March 30

Stoker Awards

The Stoker Awards are being presented tonight at WHC in Salt Lake City. The Stokers will be shown live, streaming at http://www.iscifi.tv/live/.

The 2007 Final list of Nominees is below. I will post the winners after the show.

Superior Achievement in a Novel

  • THE GUARDENER’S TALE by Bruce Boston (Sam’s Dot Publishing)
  • HEART-SHAPED BOX by Joe Hill (William Morrow)
  • THE MISSING by Sarah Langan (Harper)
  • THE TERROR by Dan Simmons (Little, Brown)

Superior Achievement in a First Novel

  • HEART-SHAPED BOX by Joe Hill (William Morrow)
  • I WILL RISE by Michael Calvillo (Lachesis Publishing)
  • THE MEMORY TREE by John R. Little (Nocturne Press)
  • THE WITCH’S TRINITY by Erika Mailman (Crown)
  • THE HOLLOWER by Mary SanGiovanni (Leisure Books)

Superior Achievement in Long Fiction

  • AFTERWARD, THERE WILL BE A HALLWAY by Gary Braunbeck (Five Strokes to Midnight)
  • ALMOST THE LAST STORY BY ALMOST THE LAST MAN by Scott Edelman (Postscripts)
  • GENERAL SLOCUM’S GOLD by Nicholas Kaufmann (Burning Effigy Press)
  • THE TENTH MUSE by William Browning Spencer
  • AN APIARY OF WHITE BEES by Lee Thomas (Inferno)

Superior Achievement in Short Fiction

  • THE DEATH WAGON ROLLS ON BY by C. Dean Andersson (Cemetery Dance #57)
  • LETTING GO by John Everson (Needles and Sins)
  • THE TEACHER by Paul G. Tremblay (Chizine)
  • THERE’S NO LIGHT BETWEEN FLOORS by Paul G. Tremblay (Clarkesworld)
  • CLOSET DREAMS by Lisa Tuttle (Postscripts #10)
  • THE GENTLE BRUSH OF WINGS by David Niall Wilson (Defining Moments)

Superior Achievement in an Anthology

  • FIVE STROKES TO MIDNIGHT edited by Gary Braunbeck and Hank Schwaeble (Haunted Pelican Press)
  • INFERNO edited by Ellen Datlow (Tor)
  • DARK DELICACIES 2: FEAR edited by Del Howison & Jeff Gelb (Carroll & Graf/Avalon)
  • MIDNIGHT PREMIERE edited by Tom Piccirilli (Cemetery Dance Publications)
  • AT EASE WITH THE DEAD edited by Barbara & Christopher Roden (Ash-Tree Press)

Superior Achievement in a Collection

  • PROVERBS FOR MONSTERS by Michael A. Arnzen (Dark Regions Press)
  • THE IMAGO SEQUENCE by Laird Barron (Night Shade Books
  • OLD DEVIL MOON by Christopher Fowler (Serpent’s Tail)
  • 5 STORIES by Peter Straub (Borderlands)
  • DEFINING MOMENTS by David Niall Wilson (Sarob Press)
Superior Achievement in Nonfiction

  • ENCYCLOPEDIA HORRIFICA by Joshua Gee (Scholastic)
  • THE PORTABLE OBITUARY: HOW THE FAMOUS, RICH, AND POWERFUL REALLY DIED by Michael Largo (Harper)
  • THE CRYPTOPEDIA: A Dictionary of the Weird, Strange & Downright Bizarre by Jonathan Maberry & David F. Kramer (Citadel Press / Kensington)
  • STORYTELLERS UNPLUGGED by Joe Nassise and David Niall Wilson (Storytellers Unplugged)

Superior Achievement in Poetry

  • BEING FULL OF LIGHT, INSUBSTANTIAL by Linda Addison (Space and Time)
  • HERESY by Charlee Jacob (Bedlam Press [Necro Publications])
  • VECTORS: A WEEK IN THE DEATH OF A PLANET by Charlee Jacob & Marge Simon (Dark Regions Press)
  • PHANTASMAPEDIA by Mark McLaughlin (Dead Letter Press)
  • OSSUARY by JoSelle Vanderhooft (Sam’s Dot Publishing)
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March 26

Murky Depths #1

Murky Depths #1

For those not familiar with Murky Depths it is magazine hybrid of graphic novel and short fiction with a dark speculative slant. It features comic strips and beautifully illustrated dark stories intermingled with the occasional spice of a bit of poetry.

First up in this issue is the first episode of “Death and the Maiden” by Richard Calder. A brief slice of a graphic serial, the story presents an alter-verse reminiscent of Nancy A. Collins’ Sonja Blue books. A death-headed vigilante saves a backstreet prostitute who is so immersed in the life she begins to look like a blow up doll. The strip isn’t long enough to truly understand the premise or the world, but it is enough to set up a dark romance between the emotionally scarred and the physically scarred inhabitants of the street.

“Looking In, Looking Out” by Gareth D. Jones is the first story offering, thought it’s not in a traditional story form. Told in brief daily log style this story is about an alien reaching out to attempt first contact with the human race. The ending is somewhat expected once the reader gets the flavor of the tale, but is no less effective.

“Come to My Arms My Beamish Boy” by Douglas Warwick is the tale of a man slowly losing himself to Alzheimer’s disease that does as good of a job as “Cobwebs” by Kealan Patrick Burke (Postscripts 11). Cotton’s take on loss is more surreal, attributing Alzheimer’s to the damage done by creatures living partially outside our reality who eat away at us, feeding from our memories. Warwick does an impressive job at moving the reader through prose and plot.

Combining technology and the natural Jonathan C. Gillespie’s “Paston, Kentucky” spins a tale from a hive of robots that roam the U.S. countryside, similar to a dramatization of africanized bees, devouring metal to build hives and more of themselves. Only the small town of Paston, Ky seems to be immune so that’s where the co-creator goes, determined to get into a hive and shut down the bots, no matter how many people he has to sacrifice to do so.

“The Other Woman” by Chris Lynch continues the science fiction flavor in stand alone strip form. This one’s darkness is the sadness of loss, not the horror of violence, a feeling that builds steadily to the final reveal. As much about human nature as scientific impossibilities, this is a subtle best of show in the graphic department.

“67442” by Paul Abbamondi is short enough that the plot isn’t much more than suggested as the main character walks the reader through his world. It could be an interesting beginning to a much longer piece.

“Supply Ship” by Kate Kelly starts by setting up a very human society, abandoned on a harsh planet surface and desperate to fill needs, like sex and acceptance, as well as their bellies. But their desperate attempt at survival, hidden under the petty surface similarities between character and reader, is not entirely what it seems.

“State Your Name” by Jon Courtenay Grimwood is the most complex of this issue’s tales. The drive to get off planet is pushing much of the story’s society, with strict rules on weight limits and social status dictating who can and can’t escape. But Piertro has contingency plan and robbing a bank is the first step to setting himself free.

“Empathy” by Luke Cooper is the last strip on this issue, a chiaroscuro testament to the down side of psychic powers.

A bit of poetry, every bit as graphic as the previous tales, “Snowblind” by Marcy Lynn Tentchoff is a tale of a romantic downfall told in words as pictorial as the drawings that accompany it.

“Cyberevenge Inc.” by Eugie Foster has a comic book feel, telling the story of a writer, career and reputation ruined by a vicious, almost meaningless stalker. She stumbles upon a help site through an online support group that offers her not only the information and ability to shut her attacker down but an opportunity for cyber-revenge. Foster weaves in a stomach-twisting amount of tension before offering an out to her character that feels far less dangerous than the present situation.

“Today is Not” by Michael Sellars is the first stray from this issue’s science fiction theme. Instead it steps into New Weird, telling the tale of Abigail, a woman haunted by witnessing the strange deaths of her husband and daughter. Now she’ll go to any means to find the surreal creatures who might be able to bring her loved ones back, disregarding the fact that they, too, might be mortal. The story is comparable to the tales in Brett Alexander Savory’s No Further Messages, with the prose a short step below Savory’s.

“I Bleed Light” by Edward R. Norden is an electric blend of long poetry and mad graphics, a perfect example of what this magazine is meant to be. It meshes with the surreal style of the story behind it, twisting words and pictures together around the reader.

“The Quality of Mercy” by Ron Shiflet is another commentary on psychics. This one is a surprisingly dark tale of a young man who just knows on sight the deaths and darkness of other people’s souls. He feels a soul draining pull to save the people he meets that threatens to tear his mind away. But his nature demands that some sort of mercy be shown to the suffering, even if it doesn’t dictate what mercy is.

“Naught But Ash” by Anne Stringer is of a similar vein as issue two’s Yellow Warbler by Jason Sizemore. Set in a small town after the world has been ravaged by “lights from above” the tale is tinged with mystery, after the fact, as the hanging of the killer of a peaceful family only brings more questions rather than answers.

Finally comes Lavie Tidhar’s “The Pattern Makers of Zanzibar”. In a way this tale brings the issue back to the beginning, echoing the structure of “Looking In, Looking Out” in a series of one sided letters. Historical and science fiction simultaneously, this story tells of an 1800s newspaper reporter who stumbles upon a mass of Ickeian-style reptilian creatures who secretly control the patterns of our reality.

Issue #1 of Murky Depths presents a nice start, proving Murky Depths can easily make itself a staple of both speculative fiction and art genres.

March 26

Dying to Live by Kim Paffenroth

Dying to Live by Kim Paffenroth

Like the real world the fictional world in Dying to Live is brutally unfair. One would expect no less from a book set a year after the world succumbed to zombies. This isn’t a story of the uprising, the slow rot of the human beast. This is a tale part in retrospect, told by characters who are in a brave new world, but still remember and mourn their old world.

 

Jonah is a man living a grim existence, spared from the initial zombie take over, but finally persuaded to leave his seaborne safe haven to search out his loved ones. After finding his former home empty, with no signs of violence his life took a turn toward simple goals– namely surviving. He wandered the countryside, with no purpose or goal outside of the drive to find food and not become food, until, by a million little coincidences, he finds a compound of survivors.

 

Hidden in what was once a museum the motley crew of living humans each have their own tales of how they came to safety, their own haunting losses and their own emotional battles to face just to maintain the will to survive in a dangerous world. Jonah and the war refugees wrestle not just with the undead, but with questions of how to, and even if they should, restart society in the face of the horrific future before them.

 

Flavored with a combination of Biblical end times and a touch of Richard Matheson’s classic I Am Legend, Dying to Live is a novel that transcends the shuffling dead image of classic zombie fiction from the beginning, nearly taming the creatures by giving them an odd sort of humanity and exposing humans as the root of the evil.

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March 26

Storm Front by Jim Butcher

Storm Front by Jim Butcher

The first book in the Dresden Files series (ten books and counting so far) is a refreshing wind for the urban fantasy genre and this reader. One of the cannon examples of urban fantasy, a blending of mystery and paranormal in a modern setting often with a touch of romance, Storm Front is slanted more toward suspense than romance.

Harry isn’t another supernaturally endowed, kick-ass female heroine, taking on the world of evil and the world of men at the same time. Harry is a somewhat-awkward, technologically challenged wizard who only has his training and his will power working for him, and the mysterious “Doom of Damocles” (two strikes, one more and you’re out), a black wizard killing by magic, and a supernatural version of a patrol officer (who thinks he’s the killer) all working against him. As soon as Dresden figures out the black wizard is using spring storms to fuel his magic he also hears that he’s the next target. The next rumble of thunder could be bringing his death.

Storm Front is suspenseful, the use of the storms as both plot point and for tension is excellent. Dresden is a charming hero, who gets by by the skin of his teeth and sheer luck, not by out magicking (or out sexing) the bad guys. The romance angle is lightly handled, the humor organic and the story will keep pages turning. This book is a great start for men or women who want to test out the urban fantasy waters.

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