Published May 15, 2018 by Rockhill Publishing LLC She's back and this time she brought a friend... The story continues: the sequel to Th...

Guest Post || Itching to Write! by Myron Edwards

Published May 15, 2018 by Rockhill Publishing LLC



She's back and this time she brought a friend...

The story continues: the sequel to The Mistress of the Rock, is The Revenge.

Still smarting from Richard Cole's rejection, Aphrodite plans a series of events that will bring about his return to the island. Only this time, his welcome will not be so warm, as he will have to battle bureaucracy and the islanders' contempt for the devastating aftermath of his chance discovery and his sudden departure. In addition, he confronts his internal demons, and with his return to Cyprus, might completely consume him.

For Aphrodite is set upon a path of cold vengeance and summons the Scylla, a legendary cryptid of the deep, to do her bidding. The creature wreaks havoc on the once idyllic coast of Cape Greco and the tourist resorts of Ayia Napa, Protaras, and Paphos.

Richard must not only face his devils but also the goddess, if he is to stop the terror that now lurks in the Mediterranean's crystal-clear waters.

But how is he going to do it?




Itching to write! 

by Myron edwards



Writing is like an itch, you know you want to scratch it, but you are afraid if you do it might bleed. That would be messy, so you ignore it. Till the next time. 

The problem is to use a much-overused metaphor that itch won't go away. Once the bug bites it is difficult to ignore. So what do you do about it? 

The best possible solution is to write down your thoughts. They may not have anything to do with your story, but what they do is get you used to putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. This is a good way to start the whole writing process. 

Some folks are fortunate they can just sit down and write without any pre-planning. But for new writers practice is essential. 

Look not everyone can write, in fact, most give up before Chapter Two. Why?
Because it is not easy. Writing like all things in life is a skill. 

Of course, the rules can be taught, that is the practical side, but the creative side is something different. Everyone has a story they can tell or a book in them so they say.  The difficult part is bringing that out. 

How to begin! The first question you ask yourself is why do I want to write this book? Is it to bring me fame and fortune or is that my story needs to be read by someone other than myself? If your answer is in the former fame and fortune, then you will need to have something unique and original. Plus, you will need an agent, a publisher, a promoter, an editor, and be in demand. 

So let’s go back to basics, what is your book about? Is it a true story, sometimes these stories are very popular and work well, is your book fiction and what genre is it?  Horror, fantasy, romance, war, history, to name but a few. Whatever the subject you will need to do some research. Why? because the more depth you can put into your story the more compelling it is to read, it is like building a house it won’t stand without the right foundations, the same is true when writing your book, build the story bit by bit. 

Now some people are lucky they can just sit down and type away, building the story as they type for most of us we need to gradually build the story chapter by chapter, introducing characters as we build.  

So plotting the book can be very useful, this way not only can you introduce characters into your story but you can integrate the action so that you can see what dialogue the character would use. 

Another useful tip is to use what they do in the movies and create character ARCS, this is basically the story of the character, from his or her beginning through the plot line, and shows what happens to them and how it affects the story and how they react with the other characters in the book. 

This way you will become more involved in the book because you are starting to see how the character and action evolves. Each chapter has a beginning middle and end as with the whole book so you want to make sure that what you are writing is a page-turner. Keep dialogue and action smart. 

This type of planning will help you become linked to the characters in your story and you will find it easier to write about them, it also is invaluable to the plot.  

Unlike the movies where everything is available to see and hear, a book is all about imagination, you must be able to conjure the feeling of what you are writing about, and believe it because if you don’t believe it how do you expect the reader too?  

Which brings me to my next point and probably the most important one of all? Writing is hard, no matter how talented you are, and no matter how good you are, you will at times struggle, you will doubt yourself, and you may even experience writer’s block, which means you are not able to write anything at all. 

But set aside these thoughts for a moment and consider this, once you start down the road to writing your book be it fiction or fact, you will need to sacrifice your time and your friends and family because writing is a solitary experience, for me it is the only way I can write.  Some people are fortunate that they can work with others around them and it doesn’t affect them, but from what I have learned most writers are solitary figures, with one aim to finish their story.   

