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Book Review: Welcome to the Apocalypse, Book One: Pandora by D.L. Richardson

 

Welcome to the Apocalypse, Book One: Pandora by D. L. Richardson

CreateSpace, 2016

ISBN: 9781370736201

Available: Paperback, eBook(Kindle, Smashwords)

 

Want to get away from it all but don’t have the time?  Want to experience an apocalypse firsthand?  Want to be a hero and save people from zombies or aliens?  Then welcome to the apocalypse!  In this science fiction thriller, the Apocalypse Games are the latest in virtual reality simulation gaming; twenty-four hours of simulated terror in a fully immersive virtual world where anything can happen.  Using the latest technology, players are attached to a pod with a neural network that enables them to feel, taste, touch and, smell everything they encounter.  Each player starts alone and empty-handed.  Each must find a weapon, find the enemy, find safe zones, and find survivors.  It is survival of the fittest, in a kill-or- be-killed world.

 

Welcome to the Apocalypse, Book One: Pandora has a really good premise, and I was really looking forward to it.  Unfortunately, it didn’t deliver what I had hoped for.  While the plot and setting were laid out well at the start, as the story unfolded it became harder to sort out what was going on.  The ending was really abrupt, and I still wonder what happened.  The descriptions and action parts were generally well-constructed, and flowed nicely.  The characters were pretty distinctive and easy to keep straight.  The fun part of them was that some were virtual reality characters and some were real people.  The author had several instances of telling instead of showing, and there were many instances of poorly worded sentences that were confusing and hurt the flow of the story.  The story could also really use some help with editing. Spelling and duplicated or missing words throughout the made it really hard to stay immersed in the plot, and this really made the story fall apart for me.  I have not read this author’s work before.

 

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher

Book Review: Clowders by Vanessa Morgan

Clowders by Vanessa Morgan

Amazon Digital Services, 2018

ASIN: B078GTVF7Z

Available: Kindle edition

 

Author Vanessa Morgan acknowledges that the real city of Clervaux, in Luxembourg, is not noted for supernatural events, or for being a haven for cats.  However, in the fictional world of Clowders, the human inhabitants of  Clervaux are vastly outnumbered by cats, a clowder of cats (“clowder” is the collective noun used to describe a group of cats). The story starts when an American couple, Aidan and Jess, move to Clerveaux with their young daughter, Eleonore. Aidan, a self-absorbed wanderer, has been hired to work in a veterinary practice in Clervaux, and Jess has agreed to the move to please him and save their marriage. What they have not been told, although it is common knowledge among the villagers, is that a tengu (a spirit of the mountain and forest found in Japanese folklore) protects the village’s cats, and if a human kills a cat, the tengu kills nine humans.

 

Aidan and Jess are driving home from an unsatisfying night with colleagues from the veterinary clinic, when Jess accidentally runs over and kills a cat.  The tengu stalks the family, although they are still ignorant of the curse.  Others, who have lived in Clervaux much longer, sense that they are all doomed, but still do not tell Jess and Aidan.  When the villagers learn about the accident, they turn against the newcomers, fearing that they will be among the nine victims.  When Jess and Aidan finally learn about the curse, they plan to leave.  But can they escape?

 

Morgan does a good job in describing the flaws and foibles of the characters.  Although the death of the cat was simply an accident, the characters’ weaknesses and actions contributed to it.  For example, although Jess had drunk the least, was her driving impaired by drinking more than usual because of worry and jealousy at Aidan’s flirting with another woman?

 

In the ebook version I reviewed, Morgan gives away the plot before the book before the book’s introduction. There is one instance of in which “of” is mistakenly used for “off”. Morgan has a good story here; Clowders is worth reading. Recommended.

 

Contains: moderate sexuality, moderate gore

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

Book Review: The Corona Book of Horror Stories edited by Lewis Williams


The Corona Book Of Horror Stories edited by Lewis Williams

Corona Books UK, 2017

ISBN-13:  978-0-9932472-6-2

Available: Paperback, eBooks(Kindle)

 

The Corona Book of Horror Stories is a collection of 16 up-and-coming writers of incredible imagination.  There are a variety of stories that cover the gamut of the horror genre;  there is something for nearly everyone.  Anything that can be used to scare, terrorize and, give you the creeps is on tap here, from the mundane to the extraordinary.  Variety is the spice of life.  And death.

This was an interesting collection of new writers.  Most of them are in and from the U.K. with a few U.S. writers mixed in.  Each story was edited with the author’s origin in mind, so the grammar switched up occasionally.  The variety was fun, as I did not know what topic I would get with each new story.

However, there were some stories I loved and some I did not.  Those I really liked were: A Health And Safety Issue (I can relate); Bad Boys Don’t Get Dessert (shocking at the end); The Ornament (it actually gave me the creeps); Death By Appointment (a contemporary interview with Death.  Timeless!)  The stories I didn’t like either took too long to really get rolling or just needed grammatical and editorial help.

In the end, although the quality of the stories varied, The Corona Book of Horror Stories is worth reading to see what some new writers are putting together.  I have not read any of these author’s works before.

 

Contains:  Adult language, adult situations, graphic images and violence

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher