Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Bible Passages (short story: horror) by Leanne Dyck

A scary story for adults--not suitable for children.

This story is sweet and innocent until bam. Watch out for the bam.

photo by ldyck

 Bible Passages


The young minister places his Bible on the pulpit and reads, “From the Song of Solomon, chapter 4, verses 10 and 11. How beautiful your love, dear, dear friend—far more pleasing than a fine, rare wine, your fragrance more exotic than select spices. The kisses of your lips are honey, my love, every syllable you speak a delicacy to savour.” His voice fills the church, filling the ears of each member of his congregation.

All she hears is him. She lingers on each word—especially ‘dear’, especially ‘kisses’. She returns, over and over again, to ‘love’.

That Sunday she makes sure she’s the last person standing in line to shake his hand. Dressed in peach, she feels pretty, and the way he looks at her, she knows she is.

He cups her hand in both of his. You look beautiful, he tells her with his eyes. He pulls her close. “Visit me. Bring your Bible,” he purrs. The corners of his mouth shape a grin. He releases her and walks away.

She waits until supper to tell her parents, “I’m going to Bible study.”

They are pleased. Bible means something to them; something else to her.

The road is long but every step of the way she thinks of him—how he looked at the front of the church; how he spoke with such authority; how his lips shaped each word. Each word. Each word full of passion...longing...devotion…

She turns the corner and there’s the manse. Finally, they will be alone together. Her heart races. What will he say, do? And if he...or...and…? What should she do? Obey? Retreat?

What if he pleads? What if he purrs in her ear?

His voice… Oh, how she longs to hear his voice. His eyes… His l…

She feels her face burn. She doesn’t take another step. All she does is breathe. In. Out. She looks up at the endless sky. She studies the outline of a cloud—watches it transform. She wills herself forward. One foot. Another. A foot on his sidewalk. Another on his stairs. Her knuckles against his door.

Alone. Together. Finally.

“Come in.” That doesn’t sound like him. That’s...a...woman’s voice.

She has a choice to make. Leave or… She pushes the door open and—.

The kitchen is full of women—young, old, slender, overweight. They sit in a circle around the kitchen table with Bibles open in front of them. They stand in front of the fridge taking food out, putting food in. They raise one head, look at her with one set of steel eyes, share one thought, one judgment, one complaint. They aim it at her like a slap to her face. Another woman. Another one. The slap stings and leaves a red bruise.

Looking more closely, she notices that some women are missing body parts—an earlobe, the tip of a finger, a hand, a leg. Of course, they’ve come to him for healing.

“Ah, Ruth, you came,” he says, walking into the kitchen.

What is that red stuff dripping down his chin?

The women move as one—close the fridge, close their Bibles. They gather around him in a tight circle. “You look tired,” they tell him. “You need to eat,” they say.

“I made...” an endless list of baking—cookies and cakes and pies and—. “You need something more, something better.”

“My ear would be delicious.”

“My leg.”

One of the women grabs his hand, pulls him close. “My heart. Cut out my heart.”

He searches a drawer and finds a knife and hand-in-hand he leads her down the hall. Somewhere at the end of the hall, a door closes. Still, a little while later, a voice breaks through the door and pours into the kitchen. “Chew, chew, chew.”

The women pick up the chant. “Chew, chew, chew.”

Ruth must leave now while she’s still strong enough to resist him. At the door, she turns around and faces them. “You don’t have to let him do this to you. Come with m—.”

The women answer with one voice. “Let him? It’s an honour.”

Powerless to save anyone but herself, Ruth leaves the house, walks into the setting sun and lets the increasing darkness consume her.

Her heart finds a new prayer. She speaks to Him who will never fail her, "Please, God... Please guide me home. Amen."


On this blog in November...

Sunday, November 3

Petal's Monster

A children's story about Petal confronting her monster.


Sunday, November 10

An Age

A short memoir for adults about the birthday I celebrated too many candles on my cake.


Sunday, November 17

Not Forgotten

A tribute for adults about a Mayne Island friend.


Sunday, November 24

Carrots

A children's story about Mariam Horse and her bountiful garden.




