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The Vault of Horror (book)

The Vault of Horror (book) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

The Future of Book Reviews on This Blog

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

For some time I’ve been thinking about these book reviews and whether they take the blog in the direction I want it to go. I’ve decided that they don’t. This doesn’t mean I’m giving up on reading books or the vast genres out there. It simply means, I won’t be reviewing them on here any longer. When I cut my blog down to two posts every other week, I struggled with what to post about. I love books, but I’m not so sure I’m personally a good book reviewer. Usually, what I end up doing is giving an outline of a book, my impressions/opinion, and then leave the rest up to the reader as to whether to look into that particular book or not. I know there’s nothing wrong with that. It’s just, I feel that a review should be something more perhaps. And honestly, I have a hard time doing one for a less-than-stellar book. I feel bad for the author, as a writer I’ve been there, made those mistakes. I always look for the good in books, just like I do people. I don’t want someone to pick up a book I’ve reviewed and think, “Wow. She was way off,” or worse, that I lied.

 

So, deciding all this left me in a quandary. Until last night when I figured out just what I want to do. Attract future readers to my site. I know, every writer’s goal. I had to step back and think, what do I write, who is my audience, how can I invite others to take a peek (and hopefully, stay). As you can see from my “About” page, I write Young Adult Supernatural Horror. In there, I also said that I wanted to shine “a light in the darkness” for my readers. Now, I don’t want you to think I’m going to post preachy sermons or anything. What I am going to do is explore horror. Where it came from, how it started, different stories including classics and biblical history, all the spectrums of what it is, how it affects us, why we’re drawn to it.

 

Thus, I’m hoping to open up conversations with all of you on how you feel about it and the topics at hand. I’ll probably even visit movie-land’s depictions of it. I’m excited about this adventure. After all, my stories are about “more than a good scare.” They’re about hope, friendship, love, and beating “the devil.” I hope you’ll come along for the new posts starting in two weeks. Until then, take care.

 

 

 

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9780765328663

Book Review: Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake

Traci Kenworth

 

Tor Books 2012       332 pages

Hook: I think I killed a girl who looked like this once.

Spoiler Alert for Anna if you haven’t read.

This is the sequel to Anna Dressed in Blood, of course and Theseus Cassio Lowood is back as the ghost hunter with the athame who only sends ghosts that do harm to others. He, Cas, is on a date thanks to Carmel, but all he can think about is how Cait reminds him of Emily Danagger, a dead girl he killed four years ago. It was when he was younger and more easily rattled before a ghost named Anna Korlov saved his life. He’s a pariah at school as others think he killed Mike (Anna did due to curse) and Will and Chase (a ghost who murdered his dad did) last year.

The date goes bad and he and Carmel end up leaving and meeting up with Thomas, whose become his best friend over the year he’s been in Thunder Bay. Both accompany him on a hunt in Grand Morais, Minnesota. The ghost almost kills Carmel. For the first time, he didn’t worry about where the ghost went when it died (the athame has been cleansed of the Obeahman).

While the athame is being purified, he worries that Carmel and Thomas shouldn’t be around him anymore. It can get them killed. Also worries that he heard Anna’s laugh in the ghost he killed. Carmel calls Cas on his hesitation to wield the athame. He tells them he can’t give up on Anna until he knows she’s at peace. He says he wants to cool things for a while.

One of his mom’s clarity candles breaks at his feet and later at the mall he sees a mannequin step off the platform wearing Anna’s dress. Carmel and Thomas say he was shouting. Some of her crowd is around and looks shell-shocked. He’ll be the gossip of the school tomorrow. More and more episodes happen with Anna until Cas realizes she’s with the Obeahman in a hell where he’s torturing her. He searches for a way to free her.

This book was every bit as promising as the first one. There’s action, heart-break, love, and redemption. The trio of Cas, Carmel, and Thomas is at times tragic and endearing to watch. I really like that the grown-ups aren’t out of the picture in this either. Not that they tell the story or take over anywhere, it’s just nice to see that they’re not the sometimes uncaring individuals in some books out there. They feel real. Cas and company feel real. I wholeheartedly recommend this book!! Can’t wait to see what Kendare Blake has planned for us with Anti-Goddess, I’m unsure if this next one is a Cas book or not. We’ll see, I suppose.

