Give my creature life! (in an indie bookstore….)

Would you like your creature to haunt an indie bookstore? If so, I highly recommend this wonderful article available on IBPA.

Drumming for the Dead

Looking for a terrifying horror read to get you through the weekend?

Check out the DRUMMING FOR THE DEAD series by Gabby Gilliam!

CHECK OUT SOME OF THESE REVIEWS:

Just like vampires cannot live without blood and a place to lay-low during the day, authors cannot live without reviews on Amazon. So read the books and give Gabby those five stars you know she deserves!

You can get both books in the series right now for less than the price of a Starbucks, or a McDonald’s anything, and have great horror for your whole weekend. It’s too freaking hot to go out anyway. Stay inside and read something scary!

Leave Gabby a review, and I’ll send you a PDF of the Gravelight book of your choice!

A hot weekend full of zombies. In the words of Walter Sobchak, “If you will it, it is no dream.”

Get your copy today!

And make sure to follow Gabby for more books!

Mr. Byrnes on Jekyll and Hyde


The Gravelight Press edition of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is getting terrific reviews. Sure, we can credit some of this to Stevenson’s classic tale of duality, but what really seems to be drawing the attention of readers is the introduction by Jeffrey D. Keeten. It seems like everywhere we look, it’s “Keeten this…” and “Keeten that…” It’s enough to make hard-working gravelighter feel like a second-string pallbearer at best.

The latest such review is by Will Byrnes, a name that, like Keeten’s, should be well known to anyone who reads reviews on Goodreads; based on his stats there are quite a lot of you. Mr. Byrnes provides his own insights and backgrounds on Jekyll and Hyde, so much so that that we considered nixing Keeten’s review and replacing it with Will’s. But since we know Jeffrey spent a lot of time writing a very thoughtful and well researched introduction, we’ll probably leave it intact. Which is, actually, good news for you, particularly if you’ve yet to read Stevenson’s novella. So go check out Will’s review either on Goodreads or at Coot’s Reviews, and then pick up a copy of the Gravelight edition, available on Amazon and at the online store of our parent company, Devil’s Party Press. In addition to Mr. Keeten’s introduction, it features a bonus story not found in any other edition. We think you’ll like it very much.

What horror are you reading this summer? Robert Pope is reading: Tim Jeffreys’ Autumn Country

Autumn Country: Selected Fiction of Tim Jeffreys is a guilty pleasure of mine. I’ve read it several times just to enjoy the way Tim tells a story. Right in the first paragraph, he lets us know we are in the hands of a storyteller and the story is underway. Plot and character are inextricably bound, and the language is their servant, as it should be.  This is the reason I proposed this volume, selected the stories, and wrote the introduction.
You might want to read this book not as fourteen stories, but as a unified fictional work with fourteen parts, chapters if you insist. Weaving in and out of the fictional work is his peculiar inventiveness as relates to the shape-shifter. From the first story we feel the urgency of creatures who mimic the loved ones of others and eat the love they take. Tim manipulates his own theories in ways only he could have imagined, and the last time through, I just read those to feel that theme and those changes once more.
Other themes run through the fictional work with great effectiveness, and one of them is the writer’s sense of humor that sometimes lurks beneath a dark surface and sometimes erupts in viscous bubbles.  The mordant humor about humorists in “Here Comes Mr. Herribone” creates a sparkling metaphor for the artist, and, in particular, comedians. “Collectable” is something of an elegant joke about the writer’s love of the music we hear at times while reading the stories.
But, for reasons I have stopped trying to understand, my favorite remains “Under Iron,” a story that picks up this musical theme and twists it into a ghost story that makes such sense we know what ghosts can actually do in our mortal world. I get so impatient with ghost stories where you know the writer doesn’t believe in ghosts himself; here’s one that makes perfect sense. I don’t have to imagine very hard to make the leap into meaning.
At my first reading of “Black Nore,” I was surprised and just a bit shaken. It did that grand old thing: it made me stop and think about what I’d just read. That’s something I enjoy. Of course, I enjoy thinking in general a great deal. The only reason I am telling you is to suggest that if this sounds all right, you should read the book. And it’s worth it for the writer’s thoughts on the stories at the end.

-Robert Pope

Who is Robert Pope?

Robert Pope has published a novel, Jack’s Universe,

three collections of stories, most recently Not a Jot or a Tittle (2022), and a book of flash fiction, Disappearing Things (2023).

His stories appear in journals, including Kenyon Review, Alaska Quarterly ReviewFiction International, and anthologies, including Pushcart Prize and Dark Lane Anthology. Seven fictions appear in Fictive Dream.
Robert can also be found in HARDBOILED AND LOADED WITH SIN (paperback/eBook) and Vella

CAN YOU GIVE THESE BOOKS SOME LOVE?

Authors literally live or die by the number of Amazon reviews they get.

If you have read any of the books published in this post, whether you bought them on Amazon or borrowed them from your local library, please do a review on Amazon.

Here are a few sample review scripts (alter as suits you):

  1. I am glad I read this book. I enjoyed it.
  2. I am glad I bought this book. I enjoyed it.
  3. I am glad I gave this book to my Uncle Ralph. He enjoyed it.
  4. This book made me scared.
  5. This book made ma laugh/cry/ponder life’s big questions.

That is all it takes to write a great book review that will help these authors on Amazon.

We survived the pandemic people. We need these acts of kindness now. And they costs you only a few minutes of time. Give a reader a good review TODAY.

Thanks so much for reading. You mean everything to an author.

Have a great summer!

The Doggone Ghost

Bernie Brown has a horror collection coming out next spring. Watch this space for more information, or follow Bernie!

I can’t wait for Halloween!

Well, now you don’t have to.

David Fulcher’s horror collection will easily keep you awake from now until fall, when it releases in paperback.

But you can read it today!

Complete on Amazon’s new platform, Kindle Vella, THE PUMPKIN KING AND OTHER TALES OF TERROR has racked up over 100 likes in less than a month!

Can you help it get to 200… souls?’

CLICK to read the first story FREE right now. The pumpkin king, he wants to carve you….

What can scare the heck out of you and keep you from scoring?

Apparently it’s not a what, but a WHO: David Fulcher!

Have you read any of David’s work?

In addition to running and publishing Samsara magazine, David also publishes short stories and poems!

You can check out these for free, by clicking on the photo:


And how about some David video?

Or listen to a tale of terror, if you dare!

Hockey fans, I believe David is a goalie. Impressive! And give up any thoughts of scoring…. 😉

The Pumpkin King book trailer is here!

R. David Fulcher’s first Gravelight collection, THE PUMPKIN KING AND OTHER TALES OF TERROR, is arriving this fall and we couldn’t be more excited. For a taste of what’s coming, we invite you to check out the official book trailer.

Watch for more PUMPKIN KING-related surprises coming soon!

The Pumpkin King and Other Tales of Terror

R. David Fulcher is our featured author in the newsletter today.

If you haven’t signed up for it you can sign up here.

In the meantime remember that the first three episodes are available and free to read for those of you in the USA. So, give it a read…. if you dare!