Sharing My Author Journey...

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Book Review: Rouge by Mona Awad (horror)

"No one knows what's inside grief." (p. 361)

 

Born to an Egyptian father and a French-Canadian mother Mirabelle Nour was raised in Quebec, Canada. At fourteen, she joined her mother in California, USA. She grew up believing that her father's dark features had made her ugly while her mother's red hair and delicate features made her mother beautiful. 

When Mirabelle's sixty-something mother Noelle Des Jardins unexpectedly dies, thirty-something Mirabelle must fly from her home in the Plateau area of Montreal to her mother's home in La Jolla, California and deal with her grief and her mother's legacy (all those many bottles and jars of beauty products).

"Mirror, mirror, on the wall/Who in this land is fairest of all"

Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Little Snow-White

"'Beauty...is a mystery... Here one day, then poof. Gone. Smoke and mirrors.'"

Mona Awad, Rouge


Rouge

Mona Awad

(literary fiction, fantasy, horror)

Hamish Hamilton

an imprint of Penguin Canada

a division of Penguin Random House Canada

2023

369 pages


Rouge by Mona Awad is a many-layered novel.

Rouge is literary fiction...

In Rouge, Mona Awad explains women's reliance on beauty products. To gain social status, women must meet society's standards for beauty. When a woman falls short of these standards, she must hide her flaws with beauty products. To maintain social status, aging women must rely on beauty products.

Rouge is horror...

Did Noelle fall from the cliff to the beach below, or was she pushed? And if she was pushed by who and why? Did something, someone, take possession of her in those final hours? If so, is Mirabelle in danger?

Rouge has elements of magical realism...

Mysterious shiny red shoes take control of those who wear them.

Giant red jellyfish that...

Mirrors that... 

No, I have to stop. There are no spoilers in this review. 

Rouge is an attractive, captivating read--from the fairy-tale-like prologue to the enchanting last paragraph.


Reviews of other books by Mona Awad...

13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl

Bunny


"Autumn magic" photo by ldyck


On this Blog in October...

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Eyes and Skull (2 horror stories) by Leanne Dyck

Celebrate the dark nights that stretch out before us with two (or more) horror stories.

Eyes is a haunted house story.


photo by ldyck

   Eyes

  

My brother and I stayed too long at the neighbours. Night like a heavy black cloak conceals all light but the single cat scratch moon and pinprick stars. 

"I know a shortcut." My brother leads me through the woods, but we aren't supposed to go that way. 

But if I don't follow him, I'll be on my own--without the flashlight. I follow him.

There's nothing around for miles, but now I see...

Grass, bush chokes the house. It's caving into the soil.

What's that? In the window... What is...? Who is...?

Struggling to catch up to my brother, I ask, "Who lives in that h--?"

 The way he looks at me--I know when to keep quiet. He starts to run. We don't stop running until home is in view. 

Breathless, we collapse onto the grass. When I can speak, I ask again. 

My brother says, "No one lives there. Not any more. Not for twenty years."

I gulp.

 "But you saw something, didn't you?"

  "There, there was, was something, someone in the window."  

 He holds the flashlight under his chin. "Some say it was a broken heart. Others insanity. But all agree, he killed himself in that house. They found him dead--throat cut, eyes missing. His body was hauled out, but his ghost is still there." My brother's voice falls to a whisper. "Never tell anyone that you saw him. If you do, he'll take your eyes."


Pumpkin by a neighbour
photo by ldyck

 In Skull a monster speaks.


Skull

When I was but a lad, I was given a special gift, a talent, really. Look into people's eyes, I could, to read their minds. I could hear their thoughts, hear them sing...


Rap, rap, rap/Let my ghost out

Crack open my skull/And let my ghost out

So I may travel, hither and yon/So I may float like a cloud/so I can see distant lands

Rap, rap, rap/Let my ghost out


Hear, I never had no choice. I had to help them. Had to.


"Scarecrow"

Made and modeled by Leanne Dyck

circa 1980s

More short stories...

I enjoyed listening to Clive Barker's The Forbidden--which became the horror movie The Candyman. 