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Tennessee barn

Tennessee barn (Photo credit: knitgrrldotcom)

 

What do you think of the new blog design? I like the simpleness and the misty setting reminds me of where my books are set: in the fictional Akara Mountains in Tennessee. The bridge is an image that particularly jumps out at me because it’s important in my stories. Hint: the dead ones often walk there, waiting for unsuspecting trespassers. I’ve updated my “About Me” page and added a new one with members of YAFF links and other writerly ones. I will still be posting book reviews and updates/writer advice hopefully on Tuesdays and Thursdays still. Although this schedule may take a hit until the new year gets in swing. The only thing that may change about it is that I may post every other week. Although I LOVE blogging and keeping in touch with all of you, it’s getting harder to find topics that aren’t covered elsewhere. Another big issue: I need writing/editing time and a lot of times that’s pushed out of the way in favor of the blog. If I don’t work on my books, I won’t be able to strive to reach my goal of publication. I’ve been torn in this reality for half of this year, now I’m making a choice: my stories need to come first. I’m sure you all understand how hard it is to find time as it is to do this thing I love. Life gets in the way. I’ll slowly be backing off a lot of social media sites as well. They just occupy too much of our hours. Not that I don’t enjoy them, but the time just whittles away so fast and nothing’s left for storytelling. I know this may sound a little like “a goodbye” but it’s not. It’s just a pause to refocus on my creativity. Until my next post, take care, and God bless!!

 

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oxford book of fantasy stories

oxford book of fantasy stories (Photo credit: cdrummbks)

 

Book Review: The Oxford Book of Fantasy Stories selected by Tom Shippey

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

Oxford University Press         1994

 

 

 

This book is full of some of the greats. I marvel at their worlds, their characters, the journeys taken. I’m only going to review a few stories, but I encourage you to try this edition, you’re sure to find something you like. In The Nameless City by H.P. Lovecraft, we find ourselves deep in the tomb of an ancient race that even the Arabian people avoid going to. Every sentence pulls us further into discovery even though our first impulse is to turn and climb back up into safety. You can almost feel the dead’s bandages skim your skin, their breath heavy, while they reach to end your own life.

 

Homecoming by Ray Bradbury tells the haunting tale of a boy born into a family of vampires, who isn’t one himself. He tries his best to fit in but the taste of blood sickens him, he can’t abide sleeping in a coffin, and he bears the scorn of his brothers and sisters. With only a pet spider to talk to, he struggles with who he is and who he will or won’t be. I hesitate to use the word “heartbreaker” with this story, but it is such. Haven’t we all wanted to fit in better?

 

Bite-Me-Not or Fleur de Fur by Tanith Lee unfolds in a cursed castle where the Duke has lost his family and has been forced to close his court to the outer world where vampires seek a way into his midst. A chambermaid sings a song she doesn’t understand, dreaming of being the Duke’s daughter. Later after he stumbles across her, she is so like his deceased daughter, he adopts her as his own. When the prince of these “fallen angels” as they’re described finds an entrance, he is taken hostage. While the courtiers gather around taunting the prince and prepare to slaughter him, the chambermaid takes pity upon him and escapes the castle with him. Thus begins their sorrowful legend.

 

Troll Bridge by Terry Pratchett focuses on Cohen the Barbarian, old, and tired of the way things in life have become. He decides to battle a troll like in the old days. Only the one he finds gives him some disturbing news.

 

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Michael Grant's Gone

Michael Grant’s Gone (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

Book Review: Gone by Michael Grant

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

Harper Teen 2008                               Supernatural                558 pages

 

 

 

When their teacher literally disappears from the classroom, students in Perdido Beach,

 

California discovers that all the adults as well as anyone over the age of fourteen are gone as well. In the panic that ensues, Sam Temple, his best friend, Quinn, and a girl they only know as Astrid the Genius struggle to figure out what is going on. No phones are working, internet is down, and they soon realize they are trapped inside an egg-shaped wall around their community.

 

As the local bullies start to take-over, the three search for Astrid’s autistic brother, Pete. Their journey takes them through the Clifftop Hotel and all the way to the nuclear plant before they find him playing his video game. They return to town to find the kids from Coates Academy, a rich kid and somewhat juvenile delinquent school, want to assert leadership over everything. The leader, Caine, and his girlfriend, Diana, size things up including the different powers that many of those left behind are beginning to exhibit.

