talk, even as she grew weaker by the second.  So he listened to every word she had to say, and despite his reservations, he did as she asked.  He collected what he could into his backpack-clothes, food, a pocket knife, and the spare cash she had hidden in a shoebox at the back of her closet.  She told him that money probably wouldn’t mean anything for much longer, but it might help him out of a tight jam with someone he came across.

Yvonne didn’t want her son going to one of those shelters, but knew there were few other options available to a twelve-year-old on their own.  The scroll at the bottom of the television screen listed the different shelters in the Cincinnati area, and Gallatin high school, which was just a few miles away, was the closest one.  He was to try and go to the neighbors first, and see if any of them would take him in, but if that didn’t work, or if he came across anyone acting suspicious, he was to run to that high school as fast as he could.

She told him the some people might not think twice about taking advantage of a young boy without any guardians, so he would have to stand tall and fend for himself.  And once things calmed down and the world got back to normal, he would have to try to reach out to any family they had up north that was still alive.  Yvonne hadn’t been able to reach any of them for a couple of days, but that didn’t mean they wouldn’t make it through this.  And when they did, he needed to find them.  They would take care of him.

Jason wondered if his mother actually believed that things would ever go back to normal.  A cure sounded next to impossible from what he’d heard, and the military didn’t seem to be having any lucky anywhere as far as containing the spread of the contagion.  After watching the news all day, and having heard horror stories coming in from across the globe for the last few days, the chances of the world ever being sane again was about as likely as momma being able to avoid succumbing to the virus.

She was the strongest person Jason had ever known, but no amount of determination to resist the rapid creep of the plague was going to keep her from changing.  The doctors on TV had bickered back and forth on just about every minute detail related to the virus, but one thing they all agreed on was its 100% mortality and reanimation rate.  If you were infected, you died, and then you came back.

After momma gave Jason her instructions and was certain he would carry them out, her voice became soft as she reminisced with him about their lives together.  She told him stories about her youth she’d never revealed before and managed to get a few laughs out of him, even as the tears flowed despite her stern command he not weep for her.

On more than one occasion, Jason hinted that he wanted to remove the cords that bound her, but she would chastise him every time he tried, even when she grew delirious and her words were slurred.

Near the end she told him to leave, to get out of the house and go to the neighbors.  He needed to find someone who could take him to the shelter, or away from this place.  There was no more pretending.   She was going to die and she had accepted that.  He refused until she had to yell at him, telling him through her own tears that he needed to go, that she did not want him seeing her like this.

Jason pretended to leave, hiding at the front door after he slammed it shut.  He slumped against it, crying silent tears while his mother lay dying down the hall.  He wanted to untie her, cut her free and hold her tight one last time.  And when he heard her loudly weeping, that desire became almost unbearable.

After the crying stopped about an hour later, Jason strained to hear anything coming from his mother’s bedroom.  It didn’t take long for him to hear the wheezing as her struggles to breath became more pronounced.  As he did, he laid his head on his knees.  At that point, he’d been awake for nearly twenty four hours straight.  His mother’s struggles with the virus had lasted through the night.  So as he sat and listened to the ragged rhythm of her breathing, his eyelids continued to droop lower no matter how hard he fought against it.

One of Jason’s uncles had died of cancer, and he’d watched him gradually lose weight and hair from chemotherapy.  It took several months, and the changes were gradual, but hard not to notice.  When the man was brought home to be with his family for the last few days of his life, after the doctors had done everything they could for him, Jason was forced to go into his uncle’s bedroom one last time.  The man’s eyes had sunken into their sockets and his skin was gray.  The smell of illness in the room terrified the boy almost more than how his uncle’s looks had changed.  There was a cloying scent of despair that hung heavy in the room.  Even the reassuring grin his uncle gave him scared Jason.  It made him look like one of the demonic creatures in a horror comic Jason’s dad had given him.  His uncle’s eyes had gone from white to a jaundiced yellow, which added to the devilish effect.