Larry by Leanne Dyck is a ghost story

Ownership by Leanne Dyck is a haunted house story

It Was Nothing by Leanne Dyck

2021

"On Halloween, if you hear a knock, don't open the door.

Just look at who could be on the other side..."


Yes, this is me--the one who answered the door.

On This Blog in November

photo by ldyck

November is literary award month--
the Booker (November 3) and Scotiabank Giller Prize (November 8)

I've chosen my winners for each prize and will review them here, on this blog. 

Wednesday, November 3
Podcast Author Reading

Sunday, November 7
Book Review
A Town Called Solace
Mary Lawson
long-listed for the Booker
and my winner
Because...

Thursday, November 11
Remembrance Day
Short Story
Leaving Her
Leanne Dyck

Sunday, November 14
Short Story
Visiting the Neighbours
Leanne Dyck

Wednesday, November 17
Podcast Author Reading

Sunday, November 21
Book Review
Astra
Cedar Bowers
long-listed for the Scotiabank Giller Prize
and my winner
Because...

Wednesday, November 24
Podcast Author Reading

Sunday, November 28
Short Story
Ex
by Leanne Dyck

Sunday, October 4, 2020

Larry (short story) by Leanne Dyck

A ghost story...


                                                                                photo by ldyck

Larry

I've been listening to him filling your head with lies. Lies. And I can't take it anymore. You've got to listen to me. This is the truth.

One day my husband comes home from work and tells me, "I've lost my job and we're moving." Just like that. Boom. Boom. Like two beats on a drum.

I sat there numb. It was a lot to take in. Too much.

"Colleen, did you hear me? I said we're moving."

I looked around at the life we're built together for thirty plus years--our nice house, on a nice street, surrounded by all the other nice houses. Friends I knew I could depend on. I was forced to say good-bye.

We moved to the middle of nowhere. He told me he was going to farm but all he grew was weeds. And all he did morning after morning was load stuff into that Ford truck he'd bought and drive to... He never told me where. 

That wasn't the only secret he kept. There was this shed that was always locked. One day, I just had enough. I broke down the door. Yeah, me. I may look small but I'm determined. Inside it was like a warehouse--all this stuff--but I dug through and found... I found... Well, it looked like a mummy. You know like in Egypt. Had my Larry killed someone? I needed to know. I unwrapped the body. And it was--. It was my Larry. But that just didn't make sense. I'd just seen him drive away that morning. And the body was stiff. That takes twenty-four hours. Doesn't it? And who wrapped him? We're alone on this isolated farm. I tried to reason it all out. And slowly, very slowly all the pieces started to fit together like a jigsaw puzzle. I'd been living with an imposter. 

Why did he keep me alive?

Maybe because I'd helped him. Not on purpose. I had no idea what I was doing. Your voice is too nasally are you coming down with a cold? Since when do you drink coffee? Do you remember our first date? We went to the movies. We saw... Comment after question, I was helping him build his new identity. 

I know what he has been feeding you--unhappy wife, takes new lover, kills her husband, steals from her wealthy neighbours, gets greedy, tries to kill her lover but the lover kills her in self-defense. But that's all lies. 

La--. That man who calls himself Larry came home and found me in the shed with my dead husband. I'd discovered his secret and he couldn't let me live. 

I didn't get greedy. I didn't want it all for myself. I didn't try to kill...kill...that, that man. 

I'm innocent. Do you hear me? Innocent. Of course, you don't hear me. No one listens to the dead. Except maybe the coroner. 


photo by ldyck

Virtual Reading...

Wednesday, October 7

I will record--for this blog--Lasting Love

This short story is a tribute to my parents


Next Sunday...

Leanne Dyck, Blogger (3-minute memoir)

To celebrate this blog's tenth anniversary, I tell you about my first blog. How I reported on the dinosaur that roamed free. 



Are you following me?

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photo by ldyck


Sharing my Author Journey...