 

Soon the town bullies and Caine’s “sheriff,” Drake come head to head until Drake takes complete control. When a girl they know is beaten by the thugs and dies shortly after, Sam feels helpless as to what to do. He doesn’t want to be the captain everyone expects of him. He just wants to surf and be a regular kid. Caine thinks Sam is a threat to his rule and sends Drake to kidnap Astrid and Pete. To his grief, he learns that Quinn is the one who turned him in for being “different.” Caine explains that Sam’s parents were also his. Sam’s mother gave Caine up for adoption but kept Sam. Caine is overwhelmed with hatred for Sam and plans to kill him. Drake busts in with the information that Astrid and Pete escaped—just poofed in the air. Later when Quinn begs Sam’s forgiveness and helps him escape, they rush to find Astrid and Pete before Drake and his team do.

 

Sam rescues both in the nick of time and they outrun Caine’s people onto another part of the town where they meet, Lana, a girl who has the power to heal. She saves them from an attack by coyotes that have somehow mutated in size and the ability to talk. They see other mutations in other animals as well. She tells them of the “Darkness,” something down in the mine that controls the animals and is bent on destroying humans. Sam begins to work on learning how to use his powers. He realizes they have to go back to town and face Caine before both of their fifteenth’s birthday in two days. There seems to be something that makes a person disappear when they reach that number, though it’s uncertain whether they die or just leave The Fayz, as the kids have renamed the town.

 

I LOVED this book. I picked it up in the library by chance and don’t regret it. The characters are real. They’re not perfect, they lose faith, get angry, hurt, pulled out of themselves. They learn to defeat the chaos and evil that has triumphed till now, they need to join together and fight. It was a bit confusing in tiny spots as to what the “Darkness” is and why it’s in the story but I feel confident the author will show us in the books ahead. Yes, this is Book One. Next would be, The Hunger. I’m going to put that book in my tbr pile as soon as I’m able. Enjoy, everyone.

 

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Book Review: Love Across Time by Anne Meredith

Traci Kenworth

 

376 pages        St. Martin’s paperbacks 1995

Hook line: In her dreams, the man calls her name.

Lindsey runs in fear of a portrait Jonathan showed her. It’s the man from her dreams

every summer she returns to Windsor Hall(Jonathan’s aunt owns, Lindsey’s Grandma brings her there.). The ghost haunts the grounds the keeper says. His granddaddy knew him and he was the saddest man alive. He was also a murderer.

Years pass and Lindsey is hiding from her father, Edward Quinn at Windsor Hall. She

doesn’t remember him. All he cares about is himself her Grandma says. His super model wife won’t have children. She thinks it’ll ruin her body. Grandma sends Lindsey to hide out with Joanathan and Irene. Lindsey hasn’t seen Jonathan in six years.

Jonathan finds her and hides her down passageway leading to the old room in which

Confederate soldiers had been hid from Union patrols. It had been the painting that kept her away. Her grandmother parted ways with her telling her to trust the legend of the Callahan women for it’s true.

“In saving his life, hers will be saved, and a new life be found.” The legend is that a

Callahan woman saved King’s life by betraying the man she loved. He granted one wish to her ever century. She asked for the man who tried to kill him, to be freed. They were banished from England forever.

A knock sounds on the door they came through. Her daddy knows she’s in there.

Jonathan is shot in a struggle with her father’s men. He tells her to make a good wish before he dies. She wishes to go back, to change the man who made Jonathan’s family unhappy. A peculiar woman appears telling her about three centuries, three wishes, the last to save the heir to the rightful throne. She leads Lindsey into fog and tells she must change a heart, to save a life, to fulfill a wish.

She finds Devlin Windsor and tells him it’s all right, she’s there. He lets go of her and

she finds herself escorted by Miss Cora Brody, Shannon Windsor’s great aunt. She’s there to be a governess to him by word of Emily Van Kirk, the wish granter. Shannon never knew his father (Devlin’s brother), he died in Civil War and his mother died giving birth to him. Agrees to one month trial or she leaves without pay.

Devlin rides in and looks up at her window with such yearning. She finds spiders in her

bed. Devlin enters. Miss Brody mutters about “that boy.” Shannon looks like Jonathan as a boy. Lindsey instantly loves. Lindsey learns from Cora that she expects Devlin to be engaged to Cynthia McKenzie in a month.