What had happened to his mother was like a time lapse recording of the illness his uncle had suffered through.  Several nightmarish months of agony jammed into a few hours of living hell, with the same terrible sights and smells that had given Jason nightmares for a year after his uncle died.

Jason woke with a start.  He had been dreaming of his uncle, smiling up at him from his deathbed, telling him that his momma would be with him soon.  As he spoke, he reached out with his hand, as if asking the boy to join them.

While he’d slept, the wheezing in the other room had stopped.  The house was silent.  Jason stood, fearful he’d missed the chance to rush back to his mother’s side to see her face and hold her hand one last time before she died.  He couldn’t come to grips with the idea of his mother being taken away from him.  How could some minor scratch undo such a larger than life person?

Jason listened for a few minutes, peering at the walls that separated his mother’s bed from where he was stood.  Nothing.  No sound at all.  Had she passed?  He had to know even though part of him was screaming that he needed to run away and not look back.  He could pretend she was still alive if he wanted to.  All he had to do was leave.

“Momma?”

His voice sounded timid, almost embarrassed.  He half expected her to come bursting through the doorway, yelling at him to do as he’d been told and leave the house.

It didn’t happen.  Nothing did.

Fear mingled with a sliver of courage that resided deep within the twelve-year-old; courage that came from realizing he had nothing left to lose.

“MOMMA!”

He waited.  Sweat dripped down his face, rolling onto his upper lip.  Droplets quivered there before falling to the floor.  Jason moved his right foot forward with care, somehow afraid that the noise from a squeaky floorboard might upset momma even more than the fact that he’d yelled her name.

His foot was still hovering above the floor when he heard it.

The bed was making a creaking sound, but there was also another sound.  One that was almost human.

The sweat pouring down his face and back turned to ice on his skin.  An involuntary shiver wracked Jason’s body as he brought his foot down.  Hairs on his arms and legs stood at attention and were almost painfully stiff as goose bumps covered every exposed inch of skin.  His foot retreated to its original position and he remained locked in place at the front door.

It sounded like a moan coming from the bedroom, but not like any he’d ever heard before.  He doubted that a human being in a normal state of mind could make a sound like that.

“Momma?”

It was the terrified little boy inside of him reaching out for her now.  Tears mixed with the cold sweat and Jason’s vision became blurred.  He thought he saw his mother in her nightgown, the one she had worn when she had gotten into bed.  It was her favorite.  She was walking out of the room, coming toward him, angry at him for not leaving as he’d been told to do.  He slammed his back into the front door and gave a wailing cry of his own that didn’t sound quite as bad as the moaning, but had the effect of making the inhuman sound grow louder.  Frantically wiping at his eyes, he blinked and saw there was nothing in front of him.  Momma was still in her bedroom, tied down.

She needs you.  Go to her.

Jason slid to the floor, hugging himself as he wept.  No longer concerned about the amount of noise he made, the sound of his crying echoed through the small house.  After a couple of minutes, his sense of loss turned to anger as the moaning increased in volume, as if his mother was mocking him.

“Shut up!  You’re not my mother anymore!  Just leave me alone!”

It’s your mother in there, how dare you yell at her?  Go in there and apologize!

The moaning didn’t stop and his anger gradually changed, morphing into something closer to regret.  He begged and pleaded, yet knowing somehow, on a coldly logical level, that the monster his mother had become would never listen to him again.  At the same time, the voice inside his head, the one that knew nothing of logic or sanity, kept whispering to him that he should go to his mother, that she needed him.

Jason knew it wouldn’t stop until it drove him mad.

That was about all the twelve-year-old was sure of anymore.  That and the fact that there was no way he could face his mother ever again.  Not with what she had become.

He turned away from the noises and stared at the front door of the house.  This was no longer his home, and even as the strange voice inside tugged at him, he could feel the house pushing him away.

You are no longer welcome here.  This is a place for the dead.

Jason leaned his forehead against the cold, unforgiving wood of the door and banged it against the pine gently, but repeatedly.

