June 19

Bonus: Interview with Kim Paffenroth

First appeared at MonsterLibrarian.com

Dr. Kim Paffenroth is the author of the recently released Valley of the Dead. He has also written Dying to Live, Dying to Live: Life Sentence, Orpheus and the Pearl, and Gospel of the Living Dead: George Romero’s Visions of Hell on Earth which won a Bram Stoker Award in 2006. He has edited the zombie anthologies History is Dead and The World is Dead.   He is a professor of religious studies, and the author of several books on the Bible and theology.

ML: All your books have been impressive with their depth, but Valley of the Dead is a really impressive work. It’s clear you tried to bring the same feel and poetic style to the book as that in Inferno, how difficult was it?

KP: It wasn’t difficult at all, once I started, but it’s exactly what held me back from starting the book, which I’d been thinking of for a long time. I’ve read Inferno probably ten times since the first time in college, so I knew I had that aspect of the work down – how to depict the sinful and monstrous, the kinds of imagery Dante would use, how he’d think of and analyze evil and grotesque things. But I struggled to get a feel for him as a man, as a character – to round out his reactions and analyses and make him less of an observer and more of an actor in the story. Then it clicked in 2008, when I read this Medieval work called The Romance of the Rose – it spells out the idea of courtly love to which Dante would’ve subscribed. I knew some of the ideas from reading the endnotes in Inferno, but reading the fuller treatment and discussing it with students in class made it clearer and more vivid to me, and I finally thought I could tackle Dante as a character and not just a thinker.

ML:  Religious and sociological musings are heavy factors in your books, and yet it never ends up sounding preachy. How do you open the paths to discussion and consideration, without crossing into evangelism?

KP: Great question, and let me be honest: I don’t think anything I’ve ever written is preachy, but my early stuff is definitely heavy-handed. I’ve worked on that, here and in the sequels to Dying to Live, which are just as religious as my first novel, but I worked hard on the language and dialogue to make sure people were talking only obliquely about the subject, and the narrator didn’t step in to “tag” things with their meaning. I learned to trust the reader more, and the stories are stronger. But as for preachy – I’m not, because my usual message is that the world is a wonderful but awful place, and different characters react differently to that reality. How would you preach such a message? It’s not something someone needs to “convert” to, it’s not an overtly or specifically religious (let alone Christian) message. It’s just an observation, so you lay out the images that would lead one to that observation and you let the readers connect the dots.

ML: Despite your skill and critical acclaim, you appear to be devoted to the genre small press. Can you tell us why, and how this has affected your writing career?

KP: No hidden or mysterious or altruistic motive there: Permuted’s been very good to me. We sell a ton of books, and they now have a deal with Simon and Schuster to reprint some of their earlier titles (including Dying to Live). It gets me noticed and gets me other, related work. For example, I’ve gotten several speaking engagements because someone at a college heard about the “zombies and theology” guy and they asked me to come speak at their school. So it’s worked out well for me.

ML: There are a lot of literary plus monster mash ups going on. Care to comment on the trend or recommend any favorites?

KP: Well, it depends on how it’s handled, doesn’t it? If you take the public domain words of a classic and intersperse them with your words – that was funny the first time it was done, but now I don’t think there’s any point or anything to be accomplished by that. If you read classics and let their ideas influence you, sometimes in quite specific ways that readers can pick up on – that’s a good thing. Every book about a journey should be influenced by the Odyssey. In fact, I’d say I’d love to see more zombie stories influenced by someone other than Romero (may his name be praised) – but I don’t want to see more that are just adding words to an already existing text. That shouldn’t even need to be said, but I guess it shouldn’t have to be said that I don’t want another film made from an SNL skit or a 1970s television series, but they keep getting made, don’t they?

ML:  Why zombies? Have you ever considered writing with another kind of “monster”?