So before embarking on this adventure consider what writing means to you and what is your objective.  And if you feel that itch coming on, scratch it.  



Born in 1952 in Orsett, Essex in England, the youngest son to Welsh parents Iris and Bill Edwards. Upon leaving school, he went into the travel industry, where he travelled the world, working in travel agencies, tour operators and airlines for some 30 years. In 1976 Myron began freelance writing for BBC, radio and television, his credits include the Two Ronnies, Week Endings, and the News Huddlines. In 1980, he joined JWT advertising, as a copywriter writing his first TV commercial for dog food inside 10 days.  His love for the creative never left him and in 1987 he created Tubewalking, a new map concept, to help people get around London easier on foot, which still operates today. In 1990 he married Niki, whose family background is Greek Cypriot.  On a family trip to Cyprus, visiting Aphrodite’s Rock for the first time, the beginnings of his passion to write the story of Mistress of the Rock came into fruition. Moving his family in 2005 to Cyprus to live, gave him the opportunity to write, as during this time he worked on campaigns for TV and Radio in an advertising agency in Limassol. The first manuscript of the book was completed in 2007, released by a local publisher it had a limited audience, but was well received by those who had read it. He has now completed the sequel and is working on the third part of this story. Myron has three children, two sons and one daughter all grown up.


Published  June 18, 2013 by 47North T hey only come when it snows, and nobody ever gets away. A group of close friends gathers at a secluded...

Book Review || The Shuddering by Ania Ahlborn


Published June 18, 2013 by 47North

They only come when it snows, and nobody ever gets away.

A group of close friends gathers at a secluded cabin in the wintry mountains of Colorado for a final holiday hurrah. Instead, it may be their last stand. First a massive blizzard leaves them marooned. Then the more chilling realization: something is lurking in the woods, watching them, waiting...

Now a weekend of family, friends, and fun has turned into a test of love and loyalty in the face of inhuman horrors. The only hope for those huddled inside is to fight—tooth and nail, bullet and blade—for their lives. Otherwise, they'll end up like the monsters' other victims: bright pools of blood on glittering snow, screams lost in the vast mountains.

**First and foremost, my apologies for the radio silence. This is my first review since May. After five years of reviewing, 2023 has left me completely burnt out. With a year in at a job that requires me to interact with a computer screen all day, the thought of coming home and trying to pound the keys has been an entirely revolting and exhausting thought. In order to get back to the love of reading and reviewing, I'm reading whatever the hell I want and writing whatever comes to mind. 



The Shuddering is my first incursion into Ania Ahlborn's books. I tend to be underwhelmed by the more mainstream horror books so I went in with little to no expectations. The isolation cabin-in-the-woods trope is one of my favorites though and to add malevolent monsters to that? Sure, I'm in. 

This is one of those books that doesn't make you wait for the action. There's no build-up, no slow slide into the abyss. You don't get time to acclimate before the slicing and dicing begins. The first chapter is tension-filled and bloody, fulfilling that instant gratification we sometimes need as horror readers. Afterward, it's a balancing act between learning the characters and being introduced to randos that are simply there to be creature fodder. Even those characters managed to have depth. They have strengths and weaknesses that make them realistic and relatable. In the briefest of instances, you still get a good feel for who they are, before they stop being anything at all. 

I won't say that the entire book wasn't a complete cliche because it most certainly was. The characters are conflicted and have complicated relationships. They play stupid games and win stupid prizes. The setting has your typical isolationist feel with an incoming miring winter storm and the monsters have an amorphous embodiment...until they don't. Somehow though, the fact that this was a horror story completely took a backseat to the characters and their drama. 

I can't believe how emotionally involved I got with these characters. When I tell you I gasped at the heart wrench, yeah, it surprised me too. When the heck did these characters get so under my skin? I was completely and totally invested in the potential for them to conquer their insurmountable odds and it broke me when they didn't. It was so bleak and depressing and turned me completely inside out. It was so...unnecessary, and I think that's what made me love it all the more. 

