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Book Review: Absalom’s Wake, Part Six: The Eye of Tangarora by Nancy A. Collins

Absalom’s Wake, Part Six: The Eye Of Tangaroa by Nancy A. Collins

Biting Dog Publications, 2014

ASIN:  B00I3L72UE

Available:  eBook(Kindle, Nook, Smashwords)

 

Absalom’s Wake, Part Six: The Eye of Tangaroa completes the tale of Jonah Padgett, and the ship known as Absalom.  The story picks up with Koro escaping into the sea, leaving his friend, Jonah, facing the angry looks of his shipmates.  “The man’s a wizard!” declares the crew, preparing to throw Jonah to the sharks.  Jonah is saved by the mercy of Captain Godward, who puts him into the small dinghy normally used to taxi about when in harbor,  now towed behind the Absalom.  Rations are thin, to say the least.  The crew sets about the business of hunting King Jim’s harem.  Jonah can only watch as the first kills are brought in.  King Jim’s response is fast and deadly.  The Absalom and all hands, save one, Jonah, go to Davy Jones‘ locker.  King Jim, better known as Tangaroa, Lord of the Ocean, has avenged his brides.  Jonah is all alone on the open sea.  His supplies dwindling, he must struggle to survive.  All is lost, except for one hint of hope; Koro!

Part six is a fine ending to the series and I enjoyed reading all of it.  The tone continued in this part and flowed well.  The multiple plot lines came together efficiently and with good result to make for a great ending.  The characters voices continued to keep me engaged.  The tension built as each conflict point emerged and was resolved.  The ending itself was really good.  My only criticism is the large number of typographical errors in this part: these really disrupted the story.  I found multiple cases of either repeated words or tenses and just outright missing words that made me guess what the author was trying to say.  I cannot overlook errors of this sort, and it is an unfortunate flaw in the conclusion of what is otherwise a great story. While The Eye of Tangarora is not up to the standards of the previous parts of the story, the series overall I would give a “Recommended” Rating.  Previous works by this author I have read are: Absalom’s Wake, Part One: Gone A’ Whaling; Absalom’s Wake, Part Two: Blood on the Beach; Absalom’s Wake, Part Three: The Whale Rider; Absalom’s Wake, Part Four: Terror Comes Aboard; Absalom’s Wake, Part Five: Ocean Born. 

 

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher

Note: Absalom’s Wake is a six-part ebook serial. Check out these reviews of earlier parts of the story!

Absalom’s Wake, Part One: A Serial Adventure of Terror on the High Seas

Absalom’s Wake, Part Two: Terror on the Beach

Absalom’s Wake, Part Three: The Whale Rider

Absalom’s Wake, Part Four: Terror Comes Aboard

Absalom’s Wake, Part Five: Ocean Born

A Look Back: The Monster Librarian Interview With Guy N. Smith

I didn’t know this, but I learned over at the Facebook page for Too Much Horror Fiction that November 21 was Guy N. Smith’s birthday when Will Errickson posted some photos of the covers of Smith’s Crabs books. These quality killer animal books were particular favorites of Dylan’s, although he was a fan of pretty much everything Smith had ever written, and a few of them number among his earliest reviews, in the days before people thought we were cool enough to request us to review their work, and he was going through his own collection (if you’d like to read them, here are links to his reviews of Crabs’ Moon, The Origin of the Crabs, and Crabs: The Human Sacrifice. I even apparently mentioned the Crabs books earlier this year when I wrote about clearing out our bookshelves, and him insisting we hang on to everything Guy N Smith. Seeing the covers Will posted made me smile in a way that killer crabs never have before.

Dylan, as the Monster Librarian, actually interviewed Guy N. Smith several years ago, in July of 2009, when Smith’s novel Maneater was coming out.  It was really exciting for Dylan, as it can be when you are a real fan of an author. The interview is posted here, in the depths of the main site.  We have actually interviewed some pretty interesting people along the way!  I am reposting the entire thing below, too, to make it more accessible to you.

And a happy belated birthday to you, Mr. Smith.

Interview with Guy N. Smith

with the Monster Librarian

 

Guy N. Smith is an icon of horror fiction. He has been writing horror fiction for over 30 years, producing a wide range of monsters to haunt his readers.  His latest take of terror is Maneater.

 

ML: Could you tell us a little about yourself?

GNS: I was born in the small village of Hopwas, Staffordshire, where I lived until 1977.  My mother was historical author E.M. Weale and she encouraged me to write from an early age.  I was first published at the age of 12 in a local newspaper and this led to 56 short stories (1952-57) some of which were novellas and were serialised.

