FEARIE TALES ed by Stephen Jones

March 23, 2014


STORIES OF THE GRIMM AND GRUESOME

From Cinderella to Hansel and Gretel, the tales of the Brothers Grimm have been told for generations. Anyone who has read the original versions (the unedited for kids versions) knows these are dark and bloody stories indeed, but this latest collection edited by Stephen Jones takes the tales one step further with fifteen of today’s top horror authors adding their own twists to a variety of Grimm classics. Some of the stories are well known—Robert Shearman takes on Hansel and Gretel with his “Peckish” and both Ramsey Campbell and John Ajvide Lindqvist offer up very different versions of Rumpelstiltskin—while other tales may be a bit lesser so—Angela Slatter tackles The Robber Bridegroom and Garth Nix offers up a weird western version of The Hare’s Bride—but each tale is preceded by its Grimm inspiration.

A few of my personal favorites include Peter Crowther’s “The Artemis Line,” a dark and creepy tale inspired by the Grimm’s story of changelings; Neil Gaiman’s oddly lyrical “Down to a Sunless Sea,” inspired by The Singing Bone; Michael Marshall Smith’s super fun “Look Inside”; and of course John Ajvide Lindqvist’s “Come Unto Me,” which plays on the Scandinavian legend of the tomte.

For anyone who enjoys horror and fairy tales, this is the perfect collection (and it makes for some nightmarish bedtime reading!). Whether you like your stories gory and gruesome or chillingly atmospheric, there’s something in Fearie Tales for everyone.

Fearie Tales is out now in the UK and will be available in the U.S. 9/23/2014

Table of Contents:
Introduction: Don’t Scare the Children
The Wilful Child
Find my Name by Ramsey Campbell
The Singing Bone
Down to a Sunless Sea by Neil Gaiman
Rapunzel
Open Your Window, Golden Hair by Tanith Lee
The Hare’s Bride
Crossing the Line by Garth Nix
Hansel and Gretel
Peckish by Robert Shearman
The Three Little Men in the Wood
Look Inside by Michael Marshall Smith
The Story of a Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was
Fräulein Fearnot by Markus Heitz
Cinderella
The Ash-Boy by Christopher Fowler
The Elves #1
The Changeling by Brian Lumley
The Nixie of Mill-Pond
The Silken Drum by Reggie Oliver
The Robber Bridegroom
By the Weeping Gate by Angela Slatter
Fräu Trude
Anything to Me is Sweeter, Than to Cross Shock-Headed Peter by Brian Hodge
The Elves #2
The Artemis Line by Peter Crowther
The Old Woman in the Wood
The Silken People by Joanne Harris
Rumpelstiltskin
Come Unto Me by John Ajvide Lindqvist
The Shroud

3/14 Becky Lejeune

FEARIE TALES ed by Stephen Jones. Jo Fletcher Books (24 Oct 2013). ISBN 978-1782064701. 430p. (UK)
Jo Fletcher Books (September 23, 2014). ISBN 978-1623658069 (US)


A MAN CAME OUT OF A DOOR IN THE MOUNTAIN by Adrianne Harun

March 21, 2014


The devil has come to town and for Leo Kreutzer and his friends life will never be the same.

Theirs is a small town, one that relies on the local logging industry for much of its economy. For years, native girls have been going missing but until now it’s never directly touched Leo and his friends. Recently graduated, they all find themselves in a bit of an odd spot: Leo is taking summer correspondence courses at his mother’s behest while also helping care for his ailing uncle, Jackie has taken a job in the kitchen at the logging camp, Ursie is working in housekeeping at one of the town’s few motels while her brother Bryan does the occasional work for the local drug gang, and Tessa spends her days looking after her sister’s kids. It’s this break—the time between school and really entering the real world—that leaves Ursie, Jackie, and Bryan particularly vulnerable to two strange newcomers: Hana Swann and Keven Seven.

Adrianne Harun’s debut is an oddball of a read. The story itself is a blending of mystery, folklore, and magical realism and Harun’s style is not only intriguing but somewhat hypnotic. The narrative is interspersed with legends and tales as told by Leo’s Uncle Lud. Each of the stories serve as little interludes that not only give the readers perspective into Leo’s character and the local culture, but also influence both the reader and Leo in teasing out the truth about Swann and Seven.

It’s a fascinating book that likely won’t appeal to everyone, but is a magical and engaging read for just the right audience.

3/14 Becky Lejeune

A MAN CAME OUT OF A DOOR IN THE MOUNTAIN by Adrianne Harun. Penguin Books (February 25, 2014). ISBN 978-0670786107. 272p.


THE SOUND OF BROKEN GLASS by Deborah Crombie

March 15, 2014


Vincent Arnott may seem like an unlikely candidate for kinky sex games and murder, but when DI Gemma James and her partner, DS Melody Talbot, are called to a scene at The Belvedere, that’s seemingly what they find. Arnott, a regular at the hotel, known to the staff as Mr. Smith, is found tied up and strangled on a Saturday morning.

As it turns out, Arnott was a local barrister whose wife suffered from Alzheimer’s. His regular routine included a Friday night dinner at his local pub and semi regular Friday night check-ins at The Belvedere – with secret female companions. It could be this time around Arnott simply chose the wrong woman, but it seems he was also involved in a bit of a dust up at the pub. Gemma and Melody end up questioning a local up-and-coming guitarist who, it’s soon revealed, has a bit of a connection to Gemma and her husband.

This latest from Crombie is the fifteenth title in her long running Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James series. Readers new to Crombie will find that there are quite a few references to previous installments but The Sound of Broken Glass does stand alone for the most part. All of the references are character development rather than plot related.

I’ve only read two titles in the series thus far – this one and its immediate predecessor, No Mark Upon Her – but I already love the characters and the setting. Crombie pays great attention to detail on London and its history, almost equal in fact to her depth of focus on building real and believable characters.

Crombie’s next title in the series, To Dwell in Darkness, is due out this fall.

3/14 Becky Lejeune

THE SOUND OF BROKEN GLASS by Deborah Crombie. William Morrow Paperbacks; Reprint edition (February 25, 2014). ISBN 978-0061990649. 384p.


CONQUEST by John Connolly & Jennifer Ridyard

March 13, 2014


Book 1, The Chronicles of the Invaders Trilogy

Earth is on the brink of another Civil War. This time the enemy is the Illyri, a race of intelligent aliens who have mastered space travel using worm holes. They arrived on Earth just over sixteen years ago, breaking down infrastructure and quashing the military efforts of ever country, making this their new home. They say they want to live in peace, side by side with humans, but the human race isn’t going to go down quietly.

Syl Hellais, daughter of Lord Andrus – the Illyri governor of Britain and Ireland – was the first of her kind to be born on Earth. On her sixteenth birthday she’d hoped to head out and explore the village near their home but a string of violent attacks has her father in and out of political meetings. With that in mind, Syl is told to stay inside where she’s protected, an instruction she immediately sets about ignoring.

Syl’s little trip almost becomes fatal for both herself and her best friend. A number of explosions ring out around the village but the young Illyrians find themselves protected thanks to two human brothers, Paul and Steven Kerr. The brothers believe the girls are human and quickly drag them to safety. When they meet again, Paul and Steve have been convicted of terrorist attacks and are set to be executed.

This first in a new series from John Connolly and Jennifer Ridyard is definitely a different animal from what readers might expect of Connolly. It’s an overall fantastic start to a new science fiction series, one I believe will easily appeal to teen audiences as well as adults. (It does seem the series is being promoted as an adult one here in the States but is noted as “One of Amazon UK’s best young adult books of the year.”)

There’s a great deal of information introduced here – lots of setting the scene for the series as a whole, introducing the Illyri, their politics, their science, etc – and while Conquest may not stand well on its own (there’s a bit of a cliffhanger ending), it does serve as a captivating kick off.

There’s no word just yet on when the next title will release but I am absolutely dying to read it!