KP: Zombies are a very handy trope for me, as I want to deal with issues of sin and theodicy, and they fit the bill pretty well. But one thing I’ve tried a couple times is to go to the opposite end of the undead spectrum: if zombies are bodies without minds, then ghosts are minds without bodies, and they’d represent an opposite set of problems and conflicts, so I’d like to work more with ghost stories.

ML: Horror is a difficult, and much maligned genre. Why do you write it?

KP: What compels me about the Christian worldview is how seriously it takes evil in our lives. So ironically, though many Christians eschew horror as inappropriate or even opposed to their lives and faith, I’d see it as the worldview most congenial to horror. And there’s another element that comes from all religious traditions equally, I think – the idea that the universe is – from a human perspective – essentially unfathomable, mysterious, and, most of the time, fairly hostile to our needs. Again, that seems like the worldview espoused by any horror writing.

ML:  Why do you think people should read it (and that it’s so important to include in public collections)?

KP: I’d say horror is simply a “given” of our existence, and to ignore it would be to ignore an essential part of my life. Zombies aren’t real; serial killers are, but they’re pretty rare. But real evil – either committed against us or by us, in all different levels of severity or frequency – is something most all of us will have to confront. All literature ultimately helps us deal with the real world, and horror has a part to play in that education.

ML:  Despite some pretty gory, brutal (and just plain depressing) scenes an element of hope always remains through Valley of the Dead. What do you think keeps people (and characters) going in hopeless situations?

KP: I’ve never been asked that! You took me by surprise. I’d say, in my experience, it’s a devotion to something other than oneself, something one gives a higher value to than one’s own comfort, well-being, or life. And it can be any number of things, either personal, societal, or religious – honor, love, one’s children, the Common Good, or God. It could even be something negative, like revenge or hate. The trick, as a writer, is to make the motive believable, and to get the reader to appreciate the motive, even if s/he doesn’t share it.

ML: Do we, like most of the valley dwellers in Valley of the Dead, just fail to see the depth of either our misery, or our blessings?

KP: Two in a row that I’ve never been asked! I think that’s a very good way to put it, and reminds me of the terrible self-knowledge in the Oedipus cycle: he’s fine, so long as he doesn’t know the truth, but he has to know the truth. Living a lie isn’t really an option, and the truth will be revealed regardless. That’s the real power of Dante’s vision – not all the cool tortures, but how he sees the afterlife as revealing who we really were, all along. It’s not punishment or reward – it’s just living (eternally) with ourselves and our decisions. That’s why I could move the whole story into a secular, earthly realm, and not lose his message, because his observation is simply to extend our present situation out into eternity.

ML: What else can we look forward to reading from you in the future?

KP: A novelette I wrote a couple years ago, Orpheus and the Pearl, is going to be reissued by Belfire Press this fall. A short story I wrote with Julia and RJ Sevin, “Thin Them Out,” will be in John Joseph Adams’s anthology The Living Dead 2, also this fall. The third installment in the Dying to Live saga will be out in spring 2011. I hope you all like what I do with zombies in all of them!

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June 17

Better Off Alone by Yolanda Sfetsos

Reviewed for MonsterLibrarian.com

Better off Alone by Yolanda Sfetsos

Damnation Books, 2009

ISBN: 9781615720514

Available: Digital Only

Better off Alone is definitely a horror bite, clocking in at about 40 pages. It is set in a post-zombie uprising world, where the main character, Nell, escapes her basement stronghold after an attack, and stumbles into a band of survivors with a dark secret. She wants to rescue Todd, the man who kept her hopes up over the last month through email, but first she has to survive her rescuers.

Better off Alone is ultimately incomplete. There are many potentially interesting things mentioned, but then abandoned, and even the description and storytelling itself feels unfinished. Sfetsos flirts with a good story here, but doesn’t quite deliver. As for its place in collections, those libraries with booming digital collections and lendings might find this tale popular, especially if zombie stories are in high demand, but if not, then it’s best to wait for Sfetsos’s next published work.

