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Book List: Haunted Hotels

It’s summertime, which means vacations, and unless you’re staying with relatives or camping, you’ll probably stay in a hotel at some point. You might want to take care, though, because hotels are not always the safest or most relaxing places to stay; Lizzie Borden’s former house is now a bed-and-breakfast, and a boutique hotel, The Blackburn Inn, now stands where DeJarnette Sanitarium, the setting for David Simms’ Fear the Reaper, used to be. Below you’ll find a list of titles that take place in haunted hotels.

 

cover for The Sun Down Motel

 The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

The Sun Down Motel alternates between two points of view. Viv, in 1982, is a runaway headed to New York to become an actress who ends up unexpectedly left in the town of Fell, New York. With almost no money and nowhere to go, Viv takes a job as the night clerk at a seedy hotel on the highway, The Sun Down Motel, that she quickly discovers is haunted. Carly is taking a break from college to cope with her grief over her mother’s death and explore the mystery of her aunt Vivian’s disappearance, at age 20, thirty-five years earlier, in Fell. Following in Viv’s footsteps, Carly visits her apartment and befriends the current resident, Heather, who invites her to become her roommate. The two of them then visit the Sun Down Motel, where Carly takes the same night shift job Viv had.  Carly learns from Heather that Viv was not the only girl at the center of a mystery during the time she was in Fell; several girls and women of varying ages were murdered in the time just before Viv arrived in town. With hauntings, psychological disturbances, and a serial killer on the loose, the Sun Down Motel is a dangerous place to stay.

 

 

cover of The Shining

The Shining by Stephen King  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

I probably don’t have to go into detail about the horrifying events at the Overlook Hotel, which is based on a real hotel, The Stanley Hotel. Jack Torrance is hired to be the off-season caretaker at the isolated Overlook Hotel, where he will live in with his wife, Wendy, and his son Danny, who has psychic abilities, referred to as the Shining. As the hotel gets more and more cut off, Jack’s behavior becomes more and more erratic as the hotel reveals its secrets.

 

cover of The Silent Land

 The Silent Land by Graham Joyce  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

A couple on vacation at a ski resort surrounded by deep snow,  dig themselves out of a flash avalanche and discover they are completely alone and cut off from civilization. More than the characters, the atmosphere of complete isolation is what creates the suspense and creepiness of this book. I’ll be honest, I don’t remember a lot about the characters, but the world Joyce creates is one I haven’t forgotten.

 

cover of Ghost Stories of an Antiquary

Ghost Stories of an Antiquary by M.R. James  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

This collection contains two short stories that involve haunted hotels, “Number 13” and “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come To You My Lad”. The second one has been adapted for radio and television. “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come To You My Lad” is the story of a college professor who takes a room at a hotel for a golfing holiday, and while walking along the beach discovers a bronze whistle in the midst of a ruin. That night, when he blows on the whistle, he has a disturbing vision, and possibly supernatural events start to occur.

 

cover for Jacaranda

Jacaranda (The Clockwork Century #6) by Cherie Priest  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

The Jacaranda Hotel, on the island of Galveston, in southeast Texas, has seen two dozen deaths since it opened a year ago. A local nun, a disgraced priest, and a Texas Ranger, along with a handful of guests and hotel employees, are trapped at the hotel during a hurricane, with a hostile supernatural force inhabiting the building.  Gothic, creepy, and violent, Jacaranda is a gripping ghost story. When I read it, I didn’t realize it was part of a series, or part of a steampunk universe, and you really don’t have to have read any of the other books to visit this haunted hotel.

 

cover for All the Lovely Bad Ones

 

All The Lovely Bad Ones by Mary Downing Hahn  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

Maybe you’re looking for a book you can share with your kids? You can’t go wrong with Mary Downing Hahn.  Travis and Corey are visiting their grandmother for the summer. She runs a small Vermont inn that has a reputation for being haunted. The boys decide to pull some pranks to fool the guests into thinking there are ghosts in the inn, only to awaken actual ghosts. Travis and Corey must discover the story behind the hauntings in order to put the spirits to rest.