Lindsey takes Shannon for a ride and gets a hard-to-control mount. Devlin saves her from

cliff. She expects him to fire her after she kisses his throat on an intimate double ride but he doesn’t. Cora determines to fire her but Devlin hires her back. The copperhead penny she wears is a symbol of Southern sympathizers, Devlin tells her. She removes it. Kendrick was not Devlin’s older brother but his younger twin. He died not in war, but defending a woman of ill repute’s honor. He does care about Shannon. And he’s not at all anxious to marry Cynthia.

Devlin’s father was no blue blood. He was illegitimate. He married an Irish barmaid and

came to a new world. Devlin and Kendrick were on opposite sides of the war. Devlin, Union; Kendrick, Confederate. War changed Kendrick. Both suffered shrapnel to back. They fought and loved same woman since birth. Devlin murdered Kendrick over her.

Devlin shows kindness to Shannon and Lindsey gets her first glimpse of Cynthia. The

two seem intimate. Cora is angry over Devlin’s change in attitude and the fact that Lindsey doesn’t know Latin. Devlin says there’s a teacher in town. Devlin had forgotten how old Shannon is. He sends a new wardrobe Lindsey’s way for a ball for Shannon. He refuses to let her not attend. He says women are deceitful. She tells him a woman would be a fool to love him.

At the dance, Lindsey realizes she loves Devlin. When she returns to Shannon and he

opens her gifts, Cynthia McKenzie enters. Lindsey is shocked to see Cynthia is Shannon’s mother. Cynthia is very ill. The woman bids Lindsey to visit her. She lives on the landing. Lindsey dances with Cynthia’s brother, Colin, who is bitter about loses his family’s estate. Colin says Cynthia will never marry Yankee Devlin.

Devlin and Lindsey end up on a balcony in an alcove thanks to Shannon. They kiss and

more. The curtains open to an audience. Lindsey is mortified. Devlin believes Lindsey set up the scene with the help of a servant. Now he will marry her but it will be a bitter marriage he tells her, no love. She pleads her innocence, agrees because of Shannon, and tells him in the end he’ll regret that her love will never be his.

I just have to say that Anne Meredith is a superb storyteller. Her characters are haunting

and so larger-than-life. I’m a big fan of Time-Travel Romance and this is no exception. I loved it from cover to cover. Every time I picked up the book, I was transported back in time to a romance that is truly magical. It’s a tale about forgiveness and how love can heal even the darkest past. I like to think that’s true in real life as well. I am definitely going to look up other stories by Anne Meredith. I believe this was the third book in a series by her, but you don’t have to read the others to read this one. Although the legend wasn’t filled into detail as I’d have liked, I had no trouble following it. So, yes, I highly recommend this author and this book. Enjoy.

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Cover of "How to Write a Damn Good Novel:...

Cover via Amazon

 

Book Review: How To Write A Damn Good Novel II by James N. Frey

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

St. Martin’s Press 1994                                     `Fiction

 

 

 

I’m going to take a quote from the book: “This book covers advanced techniques such as how to make your characters not just dynamic but memorable, how to heighten the reader’s sympathy and identification with the characters, how to intensify suspense to keep the reader gripped, how to make a contract with the reader and stick to it, how to avoid the fiction writer’s seven deadly mistakes, and perhaps most important of all, how to write with passion.”

 

There is so much packed into this craft book that it’s heavenly to read. I’ve had this one sitting on my shelves for years and as part of my effort to re-read craft books and focus on the ones that truly helped me, this is one of them. James N. Frey has a no-nonsense approach to writing that I’m sure worked well during his lectures. This book will help anyone who wants to write fiction or non-fiction, genre or literary.

 

He took a winding path to become the published writer that he is and this is something I can identify with as I set aside my own writing during marriage and the early years of raising two children by myself before returning to it full force six years ago. Passion is indeed something I think that is vital to the business if you’re to succeed. It gets you through those dark times, the rejections, the absolute heartbreak you face. I believe it’s what motivates those of us who keep at it, to keep trying.