I'm very excited to say that I have started writing a middle grade 

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Ownership by Leanne Dyck (short story)

...a haunted house story


'Craigdarroch Castle' photo by ldyck


Ownership


The minute the couple saw the house they fell in love. Towers. Turrets. Dormers. Wrap-around porch. They imagined it smiling at them.  

The foyer was huge and led to even bigger rooms. They found the parlor, sunroom, library, study. A grand curving staircase led to the second floor. Each stair squeaked a welcome to their potential new owner. Upstairs the floorboards in the bedrooms and bathrooms also squeezed but seemed sturdy enough. The couple bought the house and the family of three moved in. They didn't have enough furniture to fill each room but they had plans. 

"What do you think of our new home," the couple asked their seven-year-old son.

Troubled by a sense of doom, the boy feared that something was wrong with the place but didn't dare tell his parents. He thought they would only laugh at him. "I love it," was all he told them.

The first night, the father told the son, "Run upstairs and brush your teeth. I'll be up in a minute to tuck you in."

Upstairs in the bathroom, the boy turned the tap. Brown water trickled out. He couldn't brush his teeth with that.

"Abracadabra," the boy said and the water cleared.

Downstairs, the couple shared a bottle of wine.

"I can't believe this grand old lady is ours," the husband said. 

They clinched their glasses and toasted the house.

"Of course, she needs some upgrading--knocking down a few walls. That sort of thing. But I'll--."

"We'll," the wife corrected him.

"Enjoy working on her," they said together.

They kissed and the wife told her husband, "Don't take too long tucking Benji in. I'll be waiting for you." And winked.

The man continued to smile as he climbed the stairs. He found Benji already in bed and started to cross the floor. The floorboards gave way and he fell through--all the way to the first floor. He fell on his wife who was finishing her wine in the parlor. Both were killed instantly.

From a forgotten corner in the attic, a needle scratched vinyl and Benji heard a voice sing, 

When the wind is free
Take good care of yourself
You belong to me.

More...

Craigdarroch Castle



Next Sunday evening


 photo by ldyck

Book Review:  
Be My Love
Kit Pearson

set on a small island, during the 1950's, Be My Love is about secrets hidden and secrets shared, and it's about personal truths discovered.

photo by bdyck

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Sunday, October 27, 2019

Book Review: The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (horror)

The Picture of Dorian Gray explores what can happen to a man's life when he is manipulated by the wrong influence.
' "Each of us has Heaven and Hell in him." ' -Dorian (p. 115)
photo by ldyck

The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde
Published by Dover Publications 
Published in 1993
first book edition published by Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd.
 London, in 1891

As The Picture of Dorian Gray has long been one of my favourite movies (shot in 1945--who knew there was another shot in 2009?) I thought it was high time to read the book. As a movie-goer, I was rattled by what happened to the portrait. As a reader, I'm far more interested in the interplay between Basil Hallward (portrait painter), Lord Henry Wotton, and Dorian Gray.

I see Basil as the angel figuratively sitting on Dorian's right shoulder.
' "I want you to lead such a life as will make the world respect you. I want you to have a clean name and a fair record." ' -Basil to Dorian (p. 111)
Lord Henry is the devil sitting on Dorian's left shoulder.

On page 12, Basil attempts  to warn Dorian:  Lord Henry ' "has a very bad influence over all his friends." '

On page 67, Dorian makes plans to 'resist temptation. He would not see Lord Henry any more.'

And yet... And yet Basil observes of Dorian on page 79:  ' "You talk as if you had no heart, no pity in you. It is all Harry's influence." '

The Picture of Dorian Gray is a short novel (165 pages) cleverly written. The book opens with a scene between Basil Hallward and Lord Henry Wotton. This exchange introduces Dorian Gray. The book ends with a haunting mystery ensuring that the tale will live on in the mind of the reader. Oscar Wilde fills each page with wit, wisdom and social commentary. The only fault I can find is that there is a lot of dialogue but very little action--heads floating in the ether.