“I’m sorry momma.  I love you, but I’m sorry.  I can’t stay here anymore.  Goodbye.”

It was a lousy eulogy, but was all he could think to say.  The maniacal voice inside his head screamed at him to turn around and go to her, but he blotted it out, screaming and cursing at it.

Momma was gone.

Walking out the door, Jason didn’t look back as it slammed behind him.  He stepped out onto the grass, unconcerned with where he was going.  The world around him was in panic and upheaval.  Several of the neighbors had fled, their front doors flung open while others had already in the process of barricading their homes.  He didn’t concern himself with any of them, even as several called out to him, screaming his name.  The blare of sirens and the sound of gunfire in the background also didn’t distract him.

He picked up his feet and ran, moving swiftly past his neighborhood.  His only plan was to keep on running, perhaps all the way to Detroit, if he could.  He would run until his legs gave out, his heart exploded inside his chest, or one of those things caught him and tore him to pieces.  That was the only thought he had left in his head.  He would run until he died.

*

By the time the soldiers caught up with him twenty minutes later, all the tears had dried and the stony visage that George knew so well had taken their place.

 


Review of “Elements of the Apocalypse” from Permuted Press

Elements of the Apocalypse, as the title suggests, gives the reader four stories using the classic elements to show us how the apocalypse will occur.  I thought it was a creative take on apocalyptic stories from the standpoint of using this theme.  Fire, Air, Earth, and Water are the means to our destruction, and a different author took a swipe at each particular element.
The first story, by DL Snell, gives us fire as the source of our destruction.  Dylan Bradley is minding his own business on a bus ride home from school for spring break when the bus driver bursts into flames.  Rather quickly, most of the people around him are doing the same, as spontaneous combustion takes hold as the means to our end.  Dylan races home with several other characters as madness takes a hold of the few remaining survivors, in an effort to find his girlfriend.
The second story, by John Sunseri, deals with aliens invading our planet and placing huge atmospheric generators on earth, which make our air unbreathable for humans.  Thirty years later, a team from New America, the last surviving lair of humans, has created a device that might help them fight back.  Led by Bess, the toughest survivor left, they climb out of their underground hideout and make their way to one of the alien’s air processing stations with the device in tow.  Since the atmosphere is polluted not only with unbreathable air, but with “demons” and “diggers”, both servants to the aliens who crave the oxygen inside human blood, making the trek is somewhat like traversing one of the nine planes of hell.
The third story, by R. Thomas Riley, has the animal kingdom in revolt against humanity when Gaia decides that we are poor caretakers of our planet and she needs to start over.  Animals don’t just turn on us, they become smart and vicious servants of their earth mother.  But Gaia has a plan, and that includes enslaving some of the humans to do more of her dirty work.
The final story, by Ryan C. Thomas, has water the entire world over disappearing in a rapid fashion, leading to a desperate scramble to find the cause and find the last remaining sources of drinkable water on the planet.  Cam, an estranged husband and father, has to work with Scott, his scientist brother in law, in an attempt to discover the cause of this catastrophe, while at the same time trying to find water for his infant son as he lay dying from dehydration.
Each story has individual merits, and I give credit to each author for giving us compelling characters that made each story more than just simple doom anthems.  I grew attached enough to the characters that I found myself rooting for them to find a miracle despite knowing how most of these types of stories end.  I am not going to pick out a favorite here, because I really don’t think any of them missed the mark, and there were parts of each tale that resonated for me.  If you enjoy reading stories about our destruction that lean toward the fantastic, than this book is a entertaining choice I highly recommend.

Elements of the Apocalypse can be found here:  http://www.amazon.com/Elements-Apocalypse-D-L-Snell/dp/1934861502/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1293203900&sr=8-1


Double Whammy! Check out reviews for both Comes The Dark and Into the Dark on Zombiephiles!