 

Book Review: From the Stars… A Vampiress: An Unauthorized Guide to Vampirella’s Classic Horror Adventures

cover for From the Stars... A Vampiress

From the Stars…A Vampiress: An Unauthorized Guide to Vampirella’s Classic Horror Adventures by Steven A. Roman, with a forward by the official Vampirella historian Sean Fernald  (  Bookshop.org |  Amazon.com )

StarWarp Concepts, 2020

ISBN: 9780998236148

Available: Paperback

 

From the Stars…a Vampiress provides a great reference guide to one of the most recognizable female horror comics heroines, Vampirella. The first section, “The Vampire Who Fell to Earth”, tells her story from her initial creation by James Warren and Forrest J. Ackerman, and other writers and artists who helped her development such as Archie Goodwin, Jose Gonzalez, Trina Robbins, Frank Frazetta, Gonzalo Mayo, and many more, to her cancellation in 1982 after Warren Publishing closed its doors. The second section, “The Vampirella Episode Guide”, is an annotated bibliography of the Warren Publishing Vampirella stories, including ones that went unpublished. Entries include the names of the writer and artist, the issue in which the story was published, a list of main characters, setting, chronology, synopsis, and a brief review. This section makes up a bulk of the book. In the third section, “Vampi Goes to Hollywood”, Roman covers the 1966 Queen of Blood; a Vampirella film that never was, which was going to be produced by Hammer Films and to star Barbara Leigh and Peter Cushing; the unfortunate 1996 movie that starred Talisa Soto in the titular role, the Who’s Roger Daltrey, and an unfortunate redesign of Vampirella’s famous costume; and an entry that warranted less than a page about an animated film that never came to fruition. The fourth section, “The Literary Vampiress”, presents information on the Vampirella novelizations written by Ron Goulart and published by Warner Books. The fifth section provides just what it says, “The Vampirella Warren Era Checklist”. Roman presents a comprehensive list of all the Warren era Vampirella stories. Roman also includes reprint issues that were released by Dynamite Entertainment and Harris Comics.

The only criticism I have regards the use of illustrations. While there are amazing behind the scenes black and white photographs, there are very few pieces of artwork of the gorgeous Vampirella due to licensing. Otherwise, From the Stars…A Vampiress is not only a fantastic reference guide, but it is also a love letter to the fanged horror heroine. New fans and old will be interested in the Vampirella bibliography especially. Libraries that specialize in comics history should consider including this volume in their collection as well. Highly recommended.

Fun fact: One of my most prized comics is an issue of Vampirella with Julie Strain as the cover model.

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Book Review: The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson

cover of The Boatman's Daughter by Andy Davidson

The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson  ( Bookshop.org |  Amazon.com )

Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-374-53855-2

Available: Kindle, Paperback

 

 

The old witch Iskra knows the secrets of the bayou where Miranda runs her Alumacraft under the cypress trees in the murky, humid gloom. It’s an ugly, decaying place filled with lurking dangers, brutal violence, and the tragic history of its inhabitants. Miranda is linked to Iskra through the murder of her father and a ritual involving a web-fingered baby. In order to find her father’s bones, reunite Littlefish and his clairvoyant sister, and save her own life, Miranda must read the signs that are leading her into a mortal combat against evil forces. Her challenge involves the local constable, a crazy preacher, a dwarf, and a dead wife’s mistakes. No one is safe in The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson.

 

Davidson ratchets up the tension from the very first chapter and maintains it throughout as Miranda tries to stay one step ahead of her enemies and encounters drug dealers, murderers, and even supernatural forces. These forces have their origin in Russian myths to which Davidson adds a Southern Gothic spin. This makes for a setting that is as terrifying to the younger characters as nightmarish horror stories and yet is so realistically detailed that the reader can feel the saw grass and smell the rotting bodies. It is that very combination that makes the witchcraft believable and turns the events into the stuff of imagination. To Davidson’s credit, it is often difficult to tell where the line is between the two.

 

The plot of The Boatman’s Daughter moves at breakneck speed. Davidson’s characters might spend a few seconds thinking and planning, but the action never stops. The characters are mythological or fairytale figures in terms of good and evil, but they are always truly human which makes the evildoers all the more frightening and the heroine even more amazing. The rich descriptions and Davidson’s talent for keeping the reader entertained with a multi-layered and complicated plot make this an outstanding read that will make you dream of a film version while still being certain nothing can beat the book. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley