Raegan Butcher's Blog, page 7
August 7, 2016
Release Date for next book in Chupacabra Chronicles
Pre-order your copy of Revolt of the Chupacabras, the next book in my series today and get 10% off !
https://necropublications.com/product...
https://necropublications.com/product...
Published on August 07, 2016 16:21
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Tags:
chupacabra, horror, monster, necro
August 2, 2016
July 29, 2016
One for the poetry fans
just deal with it
there are no pills to make you feel better
no magic elixir
you just have to endure
remember: tough times never last
tough people do
there are no pills to make you feel better
no magic elixir
you just have to endure
remember: tough times never last
tough people do
Published on July 29, 2016 08:56
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Tags:
poem
July 21, 2016
July 20, 2016
FREE giveaway for the United Kingdom and Germany
On August 1st the FREE giveaway of Fury Of The Chupacabras for folks in the UK & Germany will be open. You will have all month of August to sign up. Cheers!
Published on July 20, 2016 07:36
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Tags:
chupacabra, free, horror, thriller
July 5, 2016
Winner of Free Giveaway
Congratulations to the winner of a free copy of Fury of the Chupacabras. The book goes out in the mail today. Cheers!
Published on July 05, 2016 07:35
June 7, 2016
Free Giveaway of Fury Of The Chupacabras
Sign up here on Goodreads to win a free copy of the first book in my chupacabra chronicles series, Fury Of The Chupacabras.
May 11, 2016
Mystery of the Chupacabra
The chupacabra.
What is it?
The name, coined by Puerto Rican comedian Silverio Perez, means “goatsucker” in Spanish, and comes from the animal’s reported habit of drinking the blood of livestock—especially goats. The first reports of the mysterious creature came from Puerto Rico in 1995 when eight sheep were discovered dead, with three puncture wounds in the chest, and completely drained of blood. At first, a Satanic cult was suspected, but soon the first eyewitness reports appeared, which described a strange animal, some sort of lizard-like beast, about the size of a small bear, with sharp, glowing quills on its back and large, round eyes. The beast was said to be able to hop like a kangaroo, suck blood like a bat, and was reported to emit a strange, piercing cry.
As a youngster growing up in the 1970s, I was enthralled by the numerous Bigfoot sightings that occurred in my home state of Washington and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. The idea that some unknown animal could be lurking in the wild spaces perched on the edge of civilization tickled my imagination in all the right ways. Because of my love of horror and sci fi, I have always been fascinated by monsters, and the chupacabra sounded right up my alley. Doing a bit of research, I discovered some cases from the past that were eerily similar to the infamous goatsucker.
In New Orleans there is a popular lover’s lane known as “Grunch Road” after several reports of a lizard-like beast haunting the vicinity and frightening horny teenagers appeared in the local press in the 1940s and ‘50s. And then there is a case which sounds almost exactly like a chupacabra: the dreaded “Vampire of Moca”. This unknown fiend kicked off its killing spree in February 1975, in the town of Moca, in Puerto Rico, where it took the lives of a number of animals in a grisly manner. Fifteen cows, three goats, two geese and a pig were found dead with bizarre perforations on their hides. Autopsies showed that the animals had been bled dry, as if consumed by some predator. After six months, and the deaths of over 150 farm animals, the mysterious “Vampire of Moca” vanished into history and obscurity.
Or did it?
Almost exactly twenty years later, the chupacabra appeared, and the Puerto Rican press once again began to report sightings of a strange beast that preyed upon livestock. Some people on the island believe that chupacabras are a genetic bio-experiment which escaped from a secret laboratory (The US military has had a large presence across Puerto Rico since the 1930's, with bases on the island used as Research and Development facilities for a number of classified projects). Others speculate that the creature is an escaped pet of alien visitors that wandered off while its master was visiting Earth. How’s that for a far-out theory? The chupacabra does have a slight resemblance to the Grey aliens, which could mean that they are somehow genetically related, a wonderfully tantalizing theory.