Ursula K Raphael, who has gotten some big props in the zombie community lately for her letter published in Entertainment Weekly championing the cause of small press zombie writers everywhere, has written a dual review of Comes The Dark and Into The Dark over on Zombiephiles website.  So for all of you folks who haven’t gotten either of my books yet, this is a great way to get the full overview of both at the same time.  I am pretty thrilled with the review, especially when her biggest gripe is the fact that both my books were over too damn quickly.  If that is the worst complaint you ever get about your writing, you are doing pretty well!  Seriously though, I am once again humbled by the fact that someone who really loves this genre seems to be really enjoying my books.  There is no better feeling.

So give the review a look see over at Zombiephiles here:  http://www.zombiephiles.com/zombies-ate-my-brains/library-of-the-living-dead-does-it-again-patrick-dorazio

and then go buy both my books, if you haven’t already.  😉


Sonar 4 Landing Dock reviews “Into The Dark”

Another review has been posted on Into the Dark and I have to admit I am pretty pleased by the response of the folks over at Sonar 4 Landing Dock.  My favorite quote from this review has to be this:  “D’Orazio grabs the reader and pulls them into this story with a large violent hook and you’re stuck, but what does happen is you don’t mind being stuck, actually you love it.”

Wow!  That is pretty dang flattering.

Check out the full review here:  http://sonar4landingdockreviews.blogspot.com/2010/12/into-dark-by-patrick-d-orazio-review.html?zx=e2ff0ef7837054b8

and of course, get yourself a copy of Into The Dark and judge for yourself!


Check out my article on Flames Rising’s website about “Comes The Dark”

The folks over at Flames Rising let me take a swipe at talking about Comes The Dark and my writing experiences in general.

For folks not in the know, Flames Rising is an online resource for fans of Horror and Dark Fantasy entertainment. This horror fanzine offers reviews of Games, Fiction, Movies and more ranging from Top-Selling authors to the coolest Small Press and “indie” publishers. The popular Interviews at Flames Rising include Horror authors, artists and other creators of dark entertainment.  So you should be checking them out!

And more to the point, check out my article, here:  http://www.flamesrising.com/comes-the-dark-essay/


Night of the Living Podcast reviews “Comes The Dark”

Hey folks, check out this podcast review of Comes The Dark over at Night of the Living Podcast.  Check out the link here for episode 209:  http://notlp.com/.  The review starts around the 42 minute mark, and they have some fun with it.  These guys are pretty hilarious in general and it was fun hearing them talk about my book and changing marriage vows to insure that if your spouse gets bitten by a zombie that you are willing to put a bullet in their head so they don’t come back.  Now THAT is love!

Give the review a listen and check out NOTLP in general.  They love horror and have a lot of fun with their podcast.  Great stuff.


Review of Eric Shapiro’s “Stories for the End of the World”

Stories for the End of the World is a series of short stories interspersed with three novellas.  Perhaps they are all stories for the end of the world (at least, perhaps, for those in the tales-in one form or fashion), but if you are looking for straight apocalyptic fiction, not every story here qualifies, though a few fit that category.  I had read two of the short stories previously, as they appeared in two separate Undead anthologies put out by Permuted Press.  All the stories here have appeared elsewhere prior to being compiled for this book.  While there are two ‘zombie’ type tales here, there are not walking dead throughout the rest of this book.
The three novellas were all first person tales and each had a very distinct flavor to them.  ‘Days of Allison’ takes us to a future where people can order up robots that are so similar to humans that it is virtually impossible to tell the difference.  The character in the story has a robotic mate ordered up-she is supposed to be docile and in love with him, and she is neither, which makes her both threatening and intriguing to him.  The comment on the cover about Eric Shapiro being the next Philip K. Dick comes from this story.  It certainly is a story that has echoes of Dick’s ‘Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?’ to it, with Shapiro’s own unique slant.  The second novella, and my favorite story of the book, is ‘It’s Only Temporary,’ which is about knowing that the world will end and spending those last few hours on earth trying to grasp what you should do to live a life full of meaning and experiences.  It was a touching story that had me thinking about it long after I was finished with it.  ‘Strawberry Man’ came from the other end of the spectrum of the world coming from the end.  Instead of a young man pondering on what he hadn’t been able to achieve in life, as was done with ‘It’s Only Temporary’, here there are reflections from an older man on a life full of conquests but dark secrets and horrible regrets.

