Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

BOOK REVIEW: The Diary of V. Frankenstein By Steven J Guscott

A slim volume that really packs a monstrous punch, The Diary of V. Frankenstein is a great achievement, writes TopReviews4U editor Paul Christian

Moving on the Frankenstein story in the finest traditions of the original this Steampunk reawakening of Mary Shelley’s masterpiece is a triumph.
Shelley’s proto-feminism is brought up to date in the alt-reality/Gothic horror reimagining.
It centres on the monster and his mate’s life and their brutal conflict with the human world.
Written in an engaging diary format as the title suggests it is a perfect read, which can be done in bite-sized chunks, or read through on a train or plane journey.
Speaking about the short story, Steven said: “It is an alternate-reality, Gothic/horror, steampunk, sci-fi with the main theme being feminism.

“That's a lot of genres in one story, but it appears to work. 
“This adaptation was originally a short story, which can be found in the published Charity Anthology 'Strange Tales From The Scriptorian Vaults.'
“Quite a number of those who read the Anthology said my story was their favourite so I decided to expand it into this novella.

“I really believe this is a retelling that people will find very interesting as it touches on themes that are important, plus there is some really captivating plots.”
  • For more information click here

Thursday, 11 February 2016

Buy my comedy book ‘Hacks – a sit-com about local journalism: Pilot Episode’ about local journalism in the UK


By TopReview4U editor Paul Christian
I’m not one to blow my own trumpet and certainly can’t review my own book and retain any credibility.


But I’d like readers to know that my book ‘Hacks – a sit-com about local journalism: Pilot Episode’ is now available in paperback and Kindle formats.


Originally intended as a synopsis for a sit-com, but written in prose, rather than script format, the book reflects on and amplifies my real experiences working in local newspapers in the UK.


The book itself is not for the faint-hearted and is strictly adults-only.

I also wouldn’t like to say what parts were real and what was imagined.


Suffice to say a kernel of truth punctuates every encounter or misadventure.

I hope you enjoy it.


To buy on paperback, click here 


Or to buy on Kindle, click here 

Wednesday, 16 December 2015

BOOK REVIEW: The Rivals of Dracula - Stories from The Golden Age of Gothic Horror


Think of vampires, you think of Dracula – at least you would have done before TV shows like True Blood brought the genre hurtling into the modern era.

But it is because of the success of Dracula that an obscure, mainly Slavic, piece of folklore has endured so long.

But Bram Stoker's bloodsucking blueblood was not the first exsanguinating fiend to stalk the fictional landscape.

Nick Rennison, pictured below, illuminates a dank corner of vampire lore before and contemporary to Stoker's opus, with fangtastic fables from so-called 'penny dreadfuls' and short stories consumed by a voracious, newly-literate 18th century audience.

Rennison's ability to contextualise and then let the obscure writers do the talking in this terrific anthology is a real triumph.

It blends fact, fiction, history and legend in a darkly spellbinding 287 pages, which touches on themes such as sexuality, hysteria and primal fear.
 
The book features virtually unheard of delights like MR James' Count Magus, Richard Marsh's The Mask and Frank Norris' Grettir at Thornhall-stead.

The many faces of the vampires in the anthology show archetypal fanged eastern European noble is not the only embodiment of a supernatural idea, which goes back to ancient history.

Count Magus explores the dangers of meddling with and prying into history, a theme which Dracula also used with the conflation of Dracula with Vlad Tepes, or Vlad the Impaler as he is infamously known.

Vampire legend is shown in the context of Norse mythology in Grettir at Thornhall-stead as an undead Icelander fights with Viking heroes in the days of the sagas.

The calm and calculating Count Dracula is also a million miles from the homicidal maniac portrayed in The Mask.

This book is a must for anyone with a penchant for the supernatural and a thirst for Gothic horror.
  • The Rivals of Dracula – Stories from the Golden Age of Gothic Horror is published by No Exit Press (@noexitpress) and priced at £9.99 (also available as an ebook). For more information click here

Thursday, 12 November 2015

BOOK REVIEW: Zombies - A Cultural History

Zombies are everywhere these days, in shows like The Walking Dead, Hollywood blockbusters like World War Z and I Am Legend and the ambling and shambling undead were one of the most popular Halloween costumes this year.
But it was not always so and a brilliant new book charts the rise of the zombie from Voodoo tradition virtually unknown outside of Haiti and other Caribbean islands to the all-conquering relentless phenomenon they are today.
Robert Luckhurst, Professor of Modern Literature at Birkbeck College, University of London, explores zombie-lore through colonial history, comics, pulp fiction, B-movies, medical records and Hollywood films to examine the rise of the zombie, in his eminently readable Zombies – A Cultural History.
As well as the cultural and almost mass hysteria hunger for zombie fiction, Professor Luckhurst also looks into the facts behind the myth.
Are zombies real?

The author studies Haitian accounts were people are convinced the superstition is very real indeed.
There is the fascinating case of Felicia Felix-Mentor in 1936, who it was claimed had been brought back from the dead and was walking along a dirt track to her father’s house despite allegedly dying in 1907.
It was said her body had been reanimated by the terrifying power of Voodoo.

The 224-page hardback book is a must-read for all zombie fans and is available through Reaktion Books and priced at £16.