For reasons too complicated to explain here, I ended up in prison from June 1996 to March 2003 for armed robbery (yeah, I was a crazy sumbitch, back then). As you might imagine, I had a lot of time on my hands. I was already a writer when I went down, so I tried to use my excess of time wisely and write as much as I could during those seven years. I’d always wanted to write something about the chupacabra, as they seemed heaven sent, as far as “rule of cool” goes: some kind of lizard monster that drinks blood? As a creature-feature fan from earliest childhood, I was all over it.
But I couldn’t get a handle on how to shape the story. At first I thought of that old British sci-fi movie “Island Of Terror”, and I remembered the first scene with the constable finding a body with its bones sucked out. Maybe I could set my chupacabra story on a small island off the coast of Mexico…first scene would be some guy finding his livestock drained of blood…and we go from there? Hmmm. I put the idea in the back of my mind and went on with my life, such as it was.
Years passed. Then, one day in 2002, while I was walking the yard with another inmate (who, for legal reasons, shall remain nameless) it all clicked into place. The nameless inmate was telling me a story of almost getting busted at the Mexican border with a car full of illegal weapons and the anecdote was told with such flair that I immediately saw it as the opening scene in my chupacabra book. Two brothers, Americans, one of them an ex-soldier, smuggling guns into Mexico… and they get attacked by chupacabras. Story starts out with the tense scene at the border and we go from there. I wrote it as a screenplay first and, like I always do, I finished it, put it away, forgot about it, and moved on to the next thing.
Flash forward ten years. I was now a free man, with a few poetry books under my belt, and I wanted to work on my prose skills. I rummaged around in my papers and found the chupacabra script. I had such fun turning it into the novella “Attack of the Chupacabras” (included in the book Fury of the Chupacabras) that I ended up writing four novels and creating a whole series, which I’ve dubbed the “Chupacabra Chronicles”. The books started out as simple survival-horror situations but they quickly became a series of action-conspiracy-monster-mystery-adventure-sci-fi-horror books. I tried to fill the series with everything I like: action, tension, suspense, dark humor, and all of the most outlandish conspiracy theories I came across during my many hours of research on the internet.
I am grateful that Necro is crazy enough to publish these chupacabra books, one volume in the continuing saga of the chupacabra chronicles every six months for the next two years, with perhaps more after that. I had an absolute blast writing them. Now the pleasure is all yours. Have fun.
What is it?
The name, coined by Puerto Rican comedian Silverio Perez, means “goatsucker” in Spanish, and comes from the animal’s reported habit of drinking the blood of livestock—especially goats. The first reports of the mysterious creature came from Puerto Rico in 1995 when eight sheep were discovered dead, with three puncture wounds in the chest, and completely drained of blood. At first, a Satanic cult was suspected, but soon the first eyewitness reports appeared, which described a strange animal, some sort of lizard-like beast, about the size of a small bear, with sharp, glowing quills on its back and large, round eyes. The beast was said to be able to hop like a kangaroo, suck blood like a bat, and was reported to emit a strange, piercing cry.
As a youngster growing up in the 1970s, I was enthralled by the numerous Bigfoot sightings that occurred in my home state of Washington and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. The idea that some unknown animal could be lurking in the wild spaces perched on the edge of civilization tickled my imagination in all the right ways. Because of my love of horror and sci fi, I have always been fascinated by monsters, and the chupacabra sounded right up my alley. Doing a bit of research, I discovered some cases from the past that were eerily similar to the infamous goatsucker.
In New Orleans there is a popular lover’s lane known as “Grunch Road” after several reports of a lizard-like beast haunting the vicinity and frightening horny teenagers appeared in the local press in the 1940s and ‘50s. And then there is a case which sounds almost exactly like a chupacabra: the dreaded “Vampire of Moca”. This unknown fiend kicked off its killing spree in February 1975, in the town of Moca, in Puerto Rico, where it took the lives of a number of animals in a grisly manner. Fifteen cows, three goats, two geese and a pig were found dead with bizarre perforations on their hides. Autopsies showed that the animals had been bled dry, as if consumed by some predator. After six months, and the deaths of over 150 farm animals, the mysterious “Vampire of Moca” vanished into history and obscurity.
