Hey, all.
I forgot to check the timing on my free giveaway for Hometown. Turns out that it starts Sunday, not Friday, so it can run through Halloween and into All Soul’s Day. Please stay tuned.
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Hey, all.
I forgot to check the timing on my free giveaway for Hometown. Turns out that it starts Sunday, not Friday, so it can run through Halloween and into All Soul’s Day. Please stay tuned.
We’ve met Vicki’s best friend, now it’s time to meet Angelina’s.
The two young people you see before you are Kara Sauer and Jason Olsen. They’re a bit busy at the moment. They attempted a ritual to drive out the dark spiritual forces attacking Belford in the fall of 1994, and maybe it was starting to work, because those dark spiritual forces counterattacked. Right now they’re fending off The Roadster – the surprisingly solid ghost of a local hoodlum who was killed in a suspicious car accident in the Fifties – and a local dog who’s usually a big friendly fluffo but is currently acting more like a satanically possessed wolverine.
Continue reading “Characters of Hometown: Kara Sauer and Jason Olsen”
Every time you go down into the New York subway, you take a chance that you won’t come out again. That’s just the way it is. Usually, the only thing to fear is your fellow passengers. But there are other things waiting down there in the dark below the City, and sometimes the only way to stay alive is to look the other way.
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Reviews Praising Looking The Other Way:
Just one more day to go in the Dreams of the Boardwalk giveaway! To give you a taste of what you might be missing, here’s an excerpt:
I knew the exact moment that they realized I was on to them, because their faces…split. Huge grins stretched much farther than a human mouth could open, almost literally ear to ear, and they were grinning mouthfuls of fangs.
I don’t think they expected me to react as quickly as I did. Greaser grabbed for me as I spun away, but gave a cheated shriek as his fingers just skated across the back of my shirt, and then I was off and running.
Usually in nightmares like this, it’s like the world goes into slow motion. No matter how hard I try to run, I don’t get anywhere. Or maybe the boardwalk would stretch into forever in front of me, so no matter how far I ran, there was no escape. Or no matter where I ran, the monsters would always be there in front of me. But none of that was happening. I was booking it, and it was a good thing, too, because Greaser’s shriek brought more shadowy figures pouring out of the darkness. They appeared out of the pools of shadow near broken streetlights, they climbed up through the gaps in the boardwalk, they came up from the darkness beneath and crawled and skittered over the railings, a horde of street thugs from all ages of New York City.
(And I do mean all. There was someone who looked like he’d stepped straight out of Gangs of New York running beside Scary Punk.)
I vaulted the railing and dropped down to the sand. I don’t know why I did that; it was crazy. In the waking world, the sand was level with the boardwalk, but here, it was a fifteen-foot drop, and if I’d broken my leg, I would have been helpless. Trapped prey.
But I didn’t. And I didn’t let myself think about it. I hit the ground, let myself fall, let myself roll, let the sand take the shock, rolled all the way back to my feet and I took off.
Or tried to. Coney Island beach sand is deep, and running in it is hard. I think I surprised them, going over the rail (but how do you surprise the monster in your nightmare?), but I wasn’t gaining enough ground. Worse, I was tiring out again. That first run had taken a lot out of me, and a second burst of adrenaline wasn’t going to carry me far. Not far enough.
I looked over my shoulder, and oh god, they were swarming. Swarming down off the boardwalk, leaping like insects, swarming up from underneath like cockroaches.
I floundered and struggled across the sand, my legs and my chest burning, trying to squeeze out that one last ounce of speed. Why had I even done this? Where was I going?
Then the West End jetty came into sight, and I understood. Sometimes in dreams you know you desperately have to get somewhere, you don’t know why, you just do. And that unconscious knowing was leading me right to my tide pool. I had no idea why, how it was supposed to save me from a horde of monsters in street gear, but –
Oh god, what if it wasn’t there? It was a tide pool! I might be making a desperate break for a stretch of damp sand! And with the heat and the endless run sucking the life out of me, where would I go from there? How much further could I push on before I just collapsed in the sand?
But no, the tide was high, washing syringes and garbage high up on the beach.
I buttonhooked around a fence and there it was, free of garbage and shining like the Moon.
Now what?
Stand in knee-deep water and hope that helps? It wouldn’t even be enough to save me from the heat! Why did I come here?
I turned around and looked back. They were coming – howling and shrieking and laughing that high, insane laugh, halfway across the beach now.
I had to wake up. I had to wake up!
I spun around, shut my eyes tight, and dug my fingernails into my arm, hard enough to draw blood.
Nothing. It wasn’t working. I couldn’t wake up. I couldn’t wake up!