Contains: some gore

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June 14

Silver Borne by Patricia Briggs

ISBN: 9780441018192

Mercy Thompson book 5

I was given this book as a gift.

There are three kinds of books in the world; the failures, the satisfying reads and the life-changing reads. Patricia Briggs’ Mercy Thompson series is one of the truly dependable satisfying series out there. These books won’t change your life, but they will give you a good, entertaining read every time, and stand up to rereads as well.

Silver Borne is the fifth book in the series following Mercy Thompson, mechanic and werewolf-raise coyote shifter with a knack for defying all odds. As such, there’s really no way to evaluate this book without spoilers for previous books, so be warned and if you’re just setting out in the Tri-Cities world, you might not want to read this review.

Last time in Briggs’ world Mercy Thompson got mixed up in a vampire plot that, after her brutal rape in book 3, nearly broke her. Luckily Mercy is getting a vacation from the vampires which allows her to deal with the other major things that happened in the last book–her magical mating to local werewolf Alpha, Adam. The attraction between defiant Mercy and overpowering Adam has been brewing from the first page of book one, when the two pretended to not be able to stand each other. But now Adam’s past actions–namely declaring Mercy his mate a very long time ago, before he even tried showing his affection for her in order to keep her safe from the very dangerous werewolves that might see another predator shifter as competition–are coming to light. Adam’s love and care are helping Mercy come back from the trauma of her rape, and ironically they’re causing him some major problems in the pack, since many of his wolves are suspicious that Mercy would show no interest in the pack for years of being Adam’s mate, and now suddenly wants a starring role.

Add to that Mercy unknowingly being the guardian of a very powerful fae artifact, and being unable to let those who have shown her friendliness and kindness be abused by others and you have a complex twist of plots that don’t go linear like most book plots, but blossom and grow into a collection of characters that seem to share bits of their lives with reader in each book.

Briggs’ books are fleshy and visual, featuring characters who are beyond fun and lovable. Humble and genuine, and dependable Briggs’ skill brings readers loyally back for more of this world, which is neither over powered, nor self important, but is simply and truly, entertaining.

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June 11

Murky Depths #9

ISBN: 9781906584146

I was given this magazine to review.

Issue # 9 Murky Depths is stuffed with about as much spec fic as you can get in 82 slim pages. It’s got a comic book look, and a comic book feel, from the first glance at the sullen Dead Girl on the cover to the last frame of the last graphic strip.

It starts with the cover-inspiring first part of Richard Calder’s new serial strip “Dead Girls”. Just a sliver of a tale, but with enough mood and set up to tease readers, this tale of a sex robot STI, the infected girl and the man who must save her promises many more excitedly twisted things to come. From the future this issue flings readers into the English past with “Is This My Last Testament?” by Juliet E. McKenna. Not quite a werewolf tale, but bearing some resemblance, honestly the self-absorbed, almost cold main character both makes readers almost want to see nasty things happen to him, as well as effecting them more powerfully with horror that can break through even his dulled emotions. One of the meatier tales of the issue it’s also one of the best.

Now that MD has your attention it serves up a series of short tales that focus on wild set up and strange worlds. Matt Finucane’s “Complaint from the Other World” is a straight forward tale of a man ran afoul of modern witchcraft and trapped, well you’ll know from the illustrations. “Distant Rain” by Andrew Knighton is one of only two longer tales, this one spinning a science fiction pirate world where humans have tried to repopulate the ocean through science, but instead have ended up having to hunt down their genetically engineered mutant creations. The world set up is truly interesting, but the story focus is on the characters, which are somewhat less interesting due to the brevity of the tale itself. One small adventure out of so many, no matter how it ends, just feels like not enough.

Part Two of Luke Cooper’s “The Wrath of God” continues the love affair of Goulding, the cop with the heart of an angel and Halo Slipping, the angel with the soul of a human, and their battle against the angel of death who wants to kill Halo to earn his way back into heaven. Real dark (and not just art-wise) Cooper’s tales make the world of J. O’Barr’s The Crow look upbeat.