The majority of these stories are told in first person, with one told in second person, which is always tricky and interesting to read (and it terrifies me-I doubt I will EVER attempt to write a story in second person).  Quite a few of them were entertaining, though the internal dialog in some got a little bit long-winded here and there.  Nothing that was a major gripe, but more along the lines of a pitfall that can occur in what is primarily first person narratives.

Overall, this is a very entertaining compendium of the author’s work.  Some of the author’s stories were very thought provoking and at least some of it had a bizarro taste to it-especially ‘Newborn’, which was pretty surreal.  I am guessing that some folks, looking for pure apocalyptic fiction, may be disappointed with this book, mostly because Shapiro takes his readers in some odd directions with some of his stories.  The diversions are entertaining if you are open to them, and it is without a doubt a book that raised my eyebrow in intrigue more than once as I read it.

You can find Stories for the End of the World at: http://www.amazon.com/Stories-End-World-Eric-Shapiro/dp/1934861308/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1292382578&sr=8-1


Eric S. Brown has a new contest to win one of his books!

Hey folks, just thought I would share something cool with you.  Eric S. Brown, the man behind tons of great zombie books out there is holding a contest in honor of his first release through Simon and Schuster.  It’s a great chance to check out a killer book and win some other really killer books.   Here are the details from the man himself:

Contest rules and prizes: From Eric S Brown

On Dec. 14th, my first ever Simon and Schuster release hits stores everywhere.  All you have to do is take a photo of yourself either buying or have bought War of the Worlds Plus Blood Guts and Zombies in a book store and tag me with it on Facebook anytime from Tuesday Dec. 14th to Friday Dec. 17th.  A random winner who does this will win signed copies of Antiheroes, Martin Kier and the Dead, and Kinberra Down.  For each 100 people who take part, I will be adding prizes.  So tag me on Facebook with a photo of you buying the book and you’re entered to win.

Sounds pretty simple, and a cool way to win some books!


Check out these cool Library of the Living Dead Calendars!

Hey all!  I had to post about the cool calendars that are being sold over at Cafe Press that were put together by some pretty killer artists for The Library of the Living Dead.  There are two different calendars and each contains zombified pictures of various authors whose work appears in either Library anthologies or novels.  Yours truly is in one of the two calendars and I do have to say that both really kick some major butt!

Give them both a looksee if you get the chance, at this link: http://www.cafepress.com/DrPus?CMP=CJ-CLICK-10461796&tid=skim673X607971&sid=skim673X607971&cjpid=3641109&PID=7532081&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=none&utm_source=cj

And then pick up one or both for yourself and get a few for the zombie lover you know and want to pleasantly surprise for Christmas!


Mr. MoOn’s Nightmares Day, ALL DAY!

Ladies and Gents,

Tomorrow, my good friend, Mr. Jonathan MoOn, is running a promotion on his book, Mr. MoOn’s Nightmares.  I reviewed his book here, https://patrickdorazio.com/2010/07/31/review-of-jonathan-moons-mr-moons-nightmares/.

 

Check out the Facebook page for Mr. MoOn’s Nightmares Day, All Day:  http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=170572399623444 and make sure you are attending this event!

And check out his blog to see what goodies he is giving away!  http://bit.ly/dUQ9QW

 

Most importantly, make sure you swing by Amazon and pick up a copy of his book here:  http://www.amazon.com/Mr-Moons-Nightmares-Jonathan-Moon/dp/1451577249/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1287516260&sr=1-1 and then write a review on it after you read it.  I am sure he will be happy you did, and my guess is that you’ll be happy you checked out this terrific book as well!