Published March 15, 2023 by Shadowpaw Press Reprise The first English edition of the popular young adult novel Les fantômes de Spiritwood, o...

Guest Post || Curiosity Kills the Cat but Benefits the Writer by Martine Noël-Maw


Published March 15, 2023 by Shadowpaw Press Reprise


The first English edition of the popular young adult novel Les fantômes de Spiritwood, originally published in French by Éditions de la nouvelle plume , translated by the author One summer night, Ethan and four friends are heading north of Spiritwood, Saskatchewan, for a weekend of camping to watch the northern lights, but their car swerves off the road and ends up in the ditch. The teenagers head back to Spiritwood on foot, but a severe thunderstorm strikes before they reach the town, forcing them to break into an abandoned country school to take shelter. After exchanging scary stories for a while, they fall asleep. When they wake a few hours later, the storm is over and the sky is filled with bright-coloured northern lights. Ethan recounts the legend of the northern lights. "Those lights are produced by the spirits of the departed. It's a sign that they want to communicate with the living. To establish contact, we just have to whistle at them." Then, Ethan produces a spirit whistle that he had bought at Wanuskewin, and he starts to whistle at the sky. Moments later, weird things begin to happen...





Curiosity Kills the Cat but Benefits the Writer
by Martine Noël-Maw



It all started when my then boyfriend took me for a drive in the Qu’Appelle Valley, in southern Saskatchewan, Canada. Recently transplanted from Québec to Wester Canada, I had heard all kinds of intriguing stories about an old sanatorium located on the shore of Echo Lake, near the village of Fort Qu’Appelle.

The sanatorium, named Fort San, had opened its doors in 1917. The institution resembled a village, with many pavilions scattered in the valley along the lake shore. It included a nurses' residence, a visitor lodge, doctors and employees’ homes, and even a one-room school, a theatre and a library. It was even equipped with its own radio station, thanks to the ingenuity of some patients that had a lot of time on their hands. It would broadcast original programming performed by patients.

Maybe it is the location of the sanatorium, isolated in the fold of the hills, which contributed to its aura of mystery. According to many people, “The San” as it was familiarly called, was host to many ghosts. I heard numerous stories, starting with one from my neighbour, a respectable mother of three, who had stayed at The San, after it was converted into the Echo Valley Conference Centre. She was the sole occupant of a room with two single beds. One night, she got up to go to the bathroom and when she came back to her room, she was shocked to see a little boy dressed as a cowboy, including boots, hat and fake revolvers, sitting on the bed next to hers.

Around the same time, a friend of mine attended a conference at The San with a group of college students. Someone took a picture of her and two of her classmates. The picture is very good but also very spooky: the student sitting next to my friend, a girl in her early twenties, looks like a 90-year-old woman, with a wrinkly face and scruffy white hair... I saw the picture and it sent shivers down my spine.

The most famous ghost story related to The San is the one of Nurse Jane. According to some sources, the young woman would have hung herself from a tree, in front of the nurses’ residence. According to others, she hung herself in a bathroom located on the third floor of the children’s pavilion. What is really intriguing is the fact that, according to many, children could see her at the window. A witness told me that in the morning, they would wave at her ghostly figure as they were walking to school.

Being a French literature graduate and having grown up with a ghost in my living room, I have always been interested in that kind of story. So, the day my boyfriend took me to Fort San, after I walk the grounds of this mythical site, I told him: “This is it! I know what my first novel is going to be about.” That visit triggered my curiosity like nothing before. It launched me on a research journey that lasted nearly five years. My first novel, Dans le pli des collines was published in 2004. It became an award-winning book and was published in English in 2013 under the title In the Fold of the Hills (Ekstatis Editions of Victoria, British Columbia). The book is still taught in college, and I am always happy whenever a ghost-lover reader reaches out to me.