 

This book stresses the importance of communication with your reader. We need to gain their trust, their confidence, and in the end, tell them a story that resonates with them. Without our audience, we have no future. This doesn’t mean you don’t write the story you envision, rather that you enhance it so that they enjoy it as well as you do. There will always be critics, of course, but it is the reader who we must listen to and share our journey with whether that path includes hobbits or zombies. Readers want to care about your characters, cheer them on, cry at their losses, and in the end, part with them as friends.

 

 

 

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The Secret Circle - Poster

The Secret Circle – Poster (Photo credit: satin_shirt)

 

Book Review: The Secret Circle by L.J. Smith

 

Volume 1: The Initiation

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

311 pages     Harper Paperbacks       1992

 

*SPOILER ALERT*

 

 

 

Cassie is a junior in high school and homesick for California. They are in her mother’s native home state and she is being irritated by Portia Bainbridge, an accomplished bragger from a family of braggers. Her mother looks really ill and guilty when Cassie talks about going home to her friends and the life she left behind. She feels like she doesn’t belong. A red-haired, tall guy on beach with dog approaches. Portia is disgusted by the fact that he works on boats and tells Cassie not to make eye contact. Other girls on beach reject him. As he nears Cassie, she can see his smile turning into a grin. She thinks how unfair their treatment of him is. The dog befriends her and then the boy, despite Portia’s presence. He tells her life isn’t always fair and then walks off. “Witch,” Portia whispers after he leaves and hurries off to do something.

 

After Cassie goes off on a walk by herself, the guy appears being chased by Portia’s big brothers and their friends. She tells him to hide himself and the dog in one of the boats docked there. She misleads the brothers and their friends as to where he went. In return, he gives her a  chalcedony stone which is supposed to bring luck. If she’s ever in trouble, he tells her to hold it and think of him. He says the brothers wouldn’t bother him if he was on his own turf but here he’s fair game.

 

A moment almost happens and then suddenly it’s as if he remembered something and draws back. He kisses her hand where Jordan twisted her wrist and tells her Jordan will pay for that one day. He leaves the Cape. Cassie realizes she never asked him his name.

 

Her mother and grandmother are estranged. They are going to see the grandmother up the coast next week as she’s gotten worse. It’ll be the first time Cassie has seen her. Her mother looks pained when she mentions going home. She says the grandmother wanted her to follow a path she didn’t want to. Finally, she admits they’re not going home—they’re going to live with the grandmother in New Salem, Massachusetts.

 

She knew she’d see the guy again, part of her whispers. Voice crushed by despair of being all alone. New Salem is on an island not on the map. They drive to the oldest house at the top of the bluff, in the shape of a T. Not painted, it’s in total disarray. Cassie proclaims she hates the house and bursts into tears. She sees fear and loathing for the house on her mother’s face before her grandmother comes along. The two women embrace but tension remains.

 

Cassie dreams mother and grandmother glide into the room. Cassie’s mom said she shouldn’t have tried to escape destiny. Her grandmother says what they’re doing is the only way. They whisper about sacrifice…

 

She is drawn to the most beautiful house in the neighborhood and the girl in it. Slowly, she meets her acquaintance after run-ins with the town “bullies.” She finds out that the girl and the mean crowd are part of something called, “The Club.” Tempted to join, she is put off by Diana saying that you can’t ever leave the island. They’re also supposed to do each other no harm. Though some of them don’t seem to follow those rules. Diana has a boyfriend who is away at the moment. Cassie wants to be like Diana. She feels like they’re sisters. And when she discovers they like the same guy, she determines Diana will never know.

 

I admit to watching the TV series before reading the original book. The storylines are quite different as I’m told is the same way with The Vampire Diaries books, also by L.J. Smith. Anyway, I kind of liked the television shows better. I know there’s more than one novel in this series and I’m sure they’re each used to fill in the pieces, but I didn’t feel much of a depth in the book when it came to the events happening. I guess I expected a better wrap-up of what the characters went through and I didn’t get that with this part of the story. Plus, I just felt let-down by everything that occurred. The mystery of who killed one of the girls isn’t solved. I like the antagonists to get their due and maybe that happens as the books continue, but I probably won’t read any further. I just didn’t get as captivated by the characters in the novels as I did with the ones on the show. I don’t necessarily have to have a “happily-ever-after” in something I read, but I sure like to see good triumph.

 

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Happiness

Happiness (Photo credit: baejaar)

 

Book Review: Happiness Is…

 

Traci Kenworth

 

 

 

The book is published by Word Publishing and has no author listed. 1995.