“Cancelled” by Robert E Keller is about an actor in a extreme future world, who regularly plays deaths scenes, for real, and the creature that’s getting pretty pissed off at humanity’s blatant disregard for the natural order of things. Derek Cagemann’s “Fast Learners” is also a dark SF tale, of robots who are almost human in nature, and a human who very much isn’t. The writing is solid enough, but one can’t help wondering why such a complete waste of flesh like Lon is so important to deserve a private tour of the factory, and have such things explained to him, in the first place.

“March of the Broken” by Craig Hallam features some of the best art of the book, beautiful and gruesome, matching the tale, a short, visual ode to love and zombies. Anthony Malone’s “The Transported Man” is off beat for the issue, a crude (at times) but humorous tale of a man made super lover by the tragic power that forces him to teleport at orgasm. This is one of the few love stories to be found inside MD’s pages.

“Postosuchus Kirkpatricki” by Simon Petrie is told in play form, that while at times is amusing in a Little Shop of Horrors/tongue-in-cheek form, also features non-linear theatrics that come from nowhere and seem tossed in for effect rather than natural to the story.

Lastly is “The Escape Artist” by Chris Lynch. Of all the deaths in this Murky Depths issue the ones in this graphic strip mean the most, being the most soulful and most felt, despite the very limited word use. The second to last frame says it all, showing a level of darkness, timing and devotion missing in many tales in the spec fic world.

It’s an issue of propositions and build up, and while not all the tales follow through to a satisfying conclusion Murky Depths does spark the imagination and bring to light some amazing speculative possibilities.

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June 8

Magic Bleeds by Ilona Andrews

ISBN: 9780441018529

I bought this book.

Kate Daniels #4

Like most books this deep into a series I have to start with a disclaimer: DO NOT start this series here. Magic Bleeds is the fourth in the series, and like most series it has a point where the world and characters are fairly well established and the story start moving on with the readers as friends and close relatives rather than as an audience. For the Kate Daniel series, Magic Bleeds is that book.

The Kate books are set in a post apocalyptic-ish Atlanta where tech and magic are at war for dominance over reality. By this point “tech” being up and “magic” being up, as well as the characters and the monster archetypes (such as vampires being “horses” for necromancers and werecritters being unified under one ruler in a feudal-like system of clans) should be familiar for readers because Andrews is moving on to expand, rather than explain.

The book opens with Kate following through on a bet she lost (that entails her cooking a meal and serving it in lingerie to the Beast Lord–Curran). Except Curran stands her up, which is a massive blow to Kate, emotionally, since she was raised to never get close to anyone, and had let Curran in anyway. This directly sets up the plot for plenty of angst, however Andrews backs up Kate’s fear of trusting people with a big whopping dose of the family from Hell. Formerly Jesse Custer, main character of the Preacher graphic novel series, held the title of worst family ever (in my reading experience). But Kate’s family is legendary, as in actual legends, like the kind that have parents swallowing children out of jealousy and full grow adults being born from each others’ heads.

If Kate’s destiny and relatives aren’t enough to keep her from getting attached, the fact that someone in Atlanta is targeting the strongest magic users in the city and turning their bodies into sentient, aggressive, living diseases (as in, these disease will literally chase you down to infect you) and appears to be outright after the shapeshifters, making Kate’s angst over being attached to the beast clans an even harder decision.

Character progression is what this series is about, possibly even more than the mysteries and thrill of each book itself. Kate is the cold, vicious killer that we know isn’t as heartless as she seems. It’s hard not to get drawn in, especially when on an emotional level we want to see Kate conquer the world by allowing herself to be open and passionate and a real person instead of a flat killer.

Engaging, exciting, sensual and darkly hilarious, Magic Bleeds is a wholly satisfying read with a hint of Arthurian legend in a backdrop of murder, magic and werewolves. If you love paranormals and adventure this series is not to be missed.

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