Or did it?
Almost exactly twenty years later, the chupacabra appeared, and the Puerto Rican press once again began to report sightings of a strange beast that preyed upon livestock. Some people on the island believe that chupacabras are a genetic bio-experiment which escaped from a secret laboratory (The US military has had a large presence across Puerto Rico since the 1930's, with bases on the island used as Research and Development facilities for a number of classified projects). Others speculate that the creature is an escaped pet of alien visitors that wandered off while its master was visiting Earth. How’s that for a far-out theory? The chupacabra does have a slight resemblance to the Grey aliens, which could mean that they are somehow genetically related, a wonderfully tantalizing theory.
For reasons too complicated to explain here, I ended up in prison from June 1996 to March 2003 for armed robbery (yeah, I was a crazy sumbitch, back then). As you might imagine, I had a lot of time on my hands. I was already a writer when I went down, so I tried to use my excess of time wisely and write as much as I could during those seven years. I’d always wanted to write something about the chupacabra, as they seemed heaven sent, as far as “rule of cool” goes: some kind of lizard monster that drinks blood? As a creature-feature fan from earliest childhood, I was all over it.
But I couldn’t get a handle on how to shape the story. At first I thought of that old British sci-fi movie “Island Of Terror”, and I remembered the first scene with the constable finding a body with its bones sucked out. Maybe I could set my chupacabra story on a small island off the coast of Mexico…first scene would be some guy finding his livestock drained of blood…and we go from there? Hmmm. I put the idea in the back of my mind and went on with my life, such as it was.
Years passed. Then, one day in 2002, while I was walking the yard with another inmate (who, for legal reasons, shall remain nameless) it all clicked into place. The nameless inmate was telling me a story of almost getting busted at the Mexican border with a car full of illegal weapons and the anecdote was told with such flair that I immediately saw it as the opening scene in my chupacabra book. Two brothers, Americans, one of them an ex-soldier, smuggling guns into Mexico… and they get attacked by chupacabras. Story starts out with the tense scene at the border and we go from there. I wrote it as a screenplay first and, like I always do, I finished it, put it away, forgot about it, and moved on to the next thing.
Flash forward ten years. I was now a free man, with a few poetry books under my belt, and I wanted to work on my prose skills. I rummaged around in my papers and found the chupacabra script. I had such fun turning it into the novella “Attack of the Chupacabras” (included in the book Fury of the Chupacabras) that I ended up writing four novels and creating a whole series, which I’ve dubbed the “Chupacabra Chronicles”. The books started out as simple survival-horror situations but they quickly became a series of action-conspiracy-monster-mystery-adventure-sci-fi-horror books. I tried to fill the series with everything I like: action, tension, suspense, dark humor, and all of the most outlandish conspiracy theories I came across during my many hours of research on the internet.
I am grateful that Necro is crazy enough to publish these chupacabra books, one volume in the continuing saga of the chupacabra chronicles every six months for the next two years, with perhaps more after that. I had an absolute blast writing them. Now the pleasure is all yours. Have fun.
Published on May 11, 2016 06:46
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Tags:
chupacabra, creature, cryptid, horror, monster
April 28, 2016
My 1st guest appearance
Hunter Shea, one of my favorite writers, and a genuine real life cryptid investigator, was gracious enough to let me talk about the Chupacabra on his blog today.
https://huntershea.com/
https://huntershea.com/
Published on April 28, 2016 10:17
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Tags:
chupacabra, cryptid-huntershea, horror, mystery, sci-fi
April 24, 2016
Free giveaway, Fury of the Chupacabras, coming soon
I have been trying to list Fury of the Chupacabras for a free giveaway for the past week, but I keep getting a message that tells me "Invalid book ID". Not sure what that's all about, I've tried the two numbers in the paperback and also the one listed here on this site. I'll try my usual method of just waiting and trying again in a few days. I plan on giving away free copies of Fury every month until the next book, Revolt of the Chupacabras, comes out. I'll be back soon with free stuff.
Published on April 24, 2016 12:29
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Tags:
author, chupacabra, free, necro
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