The Picture of Dorian Gray was Oscar (Fingal O'Flahertie Wills) Wilde's first novel and sadly his last, due to extremely harsh criticism. The British press condemned it as "vulgar", "unclean", and "poisonous". After the novel's publication, Wilde employed his talent to craft plays--society comedies, such as Lady Windermere's Fan (first performed on February 20, 1892, at the St. James's Theatre in London) and The Importance of Being Earnest (first performed on February 14, 1895, at the St. James's Theatre in London).

More...

Oscar Wilde quotes


On this blog in November...

photo by ldyck


November 3 
list
Writing about Writing

To my delight, you clicked the link to read the list of quotes I shared with you this month. And so next month I'll share a list compiled from the books I've reviewed. The theme of this collection is... You guessed it. Writing about Writing.

November 10
book review
Akin
Emma Donoghue

What's this book about?
Well, I'll sum it up like this...
"What did you do during the war, Mom?"
"What did you do to end poverty, Son?"

November 17
short story
The Island Storyteller on Stage

I wrote this (silly story of thanks) short story to be read during an evening of storytelling and music on November 30th in the Agricultural Society Hall on Mayne Island. It would be wonderful to see you in the audience, but if not... I hope you enjoy reading this story.

November 24
book review
The End of the Affair 
Graham Greene

Years ago, someone recommended that I read Graham Greene. Years later, I finally found him. And I can't wait to tell you about him. (Also, if you've recommended a book to me... Please don't lose patience. I am listening.)






Sunday, April 7, 2019

Your Favourites: a free short story collection by Leanne Dyck


photo by ldyck

From 2010 to 2023, I've shared short fiction on this blog. Recently I hunted down the stories (for this collection I defined 'story' as works of fiction) that received the most page views to create this collection. They're short and diverse--from horror to humour. It's interesting to see how my writing has improved and changed over the years. I hope you enjoy reading Your Favourites...


2010


Whacked out Knitting
About those ugly sweaters, your aunt sends you
(knitting themed humour)



2011


A Slave to Her Muse
Even if you want to stop writing, can you?
(metafiction)



2012


It Was Nothing
What are childhood nightmares made of?
(horror)



2013


Eve's Other Children
based on Icelandic folklore



2014


Like Magic
a conversation influenced by St. Patrick's Day
between a child and an Early Childhood Educator
(fiction)



2015


Tame Your Bully
when the bully doesn't win
(fiction)



2016


Sarren's Curse 
claiming your writer's voice
(metafiction)
(part 1 of 2)
(you'll find a link to part 2 in the post)



2017


Awakening
valuing your writing
(metafiction)
(part 1 of 2)
(you'll find a link to part 2 in the post)



2018


Wanderlust
inspired by Tom Paxton's 1964 classic:  Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound
(fiction)


2019


Authors in a Pub
Three mid-list authors complain about hard it is to be an author as they drink beer in a pub. Inspired by Monty Python.

2020

How two brothers gained their independence.

2021

Sometimes your childhood neighbours can influence--for your entire lifetime. 

2022

a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 

2023

Older Rufous hummingbirds fly south in August. Younger hummingbirds migrate in September, but Pablo stays. Will he stay too long? 


More...

not only to publish but also to improve your craft




Next Post...

Sunday, April 14th at approximately 5 PM PT

Book Review:  Bluebeard's Egg (short story collection) by Margaret Atwood

Is your book club looking for its next book? Look no further...



Sunday, October 29, 2017

Book review: The Only Child by Andrew Pyper

Question:  What scares you more the evil you discover in those you label as other or your dark side?





Published by Simon & Schuster Canada
Published in 2017

Author:  After listening to Andrew Payne contribute to a panel discussion, I quickly added his name to my list of must-read authors.

Horror:  One of the brutalist scenes is in the opening chapters--the killing of protagonist Dr. Lily Dominick's mother.

Monster:  To create his monster, Payne borrows from three pioneers of the horror genre--Mary Shelley (Frankenstein), Bram Stoker (Dracula), Robert Stevenson (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde).
'A two-hundred-year-old man who believes he personally inspired Frankenstein, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dracula.' (p. 59)
' "Three novels, each dramatizing an antagonist bearing a unique mental deformity. The Creature:  a being made of dead parts, a soul tortured by solitude. Hyde:  the psychotic with dissociative identity disorder, one half the responsible physician, the other an escaped patient beyond control. And Dracula, a projection of insatiable lust darkened by sexual anxiety.' (p. 159-160)
Plot:  Following Steven King's formula, Payne introduces us to his protagonist Dr. Lily Dominick and her seemingly ordinary life. Charmed, we follow her down the rabbit hole to the stuff of horror.

Favourite quote:  'Writers are a strange breed. Magpies, scavengers. So fearful of the world they would prefer to describe it than live in it, yet brave to the point of idiocy when in pursuit of inspiration. The real ones will slip their heads into the noose and pull the lever themselves if they think a hanging would make a good tale.' (p. 155)


More...


If you enjoy reading The Only Child by Andrew Pyper, I know you'll enjoy reading The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova--I did.





Next post:  

Book Review
Sunday, November 5 at approximately 5 PM PT




Sunday, October 30, 2016

Do you read scary stories to children? (article) by Leanne Dyck

Do you write scary stories for children? Do you read scary stories to your child? Why...?

(witch = wise woman. Something I endeavor to be.)

Happy Halloween!

I wrote a scary story for children ages 6 to 9 years old and I brought it to my writing group for feedback. 


Feedback: "Why would you want to scare children?"


Yes to sharing scary stories with children...


We all want to believe that childhood is a time of endless bliss. That worries and fears are foreign to the mind of every child, but this desire may leave your child unequipped to deal with their fears--great and small.

Few times in life are you as vulnerable as you are in childhood. Where you go, what you do, who you meet are largely beyond your control. Your parents go to work and leave you in the care of an adult you just meet. You're outside playing and your neighbour's snarling dog confronts you. 

 'It's a spooky time to be a kid... let's give them some tools to cope with it.' -writes Greg Ruth  in his article Why Horror is Good for You and Even Better for Your Kid  

Sharing scary stories with your child allows the two of you to name your child's fears and talk about effective ways to deal with them.

As Heather Shumaker writes in her article Why We Should Share Sad and Scary Stories with Kids'Books are a safe place for children to learn about the world and their own tough emotions.'

'Being frightened by a book, said [psychologist] Kenny, "helps forge resilience." ' -One third of parents avoid reading scary stories, study finds

(from my days caring for children in day care centres)


Years ago, as a University student, I participated in a heated discussion regarding Bruno Bettlehelm's The Uses of Enchantment.

"Why would you want to traumatize children?" I asked my classmates.

No to sharing scary stories with children...


Literature is a powerful tool that must be used wisely. We must always be conscious of the messages it is sending to children.

Some children are ready for scary stories. We are told that it gives the child an opportunity to work through their fears with the promise of a happy ending.

However, some children are not ready. Instead of helping them deal with real fears, it creates new horrors for the child.


How can tell if your child is ready for scary stories...


Start with a mildly scary story such as The Monster at the end of this Book (this link takes you to a YouTube video reading of this book). Watch your child's reaction. If he shows signs of being afraid, check in with him by asking questions about the characters and the story.

Proceed with caution, at your child's pace.

I was a sensitive child easily frightened by books such as Sleeping Beauty and The Red Shoes, but as an adult, I enjoy reading horror novels. One of the scariest novels in my collection is...



On a remote island off the coast of Seattle, a man lies buried alive. Miles away, his captor--the elusive killer known only as Mephisto--listens through a transmitter to his victim's dying screams, waiting for him to reveal a secret only he knows. But learning the secret is only the beginning of Mephisto's maniacal game...
Tracking the madman are two detectives. In Canada, Superintendent Robert DeClercq, a man who has experienced horror up close. In America, Jenna Bond, a young detective who has never know true horror--until now.
Together they will uncover a trail of clues that will lead them to Mephisto, and into the bloody past in which he exists. Because the most terrifying secrets are buried, lying admidst the bones of the dead... 
Do you read horror? What's the scariest story in your collection?


Next post:  November 6th (published at approximately 5 pm)

Marketing 101
How exactly do you market yourself, your work, your book? What do you say to attract readers? Over the last six years, this blog has received 268,000 page views. What did I say to attract you to this blog?


Picture Book in Canada

Peanut Butter Press is a Canadian children's book publisher based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. We have found our niche in creating quality picture books that children enjoy because of their interesting content and engaging illustrations.
And this in from the Children's Book Council... 




Sharing my Author Journey...

It's hard to believe that I worked this hard this month but...

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Why did I read (Doctor Sleep by) Stephen King?

There are many reasons why I read...

-for entertainment
-to find out what all the fussy is about (i.e. this book is in the news, everyone's talking about it--why?)
-to support emerging authors
-to learn how to write from a master of the craft (but beware, sometimes seasons authors can get away with things newbies can't)
-to stay current in my chosen genres  (what do today's books look like?)
-for inspiration

The number one reason I read Stephen King is...
for inspiration. For some reason, reading him makes my pen fly. And I don't even write in the same genre he does. It's an added bonus that he's also entertaining.


Stephen King returns to the character and territory of one of his most popular travels ever, The Shining, in this instantly riveting novel about the now middle-aged Dan Torrance and the very special twelve-year old girl he must save from a tribe of murderous paranormals.
On highways across America, a tribe of people called the True Knot travel in search of sustenance. They look harmless--mostly old, lots of polyester, and married to their RVs. But as Dan Torrance knows, and spunky twelve-year-old Abra Stone learns, the True Knot are quasi-immortal, living off the steam that children with the shining produce when they are slowly tortured to death.
Haunted by the inhabitants of the Overlook Hotel, where he spent one horrific childhood year, Dan has been drifting for decades, desperate to shed his father's legacy of despair, alcoholism, and violence. Finally, he settles in a New Hampshire town, an AA community that sustains him, and a job at a nursing home where his remnant shining power provides the crucial find comfort to the dying. Aided by a prescient cat, he becomes "Doctor Sleep".
Then Dan meets the evanescent Abra Stone, and it is her spectacular gift, the brightest shining ever seen, that reignites Dan's own demons and summons him to a battle for Abra's soul and survival. This is an epic war between good and evil, a gory, glorious story that will thrill the millions of devoted readers of The Shing and satisfy anyone new to this icon in the king canon. 

Why I enjoyed Doctor Sleep...

suspenseful...
Reaching with an arm that seemed too long, too stretching, too boneless, he turned the knob and opened the door. (p. 5)
When King writes  Nothing could go wrong. (p. 352)  you know it's about to. 

King gets inside his characters and shows you who they are...
It was his eyes; it was in the way his mouth turned down at the corners; mostly it was the way he held the bottle, hating it and loving it and needing it all at the same time. (p. 65)

King's turn of phrase...
You're the feature attraction in my home theater and always will be. (p. 311)
King's descriptive language...
Her jaw unhinged all the way to her chest, and the bottom of her head became a dark hole in which a single tooth jutted. (p. 415)
King's big ideas...
Death was no less a miracle than birth (p. 421)
(all photos taken by Leanne Dyck on Mayne Island--unless otherwise stated)

Happening in Canada 
May 7th to 14th
in libraries, schools, community centres 
and bookstores across Canada
twenty-nine of Canada's most celebrated authors, illustrators 
and storytellers 
provide 28,000 children with 400 live book readings and activities 
Click this link to learn more


And calling all Picture Book devotees--share the love...
The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Books has launched a social media campaign asking readers to share their favorite illustrated books, suing the hashtag #GetBehindPictureBooks
Click this link (Tundra Books) and (Children's Book Council) for more information.



 Next post:  (Sunday, May 16 part one and Sunday, May 23 part two -- published at approximately 5 pm PST)  It's not just alcoholics that carry destructive old tapes in their heads. Most of us do--I know I do. And it takes a lot of effort to re-record them. For example... Well you really need to read my true story My Life In Letters. I'll share it over the next two posts. I hope you'll read it.



Sharing my author journey....

 Happy Mother's Day!

The sun, the heat... It feels like Summer has already arrived on Mayne Island. Inspired I set to work...