March 25

Bloody Mary by JA Konrath

Bloody Mary by JA Konrath

Bloody Mary is the second book in J.A. Konrath’s “Jack” Daniels series. Bloody Mary starts with Lieutenant Jacqueline Daniels being called down to the county morgue because a few extra body parts have been found. Not just any body parts though. This pair of arms was found held together with Daniels’ own handcuffs. Like it? It gets better from there.

If you told me that the bad guy would be revealed and caught in the middle of the book and that the remainder of the story would still be just as intense and suspenseful as the hunt for the perp I never would have believed you. But finding the killer’s name is just the beginning of the story.

Konrath must have been laughing at the idea that all mysteries reveal the bad guy at the climax. He absolutely shattered my preconceived notions of what a mystery should be.

Bloody Mary is fun, funny, incredibly dark, and completely pulled me in. My only regret is that I finished it at 3am, and alas all the book stores that carry the third book in the series were closed.

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March 25

Blood Will Tell by December Quinn

Blood Will Tell by December Quinn

Blood Will Tell was a bit of a challenge for me. We all know that I’m unfairly picky about romance and erotica. But I read a few of the excerpts and I figured there was no better time to take a chance.

Blood Will Tell is a somewhat typical vampire tale with dialog to make the hair on the back of your neck stand up, chemistry to make the breath catch in your throat and spicy sex scenes beautiful enough to make you cry and hot enough to steam windows at the same time.

Quinn is not satisfied with women who submit at the first sign of a good romp in bed, flowery euphemisms for people parts or titillating actions, nor for males who mistake chauvinism or manipulation for heroism. The characters in Blood Will Tell are vocal, headstrong, not willing to undercut themselves and full of a delightfully yummy need.

Blood Will Tell has enough plot to make it more than sex, but not to overpower its true story of two people, caught up in dangerous times and carnal needs. Using a familiar creature, the vampire, gives the book room to charge words with electricity and this electricity is what made it work for me.

Blood Will Tell is steps beyond the public view of romance and erotica. I definitely recommend it.

March 25

Apple of My Eye by Amy Grech

Apple of My Eye by Amy Grech is a collection of thirteen short stories in the slasher style of horror. It has violence, sex, betrayal, revenge and more than a few people who should have known better. The characters are puppets on Grech’s strings and she puts them through stories of vengeance, entrapment and strange and deadly sex. Grech is delightfully crude in places and refuses to flinch from the nastier side of humanity in others.

My favorites of the collection are Rampart, a unique tale of a strange haunting, Ashes to Ashes, one of the tightest tales of the bunch, about devotion after death, and EV 2000, a tale twisting the old ideas of vampires and murder.

If you like fast, messy horror that makes you flinch this book is for you. Grech proves that the girls can play just as hard as the horror boys.

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March 25

Apex Digest #9

Apex Digest #9

Apex Digest Issue 9 promises to be moody and discomforting from the first glance at its stormy cover, strongly reminiscent of Van Gogh’s Starry Night. It’s a bit of a new taste from the last few issues, a departing from a mild science fantasy trend toward a sort of mental sci-fi.

 

First up is The Sum of His Parts by Kevin J. Anderson. Not only is this story about a familiar patchwork man it also is patchwork in its structure. It works very well. The minimal interludes serve perfectly as a break between point of view changes and a hint of what will happen next. They serve as threads, weaving a series of seeming coincidences together. The story doesn’t end there. Also hidden inside is a spiral of related stories, to which the true extent only becomes clear as the reader grows closer to the end. Not only did I enjoy the story in this story, I also truly enjoyed seeing the structure and tales within tales aspects being played with and pulled off so successfully.

 

The End of Crazy by Katherine Sparrow is the height of the mental science fiction slant in this issue. The story follows a couple, “cured” of their mental disabilities by a miracle treatment but faced with a future that requires them to sacrifice the treatment, and possibly their sanity, for a better life. They learn very quickly that moving past their mental limitations takes effort and willpower, not just the latest quick fix. I enjoy the conflict between “is it real or is it in your head” and this story is all about that. It also has moments both of fearing falling into a mental skew and moments of wondering what’s so good about normal after all.

 

The Gunslinger of Chelem by Lavie Tidhar is a great follow up to The End of Crazy. The focus changes to dreams becoming real rather than the paranoid delusions of insanity becoming real. Then it moves outside of chaos and into lucidity, rules that must be figured out and conquered to end a sort of ruthless REM pit. Plus I got a kick out of scifi with a classic western theme. Sort of like Back to the Future 3, only better.

 

Locked In by Mary Robinette Kowal is a nasty bit of text wedged into this issue. The other stories were safe, but this one is downright dangerous. The hazard comes, not from technology spinning out of control, but people’s faith in technology being far misplaced. The true evil is in the people, not the tool. The darkness in this piece snuck up on me. This one is a powerful, short piece, not to be missed.

 

Projector by Daniel LeMoal comes next. The dark slant here is everywhere, from the desperation and abuse of the junkies who serve as central characters, to their those abusing them, the people set up to be their victims, the drug itself and the one dangerous power that is the reason the druggies were put in their situation in the first place. There is no good escape, not for the junkies who are set up to fail, nor for their desperate target, nor for the true villain of the story, hidden until it’s far too late for anyone to break free.

 

I enjoyed At the 24-Hour by William F. Nolan more than his contribution to the last issue. Both are well written, but At the 24-Hour has the last minute evil, like Locked In, that I enjoy. I also think this story is a better fit for Apex.

 

Pyramus and Thisbe by Jeremy Adam Smith is a strange tale, a retelling of a classic Greek myth. It fits well with The Sum of His Parts, a retelling of Frankenstein. But ultimately I feel I missed something in this story. The writing is lovely, but I never quite grasped the setting, nor the relevance of the humans’ hatred of him simply for being a machine. It brings conflict, and even realistic conflict, but there was no explanation as to why the humans hated him so, nor why he appeared to spontaneously hate himself.

 

Sufficiently Advanced by Bev Vincent brings the issue out of the esoteric and puts the reader into a darkly ironic world where what we find unreal is mundane and what we are accustomed to put a crash survivor in terrible danger. Bev proves that just because you escape doesn’t mean you survive.

 

Don’t Show Your Teeth by Rob D. Smith is a neat little tale about fascination with the past in the future. I would have liked to have learned more about why Perri finds the scum covered teeth so fascinating. What is it about the story’s present that makes the era the teeth came from worth the obsession? I’m afraid ultimately I just didn’t feel the paranoia of the main character through most of the story so the end didn’t feel like a culmination of the events as much as an end.

 

I took a sneak peak at Cain XP11 by Geoffrey Girard, though I had planned to wait until I had all four parts before reading it. I’m not sure I’ll be able to wait now. The story appears to be a “who’s the more evil” tale of scientists who clone the world’s most know serial killers, not to settle the nature vs. nurture, but to play god with their genes, and, as always, for money. The story is told primarily from the point of view of the man charged with cleaning the mess up, figuratively not literally. The prose doesn’t jump out and beat you the way Steven Saville’s did in the first serialized work in Apex. But it’s like watching a train wreck in slow motion. Delight fun in the vein of “If only the character knew what I think I know.” I look forward to reading the rest.

 

The Parting Shot for Apex Digest #9 is Sonorous by Paul Abbmondi. I have to say it’s the first time I’ve been satisfied with a published piece that I’ve read in second person. I instantly thought of Gabriel’s horn, only scifi, reproduced like a clone of an artifact. The story didn’t entirely lean that way, but I enjoyed the lovely imagery that surfaces in the tale.

 

Issue Seven felt like it lead into Issue Eight. But this one, #9, seems to have departed for a new goal, one I’ll be glad to ride along to.

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March 25

Apex Digest #10

Apex Digest #10

This issue of Apex Digest is slimmer than others, and is lacking some of the beautiful artwork normally found within. But it’s not lacking in good and unusual fiction.

 

First up is Bad Sushi by Cherie Priest. While not within the normal parameters of “science fiction” it is an amusing tale with an unusual hero, Baku, a veteran of World War II that can be summed up as “Cthulhu Sushi”.

 

Next up is Daydreams by Lavie Tidhar. Set in the same world as his previous story in Apex (The Gunslinger of Chelem, from issue #9) wherein dreams are real, solid things, Daydreams focuses less on dream logic and more on the real world implications of the phenomenon. Tidhar weaves a sort of circular dreaminess to his story which may not be agreeable with everyone. Rafael ends up facing a dreamer who can not only recraft human subjects but also might be a little closer to Rafael than her realizes.

 

Memories of the Knacker’s Yard by Ian Creasey goes very well with the previous Daydreams. In this story it’s not dreams that are real, but ghosts. And memories can be pulled from heads and traded or sold, which of course leads to sculpting memories for higher value and poaching. It also raises a question, if cops could buy the memories of the killer would it turn them into killers themselves? This goes very nicely with the second installment of CAIN XP11 further in the issue.

 

Pigs and Feaches by Patrice E. Sarath is next up and it picks up the theme of memories where the previous story left off. In this story “Fast A” is a super speed version of Alzheimer’s that is infectious as if viral. The question raised is whether the disease truly wipes the mind, or just traps it within the body.

 

With Temple:Incarnations I didn’t review each segment, only the whole. But with Apex Digest’s second serialized novella, CAIN XP11 I can’t resist. The first section (found in Apex Digest #9) asked questions of both nature vs. nurture and science can, but should it? This segment continues the nature vs. nurture debate as Becker, armed with files and a clone of Jeffery Dahmer, chases down clones of other famous killers created for an experiment trying to isolate the killer gene. But the scientist in charge liberated the young killers (in the first part) and set them free to play in the world, also revealing there were more clones than the ones under careful scientific study.

 

But in addition to killer genes and carefully sculpted abuse on the part of the scientists part two also begins to ask “I’m genetically predisposed and nurtured to kill… what’s your excuse?”

 

This is one of the most thematically similar issues of Apex I’ve seen. It flows together like a fine meal, each side complimenting another.

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