That was the breaking point. I was too tired to run any further, and there was no place to run anyway. This terrible dream just wouldn’t end, and I couldn’t even wake up. Exhausted and beaten, I dropped to my knees in the sand.
“Damn you, Dream Boy,” I whispered as the first of my tears dripped into the pool “Where are you? What good is it to have a dream boyfriend if he’s only there to dance and eat cotton candy and screw? Where are you when I need someone to fight for me? Fight like Justin never – “
“You need to give him a name.”
“Who said that?” I looked around wildly, but there was no one.
“Over here.”
I looked at the tide pool, and it was like looking through Alice’s Looking Glass. On the other side of the tide pool’s surface, it was a bright, sunny day. Standing there on the other side of the pool was a young man – maybe thirty – with a black goatee. He was wearing sunglasses, a top hat, and a black bathing suit, the old-fashioned kind with the shoulder straps. In his hands, he held a big Key to the City that read “Coney Island”.
“Help!” I screamed into the water. “Please, you’ve got to help me!”
“I’m trying,” he answered. “But you’ve got to listen. Your dream boy – you need to give him a name. You can’t call him without a name.”
I looked over my shoulder. They were so close, they were coming around the fence now, and this guy was talking about names.
“What?”
“Listen! Your dream boy can help you, but you have to call him, and in order to call him, he needs a name. You already know it – you dreamed him, he’s your perfect teenage boyfriend, all you have to do is let yourself realize it. What is his name?”
And that was when I realized he was right. I’d known Dream Boy’s real name all along. It was a name that none of the actual boys I’d known when I was a teenager had worn, but it had always seemed to me to be the name of restless teenage ride-on-the-edge funtimes, of hot summer nights, leather jackets and cheap wine.
“Jimmy,” I whispered. Ripples began spreading across the tide pool, and the image of the man on the other side disappeared. Somewhere, I knew, Jimmy’s hair had just turned a lighter shade of blond, and a spray of freckles had appeared across his nose and cheeks, as was appropriate for a Jimmy. And those things would stay; he was more real now, more solid and defined.
And he was coming. He was on his way. He just needed –
“JIMMY!” I screamed.
And then he was there.
Want to know the rest? Head on over to Amazon and pick up your free copy of Dreams of the Boardwalk. Promotion ends today!
Lost in the Dream of the City.
Sarah Brannigan’s life has fallen to pieces at the age of forty-five. Her fairy tale marriage has ended, her job history has been a downward spiral since 2008, and she’s paying way too much rent to live in a tiny room in an apartment that she shares with five roommates.
To escape it all, she walks the streets of New York City, seeking out the hidden wonders of the City. And like many before her, she falls in love with Coney Island. Then one day, she falls asleep on a boardwalk bench after a long walk in the hot sun, and she falls into a dream. A dream that seems to reach into Coney Island’s past. A dream of everything she wished for when she was young. A dream whose effects linger even after she’s woken up.
Soon the dream begins to take over as Sarah uses it again and again to seek escape from her failed life. She’s getting everything she ever wanted: youth, love, and adventure. But as she goes deeper into the dream, she gets ever closer to nightmare.
Sound good? Head on over to Amazon and download a copy! Absolutely free, today through Tuesday October 16!
And for the love of God, would somebody please review this thing?
New book trailer from BooksGoSocial! This time for The Truth of Rock and Roll! Enjoy!
So with the promotional giveaway of Dreams of the Boardwalk coming up, I decided it was time to share a few pieces of artwork I commissioned for the story.
Continue reading “Dreams of the Boardwalk Promotional Art”
If there’s anyone reading this blog who’s been following me since the old days at Dreams of the Shining Horizon, you can testify that I don’t post nearly as much here as I did there, at least during the heyday. There’s a reason for that.
Continue reading “What I’m Working On And What I Plan To Do With It”
So here we see Vicki just hanging out with her best friend Valerie Robard.
Val is another one of the bad girls of Belford High. Sort of. She likes a lot of the same things that Vicki does, certainly – she likes to party, she likes to drink, she likes to smoke a few nugs now and then, and she’s very easy to talk out of her knickers. Especially when she’s been partying and drinking and smoking a few nugs.
The difference is that she’s not magnificent in her bad girl-ness like Vicki is. Where Vicki is angry and defiant, Val is timid and submissive. Or rather, as Natasha VanDyne and the other snobs would put it, Vicki is a bitch and Val is just a dumb trailer trash ho. The teachers and other adult authority figures of Belford mostly agree with that assessment, though they’re more likely to use words like “troublemaker” and “underachiever”.
Continue reading “Characters of Hometown: Valerie Robard”