3/14 Becky Lejeune

CONQUEST by John Connolly & Jennifer Ridyard. Atria/Emily Bestler Books; First Edition edition (February 11, 2014). ISBN 978-1476757124. 448p.


THE ORPHAN CHOIR by Sophie Hannah

March 11, 2014


Louise Beeston is on the brink of a complete meltdown. Distraught over being separated from her seven-year-old son, Louise is already in a sensitive place. But now her neighbor’s partying has kept her up late one too many times. Exhausted, Louise attempts to once more politely broach the subject with her neighbor. Her pleas are not only ignored, she’s ridiculed by Justin Clay and his friends.

Clay takes things one step further by blasting Louise’s walls with classical pieces and finally what sounds like choral music. Choral music like that her son has been performing at the elite Saviour College School. Louise reaches out to the local authorities but becomes convinced that their efforts will be in vain. Then she hears about a new second home community just over an hour away. It would mean peace and quiet, a break from the neighbor, a chance to recover and relax. But even here Louise can’t escape the haunting melodies and hymns. Now it seems Louise may truly be losing her mind… unless there’s another meaning behind the music.

This stand alone from Hannah had all the pieces of a potentially great chiller but unfortunately fell flat. While the book begins with good character development, setting the scene for Louise’s no doubt looming mental breakdown, the overall balance of the book is disappointing.

By the time Louise starts to find out more about her mysterious choral music, the book is fully three quarters through. Ultimately the end comes on much too quickly and with very little explanation.

3/14 Becky Lejeune

THE ORPHAN CHOIR by Sophie Hannah. Picador (January 28, 2014). ISBN 978-1250041029. 288p.


THE ACCIDENT by Chris Pavone

March 11, 2014


The author of The Expats returns with another mesmerizing espionage novel, this time centered on a novel written by someone styling themselves as “Anonymous.”

Isabel Reed, a top literary agent, is sent a manuscript which captures her immediately, revealing dark hidden secrets about a great man whose life and career could be destroyed if the book were ever published. At the same time, Hayden Gray, a CIA chief of station in Copenhagen, is attempting to prevent that publication from happening. The author of the manuscript is living the life of an expat in Zurich, attempting to make up for a life of lies and deceits with the publication of the book.

Pavone sets up a plot that moves quickly from danger and possibly murder for anyone that has a copy of the book, in attempts to squelch the revelations. Scenes move from New York to Europe and also to a road in upper New York State a quarter of a century earlier, when the subject of the book commits what becomes the point of the plot.

Chris Pavone is good at making his characters react and think as they would in real life and allow his readers to enjoy a fascinating internationally focused novel. An all nighter and one that will prompt interest in his next book.

3/14 Paul Lane

THE ACCIDENT by Chris Pavone. Crown (March 11, 2014). ISBN 978-0385348454. 400p.


THE SECRET OF MAGIC by Deborah Johnson

March 10, 2014


Regina Robichard is a young, idealistic black lawyer working for the NAACP and her mentor/boss, Thurgood Marshall shortly after the end of World War II. Marshall receives a lot of mail, but one letter in particular touches Regina.

One of her favorite childhood authors, M.P. Calhoun, has written to ask Marshall to investigate the death of a young black soldier on his way home from the war to small town Revere, Mississippi. Enclosed is a photo of the young man with his father, and Regina latches on to it as a talisman, determined to find justice in the deep South.

Regina has her own interesting history. She never knew her father, he was lynched before she was born and her mother became a political activist. But she remembers with great fondness the book she read and reread as a child, “The Secret of Magic,” a tale of murder and a magical forest.

Living in New York City does not really prepare her for life in rural Mississippi and how blacks are treated. But Regina perseveres, despite threats, another murder and a vicious attack in her quest for fair treatment for a minority many Mississippians still feel they own.

This is fast reading that tugs at the heart with reminders of how much things have changed, and how much maybe they haven’t. My love affair with Amy Einhorn books continues.