 

 

 

I ran across this little book on my shelf the other day and waxed nostalgic. This book was gifted to me about seven months before my marriage, by my sister. I miss little books like these sometimes. So positive. Uplifting. A treasure to find when you’re having a less than fantastic day. Oh, how I wish my then-self could have known more, realized what was going on in my life, but things happen for a reason and I would not have wanted to miss my children despite the pain and loss of the later years.

 

In any case, sometimes I think we forget to look inside ourselves at what’s going on in our lives and see the signs, the warnings. Books like this one make our eyes see what our heart must have and ignored. Here’s a verse from it that I love:

 

“The world’s joy glows brightly for a moment and then fades away. God’s joy is forever!”

 

How true for me. The things I’ve always wanted—and got—did not satisfy me for long. There was always something else to reach for, something more to gain. But when I come to God, in his presence, all things make sense. He instills a peace in me that I fought many years to find. Books like these are needed. To remind us to look, to realize, to inspire us to not settle for the lonely and the despair but to open our hearts to what God is for me: love and healing.

 

I encourage you to seek out little gifts like these, to become amazed when you look into your heart and see the truth. Happiness is believing in something greater than ourselves. It’s having the faith of a little child to begin again. And in doing so, persevere.

 

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Cover of "Full Dark, No Stars"

Cover of Full Dark, No Stars

Book Review: Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King

Traci Kenworth

 

Scribner 2010 Short Story Collection-Horror

  1. 1922

Hook: April 11, 1930.

A confession by Wilifred Leland James. He murdered his wife in June of 1922. His son, Henry, at 14, aided him although he beat fear into him over a two month period. All over farmland. Hears things in walls. This was a chilling and at times sympathetic story over a man trying to keep what is his.

  1. Big Driver

Hook: Tess accepted twelve compensated engagements a year, if she could get them. She writes books. This is her retirement fund. She takes a shortcut home thanks to the librarian. Trouble comes in the form of wood sprawled across the road and a giant of a man. Oh, this was a hard story for me to read. It was full of such heartache, pain, and the thirst for revenge. Brutal in tone, Tess is a survivor and deals with the situation the way many women perhaps wish they could deal with their attacker. She had me rooting for her all the way through and it was a satisfying conclusion.

  1. Fair Extension

Hook: Streeter only saw the sign because he had to pull over and puke. Diagnosed with cancer, he lives in Derry, and is a banker. In return for 15% for 15 years, possibly more, he buys a life extension from a guy alongside the road. The catch? Bad luck goes to enemy. He chooses to cast everything his best friend’s way because Tom and Streeter’s girlfriend fell in love when they were in high school and married. This was my least favorite of the stories written. Maybe it’s because Dave Streeter doesn’t really see what he’s got to be thankful for (a nice wife, great kids, good career). Instead, he pines for what he doesn’t have. Even in the ending, he shows no remorse for what he’s done.

  1. A Good Marriage

Hook: The one thing nobody asked in casual conversation Darcy thought in the days after what she found what she found in the garage, was this: How’s your marriage? Darcy’s life is happy until she discovers her husband’s a serial killer and rapist named Beadie. He claims that he’s haunted by his boyhood friend who died when he was a teen. Darcy struggles to decide what to do: turn her back on her husband or unveil his deeds. King really digs into the story here and shows what someone like Beadie’s other life might really be. It was haunting and gruesome and yet surprisingly had a heart to it you wouldn’t think it would.

This collection was everything a fan of Stephen King could want, maybe more. King always tells a fascinating tale and gets down to the nitty-gritty of things which is what I personally think makes him such a great writer. He knows people. And isn’t that the greatest compliment a writer can have? In his Afterword, he explains why he writes the stories he does and what he thinks makes a bad writer: someone who refuses to look the truth of the story in the eye and tell it for what it is. King has proven time and again that he’s unflinching in his portrayal of people and their humanness. We might not like what we see when the scab is ripped off, but we know that in doing so, he’s exposing all the pus beneath. Life isn’t always sweet. Sometimes it’s painful, heartbreaking, and unfair. How we each respond to that is different, unique. It’s what makes the tale true and the storyteller genuine. I heartily recommend this collection to all King fans and to anyone who loves to see the truth behind the mask of life.

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