What set me on the path to becoming a professional writer is my insatiable curiosity. And I didn’t stop with that first book. Since then, I have spent years researching characters like Will James and Louis Riel. I even embarked on two walks on the Camino de Santiago, in Spain, to write the story of a pilgrim. All this to say that although curiosity may be bad for cats, it has given me the gift of a very rewarding and fulfilling career. As I write these lines, I am anxious to find out where my curiosity will take me next.


© Martine Noël-Maw 2023






Born and raised in Québec, Martine Noël-Maw has called Saskatchewan home since 1993.

A French literature graduate from the Université de Montréal, she has authored seventeen books and a number of plays for both adults and youth, in French and English. Her work has earned her many honours, including two Saskatchewan Book Awards and a SATAward.

Shadowpaw Press Reprise of Regina recently published the first English edition of her popular YA novel The Ghosts of Spiritwood.

Martine is also an editor and translator. Find her online at martinenoelmaw.wordpress.com.




 Get ready to pad your TBR, here are just a few of September's new releases!  If you've missed the previous lists ( January ,   Febr...

This Month in Horror || October 2023



 Get ready to pad your TBR, here are just a few of September's new releases! 

If you've missed the previous lists (January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September), you can still check those out. And if you are looking for what's still to come, you can see the whole list for 2023 here.


If you have a book releasing this year and want to get on the list, click here and I'll get you added!


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The Dead Take the A Train by 
Cassandra Khaw and Richard Kadrey

Expected publication: October 3, 2023 by Tor Nightfire



Julie Crews is a coked-up, burnt-out thirty-something who packs a lot of magic into her small body. She’s been trying to establish herself in the NYC magic scene, and she’ll work the most gruesome gigs to claw her way to the top.

Julie is desperate for a quick career boost to break the dead-end grind, but her pleas draw the attention of an eldritch god who is hungry for revenge. Her power grab sets off a deadly chain of events that puts her closest friends – and the entire world – directly in the path of annihilation.

The first explosive adventure in the Carrion City Duology, The Dead Take the A Train fuses Khaw’s cosmic horror and Kadrey’s gritty fantasy into a full-throttle thrill ride straight into New York’s magical underbelly.




Let the Woods Keep Our Bodies by E. M. Roy

Let the Woods Keep Our Bodies by E. M. Roy

Expected publication: October 10, 2023 by Ghoulish Books



In the small town of Eston, Maine . . . weird things happen sometimes.


Leo Bates knows what’s behind every corner in her hometown, where she’s lived her whole life. Some disjointed memories and grief for her late parents, sure, but nothing dangerous. Nothing unexplainable.


But the familiar becomes strange the longer you look at it. When Tate Mulder goes missing and Leo is pinned as the prime suspect, she can only watch as the town she thought she knew deteriorates around her. She is forced to confront the truth about her parents, Eston, and her relationship if she is to survive an onslaught of conspiracies, cryptic monstrosities, and whatever is hiding in the woods where Tate was last seen. Finding the girl she loves may be the only way to restore balance to Eston—if such a thing ever existed to begin with.





A Light Most Hateful by Hailey Piper




Expected Publication: October 10, 2023 by Titan Books




When a summer storm sweeps through a sleepy town unleashing a monstrous and otherworldy power that threatens to break reality, Olivia will stop at nothing to find her best friend and get them to safety.
Mona Awad’s Bunny meets Stranger Things in this mind-bending and terrifying examination of female friendship and the lengths we'll go to protect the ones we love, from the Bram Stoker award winning author of Queen of Teeth.


Three years after running away from home, Olivia is stuck with a dead-end job in nowhere town Chapel Hill, Pennsylvania. At least she has her best friend, Sunflower.


Olivia figures she’ll die in Chapel Hill, if not from boredom, then the summer night storm which crashes into town with a mind-bending monster in tow.


If Olivia’s going to escape Chapel Hill and someday reconcile with her parents, she’ll need to dodge residents enslaved by the storm’s otherworldly powers and find Sunflower.