3/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE SECRET OF MAGIC by Deborah Johnson. Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam; First Edition edition (January 21, 2014). ISBN 978-0399157721. 416p.


BLACK HORIZON by James Grippando

March 6, 2014

Grippando brings back Jack Swyteck, his Miami based attorney, who is marrying his girlfriend Andie Henning. Andie is an undercover agent for the FBI and Jack has to accept the fact that much of what she does is confidential and he will not know about it. The two plan a honeymoon to Key West and settle in for days of romance and getting to know each other as man and wife. The getting to know includes the revelation that Andie is pregnant and expecting in about eight months.

An unexpected glitch suddenly affects both Jack and Andie when an ocean going, Cuban owned drilling rig explodes, triggering an immense oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that wends its way towards the Florida Keys and up the coast from there. The rig is in Cuban waters and is actually a consortium between Cuba, Venezuela, China and Russia whose group prohibits the U.S. from bringing in equipment to contain the oil spill.

The problem falls into both Jack and Andie’s laps when the F.B.I. calls her back to work on what might be a terrorist plot to blow up the rig. At the same time Jack agrees to represent a girl whose fiancé was on the rig working towards a solution to be allowed to leave Cuba and be with his sweetheart in the United States.
The author covers the activities of both Jack and Andie in their work on what could be the same problem. As always, Grippando’s knowledge of the intricacies of the law and his explanations of cause and effects in the action tied to these rules makes the action very real to the reader, and allows him to think of Jack as not superman, but a good, knowledgeable practitioner of the law. Andie’s role in her portion of the events is in keeping with her image as a woman loving her job, doing it well, but aware of the dangers involved in working undercover.

Grippando’s books never cease to attract and keep the reader going, and when finished anxiously awaiting the next one.

2/14 Paul Lane

BLACK HORIZON by James Grippando. Harper (March 4, 2014). ISBN 978-0062109880. 384p.


HAZARDOUS DUTY by W.E.B. Griffin & William E. Butterworth IV

March 5, 2014


Mexican drug cartels are shooting up the streets of Laredo and El Paso. Somali pirates are holding three U.S. tankers for ransom. The President is fed up and has what he thinks is a pretty bright idea—to get hold of Colonel Charley Castillo and his merry band and put them on the case.

Unfortunately, that will be difficult. Everybody knows that the President hates Castillo’s guts, has just had him forcibly retired from the military, and now Castillo’s men are scattered far and wide, many of them in hiding. There are also whispers that the President himself is unstable—the word “nutcake” has been mentioned. So how can Castillo “follow” the Presidents orders without creating harm to the nation.

It is truly Hazardous Duty.

3/14 Jack Quick

HAZARDOUS DUTY by W.E.B. Griffin & William E. Butterworth IV. Putnam Adult (December 31, 2013). ISBN 978-0399160677. 416p.


EYES CLOSED TIGHT by Peter Leonard

March 4, 2014


Leonard delivers another book in which he shows his skill in bringing characters to life, as well as setting up an interesting plot. O’Clair is a retired Detroit Homicide detective that has moved to Florida, opened up a motel and developed a love interest in Virginia, a younger, stunning girl who can fix anything and works with him.

Life looks sweet for him when suddenly he discovers a young girl killed and left on a chair outside of his motel on the adjoining beach. The circumstances are very similar to those of a series of murders he worked on while still active in Detroit. At that point he caught the serial killer who was jailed in Michigan and the case marked closed.

Circumstances appear that the actual killer in Detroit was never caught and has followed O’Clair to Florida. The murder forces him to offer his help to the homicide detective in Florida, due to the similarity to those in Detroit. The case is worked at both areas, and includes a trip revisiting people and evidence gathered in Detroit. The reasons for the murders occurring in Florida constitute a major force in the novel and help with the solution.

In all probability, Peter Leonard has developed a character that will be used again in future novels and will be a welcome one.

3/14 Paul Lane

EYES CLOSED TIGHT by Peter Leonard. Story Plant, The (March 4, 2014). ISBN 978-1611881141. 300p.