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Crescendo
L. Marie Wood
Publish America
James hates to go to bed because nightmares starring loved ones and friends
consume his sleep. He feels haunted by the fiery car death of Susan during
an accident. He also dreams that his wife Andrea was not human
but instead some hideous demon who claims possession of his soul. Dead
relatives enter his psyche.
James wonders if he lost his mind or if he had visitors from beyond. In
Rockland County, New York, James cannot resist the lure of a creepy house
where he believes he has made terrifying contact including sexual with the
dead. His mental spiral downward impacts his devoted loving wife who worries
that he is losing his mind as she rejects the possibilities of something
from beyond using him as a puppet. James' descent into hell deepens, as he
now believes he killed two people while under the influence of the dead.
Pete, the husband of the late Susan, sees an opportunity to use James'
apparent insanity to steal Andrea from him. If successful, this will
complete the burial of James as Andrea remains his only foothold in the
mundane world.
Crescendo is a pleasant surprise keeping the audience guessing whether the
lead character is losing his mind or the center of an otherworldly assault
until the climax. The key to the tale is James who the audience will believe
is crazy one moment and then feel he needs an exorcist the next. The
suspense never lets up as L. Marie Wood provides a powerful thriller that
the audience will have to read to learn whether this is a demon horror story
or a psychological suspense chiller, but fans of both sub-genres will
appreciate this novel.
Harriet Klausner, GWN Book Reviewer
2/1/2003
Read another review
of Crescendo
Bloody
Irish: Celtic Vampire Legends
Bob Curran
Merlin Publishing
Horror
Trade
2002
186 pages
$14.95 USD
ISBN 1-903582-19-9
When I chose this book, I thought it would be about legends themselves. You
know, stories pulled out of old records and folk tales, sometimes told as
stories, sometimes told as little snippets in the text as the author
describes the state of the vampire in Ireland past. Instead, we have four
very distinct short stories that feel more like amalgamations of legends
wrought together to form original tales than something you can point at and
go, "This is a real Irish folktale."
To quote from the introduction: "The majority of them are based on old
stories that I have heard up and down the country ... In most tales, true
locations and proper names have been disguised, and some of the facts have
been modified for various reasons. They all may have some base in reality,
and they all may reflect older beliefs that we can not presently
understand."
That is not to say that this book is not well worth reading. The four
stories are very well executed. The feel of the setting is marvelous, Irish
down to the bones, yet just a tiny bit sinister. It gives you a feel for
Irish rural life and people, yet brings just a little bit of darkness to the
picture, shadows where evil things peer out at the reader.
"Beside the Fire" tells the story of an English tourist whose
curiosity about the Irish countryside may well lead to his doom. One day, he
goes into a cottage, in an abandoned village that he was well warned away
from, and gets cut when he touches a shadow on the wall. As the story
progresses, his dreams show us why the village is abandoned and why the
villagers avoid the sinister family that owns it.
"The Way Through the Wood," introduces us to another person who
treads where she should not. Sinead has come to live with her Aunt and
stumbles across a mystery. Several girls have gone into the woods and
disappeared utterly. While the police think that the cause is more mundane,
a man warns Sinead other wise. He says that it is after her next.
"The Withered Hand" is probably my favorite story. In it, Daniel
meets his old college friend, Richard Farrant, who wants to show him an
antiquity that he is certain Daniel has never seen before. It turns out to
be the hand of Lady Alice Killigrew, a witch of great power and cruelty.
This piece, which takes place in a decrepit house, is extremely creepy to
me. When I went to bed after reading it, I heard the scrabbling of claws and
wondered if it was caused by the squirrels seeking shelter from the cold, or
a much more horrifying reason.
In "Miss O'Hare," the young narrator of the story tells of a
plague that swept his village, a plague that seemed connected to a sleek
gray cat. It warns that looks are deceiving, in more ways than one.
We learn a lot from these stories. First, that people tell you not to
venture somewhere for a solid reason, that it's always handy to keep
something once possessed by a person of piety in a pocket or dresser drawer,
and that vampires are not always tall, gaunt and pale. In fact, they are not
always human in form.
An intriguing and atmospheric book
four out of five headstones
Cindy Lynn Speer, GWN Reviewer
3-3-03
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