But as the night strains friendships and reality itself, Olivia suspects the storm, and its monster, may have its eyes on Sunflower and everything she loves.


Including Olivia.





The Infested by Renee Lake

Expected publication: October 1, 2023 by Hansen House



Monsters are real and the United States is infested...

In the year 1900, a section of the Mid-Western United States, known as The Infested, is overrun with ghosts and monsters. Despite the evil that lurks just outside their door, Desdemona and her family live in The Infested. Their home is a haven for those that make the treacherous journey from east to west.

While magic keeps them safe, Desdemona has always felt indescribably drawn to the Infested. A dangerous compulsion when her mother dies and her father is late leading the wagon train from the East. When a shadow creature appears on their land, and mysterious, alluring visitors arrive, Desdemona is forced to do something she never wanted: lead her family.

Desdemona and her siblings must band together to save themselves and their home. If they can’t escape the darkness and overcome the tension that has grown between them, their father may very well return to nothing but a graveyard.

Sapphic, Bi and Trans Rep

TW: Eating disorder, anxiety, gore, war, trauma





All These Sunken Souls: A Black Horror Anthology, 
Circe Moskowitz ed.

Expected publication: October 17, 2023 by Amberjack Publishing



Welcome to the Dark.

We are all familiar with tropes of the horror genre: slasher and victims, demon and the possessed. Bloody screams, haunted visions, and the peddler of wares we aren’t sure we can trust. In this young adult horror anthology, fans of Jordan Peele, Lovecraft Country, and Horror Noire will get a little bit of everything they love—and a lot of what they fear—through a twisted blend of horror lenses, from the thoughtful to the terrifying.

From haunted, hungry Victorian mansions, temporal monster–infested asylums, and ravaging zombie apocalypses, to southern gothic hoodoo practitioners and cursed patriarchs in search of Black Excellence, All These Sunken Souls features the chilling creations of acclaimed bestsellers and hot new talents, with stories from Kalynn Bayron, Donyae Coles, Ryan Douglass, Sami Ellis, Brent Lambert, Ashia Monet, Circe Moskowitz, Joel Rochester, Liselle Sambury, and Joelle Wellington.



Here Lies Olive by Kate Anderson

Expected publication: October 24, 2023 by North Star Editions




Growing up in the dark tourism capital of the United States, sixteen-year-old Olive should be comfortable with death. But ever since an allergic reaction almost sent her to the wrong side of the grass, she’s been terrified that there is no afterlife. And after the death of her surrogate grandmother, Olive has kept everyone at arm’s length because if there’s Nothing after we die, relationships and love can only end in sorrow.

When she summons a spirit to answer her questions about death, Olive meets Jay, a hitchhiking ghost trapped in the woods behind the poorhouse where he died. Olive agrees to help Jay find his unmarked grave in exchange for answers about the other side and what comes next.

Meanwhile, someone―or something―is targeting Olive’s classmates, and the longer Jay lingers, the more serious the attacks become. Blaming herself for having brought Jay back, Olive teams up with maybe-nemesis, maybe-crush Maren, ex-best friend Davis, and new girl Vanessa to free Jay’s spirit before he’s trapped as a malevolent shade and the attacks turn deadly. But in doing so, Olive must face her fear of death and risk losing another person she loves to the Nothing.





Nestlings by Nat Cassidy

Expected publication: October 31, 2023 by Tor Nightfire



Ana and Reid needed a lucky break.

The horrifically complicated birth of their first child has left Ana paralyzed, bitter, and struggling: with mobility, with her relationship with Reid, with resentment for her baby. That's about to change with the words any New Yorker would love to hear―affordable housing lottery.

They've won an apartment in the Deptford, one of Manhattan's most revered buildings with beautiful vistas of Central Park and stunning architecture.

Reid dismisses disturbing events and Ana’s deep unease and paranoia as the price of living in New York―people are odd―but he can't explain the needle-like bite marks on the baby.