 

In 1972 I married Jean and we had 4 children.  1977 saw us move to Black Hill, a remote area on the Shropshire/Welsh border which is still our home.

 

I have written around 116 books since 1974, mostly horror but also mysteries, childrens books,  westerns and non-fiction.  Primarily though, I have always been a journalist and have published around 3,000 articles on shooting, deer stalking , big-game hunting etc.  For the last 10 years I have been Gun Editor of “The Countryman’s Weekly” with a deadline of 5 features per week, mostly technical on guns, ammunition etc.  I also have to review and test rifles, shotguns etc.

 

ML: Did you initially want to write horror?  How did you get started writing?

GNS: My early short stories featured some horror, SF, pirates, westerns detective etc.  I began writing for the sporting press in 1960 which was to be the mainstay of my output.  However, in 1972 I submitted a story to the “London Mystery Magazine” and this led to a further 17 being published in this quarterly anthology up until its demise in 1982.  So, in between my regular journalism, I wrote short fiction.

 

ML: Did you read horror yourself?  Do you read it now?  What would you say has influenced your writing?

GNS: I have read much of the classic horror, Lovecraft, Stoker etc,  and I have my own collection of ‘Weird Tales.’  If I read any horror now it is usually pre-1960.  Some contemporary horror writers have accused me of emulating them but this is certainly not the case as I have never read their work.  In any case I was published prior to their books.

 

As already stated, my mother influenced my writing and my family have always encouraged me.

 

ML: You have been writing for 30 years.  How have writing and publishing changed in that time?  Do you think the changes have been good or bad for writers?

GNS: Writing and publishing have certainly changed since I started.  In the ‘good old days’ I wrote 40,000 word books and my publishers were encouraging me to turn out as many as possible.  The most I ever wrote in one year was 10.

 

Then things changed.  Basically, the market was saturated with numerous category publishers trying to ‘leap on the bandwagon.’  Everybody’s sales plummeted, publishers began to drop their horror lists and eventually the category market as a whole suffered.

 

Before the horror market collapsed my publishers at the time (Hamlyn Paperbacks) wanted bigger and more ‘complicate’ novels.  Instead of producing fast-paced fun horror I found myself having to write depressing psychological horror.  I was not happy with it but I continued until the horror genre virtually petered out.

 

I then diversified into children’s books, a tome of a western for Pinnacle, USA and various non-fiction.  We tried publishing for a year or two under our Black Hill Books ‘Bulldog’ and ‘Muffin’ imprints.  It was fairly successful but this was not the way I wanted to go.  So I abandoned fiction for 10 years and concentrated on my journalism and my second-hand mystery and westerns postal book business.  This is now very successful and expanding all the time.

 

ML: When you are writing, what is your process for putting together a story?  What type of environment do you like to write in?  Do you need quiet, or play music, for example.

GNS: For every book I have a detailed synopsis broken up into chapters.  So, when I come to write it all the research is done, it is paced, and all I have to do is to sit down and write.  In the old days I could write a book comfortably in 4 weeks.  Nowadays my routine is different; the daytime hours are taken up with journalism, interspersed with my hobbies, and I write novels in the comfort of my armchair in the evenings, usually knocking out around 3,000 words at a session.  I do not need peace and quiet.  Often the television is on.  I can also write on trains or in the car when Jean is driving.  The environment is of no consequence to my work.

 

ML: You have written a number of series over the years – the Crabs series, the Sabat series, the Werewolf series.  Do you start off the series knowing where you story arc is going, or do you develop each book on its own, as a stand alone title?

GNS: Sabat was commissioned as a series by New English Library.  During the 1970’s series were selling well but by 1982 when my Sabats 1-4 were published they were going out of fashion.  Had they been published a few years earlier then we should probably have reached anything from nos 30-40.

 

The Werewolf trilogy was certainly not intended as such.  I was simply delighted to have the first one, also my first book, commissioned.  The same applies to the Crabs.  I never thought ‘Night of the Crabs’ would be anything other than a one-off.  In the event it spawned five sequels, many short stories and a graphic novel.

 

ML: You have written about killer bats, crabs and other creatures over the years.  What inspired these “nature run amok” stories?”

GNS:  “Nature–run–amok” stories come naturally to me.  I have lived in the countryside all my life and understand wildlife.  My latest novel “Maneater” (Severn House) is about a wounded leopard terrorising the area around my home.  It cannot hunt its natural prey so it turns to the easy option – humans.  It could just become a chilling reality.

 

In ‘Maneater’ the hero is Gordon Hall who featured in all three of my early werewolf novels.  I have brought him back to the scene of his former adventures, now a man in his late sixties who has spent the intervening years as a professional hunter in Africa.  This is specially for my original fans.

 

ML: The Crabs series has developed a following over the years.  Were you surprised by the success of the series?

GNS: Yes, I was surprised by the success of the Crabs series.  It was also filmed in the 1980’s as ‘Island Claws.’  Best sellers are rare, you can never forecast how a book will be received.  This one came at the right time, that record hot summer of 1976 when ‘beach reads’ were in demand.

 

ML: You have written about werewolves, vampires, the occult, and nature run amok.  Of all the monsters and demonic forces you have written about, which do you find to be the scariest?  What kinds of stories are the most fun for you to write?

GNS: ‘Maneater’ is the book I find the scariest because I feel that one day it will happen.  I have often been accused of prophetic writing.  In 1980 I wrote ‘Caracal’ (a lynx-type creature).  A month after it was published a Big Cat was sighted in Wales, one of the first of a multitude of such feline sightings.  My novel was mentioned in the local press and our local bookshop sold 100 copies as a result!

 

Pulp fiction is the most fun to write.  I often think that I was born too late and maybe I could have had a field day in the many pulps of the thirties.

 

ML: Your book ‘Writing Horror Fiction’ was published in 1996.  Some time has passed since then.  What additional counsel would you give to those horror authors just starting out?

GNS: Many aspiring writers seek my advice.  Much of what I wrote in ‘Writing Horror Fiction’ is still applicable except that the market has changed.  The only advice I can give is to keep on writing, don’t give up.  I forecast that the horror genre will be BIG again one day, and maybe sooner that you think.

 

Whilst I am always willing to advise budding authors, I simply do not have time to read their manuscripts.

 

ML: What stories are you working on now?  What new releases can we expect from Guy N. Smith?

GNS: I have ideas on file but today publishers are ruled by accountants.  If your last book does not sell as hoped then they will be reluctant to publish your next.  This also applies to authors such as myself who have a track record that cannot be disputed.  It is what you are achieving now, that counts.  ‘Maneater’ has had some excellent reviews so I am hopeful that sales figures will be on target for another book.

 

ML: Is there anything in particular you would like librarians and readers to know about you?

GNS: Fans are very important to me.  When possible I like to meet them personally.  For many years now I have held my Fan Club Convention at my home in Shropshire.  This gives fans an opportunity to meet me in my own surroundings and see where all the books have originated.  All except the first six were written here.

 

This year the Convention will be held on Sunday, September 6th.  We start at 1pm and the event usually continues through to the evening.  There will be an on-going buffet and drinks.  Fans will have the opportunity to discuss my books with me or talk about their won writing.  There will be the usual auction, a few GNS rarities, going under the hammer.  Then there is the GNS bookstore to browse, maybe finding that elusive title for which you have been searching for years – and probably much cheaper than one found on e-bay!

 

 

For further information visit:  www.guynsmith.com

Defining the Scary Story

In explaining horror fiction for reader’s advisory librarians in The Reader’s Advisory Guide, Second Edition, Becky Siegel Spratford defined it as

…a story in which the author manipulates the reader’s emotions by introducing situations in which unexplainable phenomena and unearthly creatures threaten the protagonists and provoke terror in the reader.

We argued with her definition of horror fiction in our review, because here we consider genres such as human horror and killer animals as subgenres in horror fiction, as do many, many readers.

When I talk about scary stories for kids, I’m talking about something a little bit different, though, because what I consider “scary” doesn’t necessarily easily fall into genres (and sometimes it’s not especially scary, but has a focus on Halloween, or on creatures traditionally considered scary). I decided to ask my Monster Kid what he thought about all this.

Me: Does a scary story have to have a monster in it to be scary?

Monster Kid: No, a dripping, dark wood where you are lost is scary. That can be a scary story.

Me: So there doesn’t have to be a monster for the book to be a scary story?

Monster Kid: No, getting lost far away from your village in the dark is scary even without a monster. Even when there’s no monster, that’s a monster.

There you have it. You don’t need the unexplainable, otherworldly, or supernatural to make a scary story a scary story.

Here’s a list of the kinds of things that fall beneath the large umbrella of “scary stories” in children’s literature, according to several scholars in the subject:

Nursery rhymes
Fairy tales
Where the Wild Things Are and other picture books
A Series of Unfortunate Events
The Graveyard Book
A Tale Dark and Grimm
The Vampire Diaries
Twilight
The Hunger Games

Whether all of these REALLY qualify as scary stories (or horror, for that matter), or whether I should include Halloween books and not-so-scary monster tales in the “scary stories” category here, is certainly up for debate. But that dark and dripping wood that emerged from the mind of my six year old son… well, he certainly scared me with that, more than any monster could.