Mia Fox's Blog, page 9

November 17, 2014

What Rough Beast by H.R. Knight Preview

What Rough Beast - Banner


 


BOOK INFORMATION

TITLE – What Rough Beast

AUTHOR – H. R. Knight

GENRE – Paranormal Mystery

PUBLICATION DATE – 9/8/14

LENGTH (Pages/# Words) – 320pp/109,000 words

PUBLISHER – H. R. Knight

COVER ARTIST – Rebecca Poole


 


BOOK SYNOPSIS

Harry Houdini asks Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to help him expose Maximillian Cairo—a spiritualist medium. But the two men underestimate Cairo. He’s a master of the occult and the most debauched man in London. Conan Doyle and Houdini get more than they bargained for when they interrupt a magic ritual and accidentally set loose a force for ecstasy and chaos on an unsuspecting Edwardian London.


Soon one of their friends is falsely accused of a grisly murder. Conan Doyle and Houdini are sure the real killer was at the ritual with them. They’re faced with a locked-room homicide that baffles even Houdini.


One by one, people in the little group who attended the ceremony feel an insidious influence creep over them. Each succumbs to a burst of creativity, shortly followed by an act of uncontrollable madness.


The proper Victorian gentleman and the ebullient New Yorker must team up to solve the murder and stop the thing they set loose before it completely unravels their ordered world.



What Rough Beast - Book Cover


 


BUY & TBR LINKS

AMAZON KINDLE US –  AMAZON KINDLE CA –  AMAZON KINDLE UK

AMAZON PAPERBACK –  BARNES & NOBLES NOOK –  SMASHWORDS


ITUNES – Books > Mysteries & Thrillers > Historical> H. R. Knight


 


EXCERPT

Chapter 28 – Encounter in the Fog



As we strolled along the tiny cobblestone lane, there was not a cab in sight. Not that we could see far in the darkness. The damp fog off the Thames had worked its way north to this neighbourhood. A thick patch of it rolled in quickly. In a few minutes, we could barely see across the street.


A little chill ran down my spine. I had a distinct feeling of being watched. I turned to look behind me. The gaslights had become faint glows that hid more than they illuminated. Movement at the corner of my eye caught my attention. There, had something behind us just flitted into the shadow of a doorway? Or was it merely a swirl of mist? I felt alone and quite vulnerable. I was grateful for the sturdy companion at my side. Houdini spoke in a low voice.


“Let’s get out of here,” he said. “I’m getting the creeps.”


We picked up our pace and made south for Euston Road. The fog thickened and thinned around us in pale, cottony patches. We encountered no other soul. At its densest, the fog could have concealed armies. Indeed, it played strange tricks on one’s ears. I thought I heard footsteps shuffling along behind us. Perhaps it was the lateness of the hour or the disturbing events we were investigating, but the sound made me uneasy. We continued on even more quickly. Then, suddenly, we were in the clear. We could see the entire block of flats behind us. I paused, and restrained my companion with a hand on his arm. Here was our chance to get a good look at our pursuer. I could not be sure, but I thought I heard a foot scrape the stones of the road before silence surrounded us. I looked to Houdini.


“I heard it too,” he said softy. He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “Back there.”


Why his confirmation filled me with dread, I cannot say. The person behind us was almost certainly a weary pilgrim such as we, eager for his own sitting room and a warm fire.


I saw that Houdini had drawn the sharpened screwdriver out of his pocket and held it like a dagger. We turned to face whoever was following us.


Halfway down the street a single gaslight glowed feebly. At the end of the lane a figure approached. It jogged along the walls of the buildings. I got an impression of a manlike shape with an impossibly lean body and grotesquely long limbs. It loped along in an odd, loose-jointed way. I could have sworn I heard soft, animal-like moans. It was as if some savage beast were hot on our trail. I felt Houdini clutch my shoulder.


“What is it?” he hissed in my ear.


I could only shake my head. It was like no creature I had seen in all my travels. The thing’s unnatural form filled me with loathing. Its huge shadow, magnified by the streetlamp, flitted along the bricks of the buildings.


I stood, my eyes riveted on the gaslight down the street. What would I see when the thing stepped full into the glow? As if in answer to my thought, it paused and sniffed the air. The misshapen head swiveled until it pointed precisely in our direction. Its eyes glittered with a malign emerald glow.


The beast took a step forward. Then an absolutely unexpected thing happened. Just before it stepped full into the light, the creature swarmed straight up the sheer wall. I gasped at the speed with which it scaled the bricks. It climbed until it was lost in the shadows. For a moment, all was silent. Then I heard a sound that chilled me to my soul—the faint sound of claws scrabbling across the roof tiles high above us. And the sound was approaching rapidly.


“Come on,” Houdini hissed, grabbing my sleeve.


We took off down the street at a run. My shoes slipped on the flagstones. I wheeled my arms to catch my balance. On and on we raced. The blood beat in my temples. We careened into abrupt turns and doubled back on ourselves. Soon we were back in another patch of fog. My breath sounded harsh in my ears. At last I felt Houdini’s grasp on my arm as he pulled me to a stop.


I sagged against the cold bricks and gasped for air. Silence surrounded us. My heart pounded in my chest. Had we given our pursuer the slip? The alley next to us was dark. We huddled in its shadows and peeped around the corner. We could barely make out the walls of the tenements that loomed over us. The stones beneath our feet were rough and uneven. The cold air seared the back of my throat as I caught my breath. I scarcely dared look back for fear of seeing something.


Houdini whispered. “I think we lost—”


The unmistakable sound of scrabbling above us cut him off.


“Run!”


The cry echoed off the walls. We plunged into the blackness of the street before us. I was racing at full speed before I realised that it was I who had shrieked the command. Our feet pounded the pavement as we dashed through the darkness. We both flung our arms up to protect from an overhead attack. The thing that pursued us—was it what had murdered Mackleston’s brother?


The street turned out to be a long, curving one with no side alleys. But at the end I thought I discerned a glow of light.


“At… end,” Houdini gasped beside me. “Stop … set ambush.”


I thought of what the creature above us had done to Reggie and shivered. How could we defend against an attack that could come from any direction? But each breath I drew felt like a stab in my side. I couldn’t run much longer.

Not three yards from the end of the street a huge figure loomed out of the lowering fog in front of us. We skidded to a stop and barely avoided colliding with it.


“Here now, what’s the rush, lads?” a loud voice boomed. Two hands the size of hams clutched at our lapels and hauled us into the street. “Let’s get a better look at you,” the voice declared.


We found ourselves under an electric light on Euston Road. The figure looming over us revealed itself as a frowning giant of a policeman. The fog had lowered again. Little droplets had condensed on the brass buttons of his uniform. They glittered like gems under the lamplight. Though I continued to gasp for air, my relief was palpable. As he saw how we were dressed, a look of surprise registered on his face and he loosed his hold on us.


“I beg your pardon, gentlemen,” he said. Then he noticed the sharpened screwdriver, still clutched in Houdini’s hand. “Now what—”


“Constable,” I panted, “someone or something is after us.” I pointed into the blackness behind us.


Houdini nodded vigorously as he leaned over to suck in air. “Tried to lose him … chased us a good two miles.”

“Oh, he has, has he?” The officer drew his truncheon out of his belt and turned to face the yawning darkness. “We’ll see about that.”


I could not let him face the demon alone. “Whoever he is. .. he’s gone mad,” I warned between breaths. “You must … get reinforcements.”


The policeman turned back to us and smiled. “One man only?”


“At least wait… until we catch … our breaths,” I urged. “We’ll accompany you.”


The policeman seemed not to have heard me. His face lit up in anticipation. William the Conqueror’s face might have looked the same as he led the charge at Hastings.


“I hope he tries to resist arrest. I truly do.”


So saying, he picked up a little black lantern from the ground beside him. He lifted it to head height and plunged into the unlit street.


“Like Custer at Little Bighorn,” Houdini muttered to himself. Neither of us had fully recovered, but we straightened up and staggered after the man.


“Wait up!” Houdini called. We chased the watery glow of light from his lantern as it floated through the foggy darkness. Before we had gone six steps, the light appeared to dance wildly. We heard a shout, a feral screech, and finally a shrill scream, like a soul in torment. The shriek rose and fell. Abruptly, it cut off. The lantern fell to the street with a clatter. It glowed brightly for a moment and then winked out. A terrible silence followed.



AUTHOR BIO

H. R. Knight is the pen name of Harry Squires, a critically acclaimed author who writes mysteries—some paranormal, some not—as well as thrillers, and the occasional magazine article. Harry has worked as an insurance underwriter, a software marketer, and a corporate trainer. He attended Journalism School at the University of Missouri and film school at UCLA.


He has studied Okinawan karate and Chinese boxing. Current hobbies include dog training, classical guitar, cooking, and collecting obscure, cheesy horror films from the 1930s & ‘40s.


Having traveled all over the world, he’s developed a preference for countries that produce good wines.


He shares a home and a life with his wife Susan, who publishes unconventional paranormal romances. They own, train, and show Belgian Sheepdogs. Occasionally the dogs are kind enough to give Harry and Susan hope that they may someday be in charge of the pack.


They all live at the beach in Southern California.


AUTHOR FOLLOW LINKS

AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE –  WEBSITE / BLOG –  TWITTER



GIVEAWAY PRIZE

$25 Amazon gift card


a Rafflecopter giveaway

 


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1-MINIBUTTON



BONUS!! AUTHOR INTERVIEW WITH H.R. KNIGHT


Where does your inspiration for stories come from?


Usually that’s a tough question to answer. And scary. The process seems magical and timid; writers are afraid to question it in case they scare it away.But in this case I know exactly where my book, What Rough Beast, came from:

One summer not long ago, guilt drove me to read the philosopher Frederick Nietzsche. Years ago my good friend Steve had given me a book of his writings. But Steve was a philosophy major in school, so his idea of a fun read was probably a little different from mine.


But hey, I thought, you’re a reasonably intelligent fellow. It’s time you knuckled down and got through this thing. You read some philosophy in school. How bad could it be? So I opened the book and started the essay, The Birth of Tragedy. It was obvious from the start that Fredrick and I were not destined to be buddies. Here’s a quote from the book:


“This primordial basis of tragedy radiates that vision of drama out in several discharges following one after the other, a vision which is entirely a dream image, and, in this respect, epic in nature, but on the other hand as an objectification of a Dionysian state, it presents not the Apllonian consolation in illusion, but by contrast the smashing of individuality and becoming one with the primordial being.”


Fun times. But I made my way through it. Neitzsche talked about all art as being a conflict between the powers of two Greek gods–Dionysus and Apollo. Dionysus represented ecstasy and chaos; Apollo stood for the forces of reason and order. It was a conflict between the party animal and the worker bee. Or you could look at it as emotion vs. rational thought.


Or you could slam the book shut in frustration at the denseness of the prose. But I persevered. I owed Steve that much. Still, I was mentally fatigued after a session with Neitzsche. So to reward myself I would relax by reading a story or two from The Compete Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.


And those were my days (when I had one free) — Neitzsche in the mornings, Conan Doyle in the afternoon.

And I began to get an idea for a book. The story would be about repressed Victorian men being slammed up against the Dionysian forces of ecstasy and madness. I would make them acknowledge that those emotions and desires existed hidden within their ordered, rational lives.


Here’s the story I came up with:

Harry Houdini asks Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to help him expose Maximillian Cairo–a spiritualist medium and the most debauched man in London. But the two men get more than they bargained for when they interrupt a magic ritual and accidentally set loose a force for ecstasy and chaos on an unsuspecting Edwardian London.


One by one, people in the little group who attended the ritual feel an insidious influence creep over them. Each succumbs to a burst of creativity, shortly followed by an act of uncontrollable madness. The proper Victorian gentleman and the exuberant New Yorker must team up to stop the thing they set loose before it completely unravels their ordered world. And that’s how I started writing the book that became “What Rough Beast.”



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Published on November 17, 2014 21:30

Fiction Meets Lego

As authors we are always looking for new ways to tell a story. Sometimes, we have to find new ways to tell an old story. Apparently, the same is true for the creators of Lego who have recently hired a new art director to fuse together different characters, thus creating fresh and new lego. It’s fiction meets lego.


Take a look at their new creations:

here.


If you could merge any two characters, which would they be?Fiction Meets Lego


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Published on November 17, 2014 09:03

November 16, 2014

The Skinny on Thanksgiving Leftovers

It’s okay to splurge on Thanksgiving. After all, it only comes once a year and if you’re like me, saying no to pumpkin pie is just not possible. But, after the holiday has passed, then it’s time for the skinny on Thanksgiving leftovers.


Here are three ideas for enjoying the turkey throughout the holiday weekend without over-indulging in too many calories:


Turkey Lettuce Wraps

Top shredded white meat with red onion, shredded carrots, chopped nuts and cilantro. Wrap in lettuce leaves for a low carb lunch.


Turkey Vegetable Soup

In a pot, saute chopped onion, add a few cups of vegetable broth along with white and dark meat turkey. Toss in as many chopped vegetables as you can find such as carrots, celery, and squash. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until veggies are tender.


Chilled Quinoa Salad

Mix leftover green beans or any roasted vegetables with cooked quinoa and fresh herbs like parsley or cilantro along with basil for a lean, but satisfying salad.


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Published on November 16, 2014 23:00

November 11, 2014

Sylvia Day on Teaser Tuesday

Captivated by You


Proud to share Sylvia Day on Teaser Tuesday. Here is a sneak peek of Sylvia Day’s Captivated by You. To read chapters one through three, click: http://www.sylviaday.com/captivated-chapters/.


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Published on November 11, 2014 13:15

November 10, 2014

Ten Thousand Sack Lunches

Ten Thousand Sack Lunches


What does Monday mean to you? If you’re like me, there are aspects of Monday that you just don’t like. Back to work…kids are back to school…no sleeping in. These are the normal complaints. What tops my Monday to-do list is having to make the sack lunches. Over the course of my children’s lives (now ages 10, 13, and 15), I think I must have made hundreds, perhaps ten thousand sack lunches, maybe more.


I wake up every Monday and make a sack lunch, continuing that habit every day until Friday. Now here’s what I hate about that activity…It’s not resentment toward my children. I love them dearly and readily make their lunch because the school based ones are not only pretty disgusting, but also not particularly healthy and healthy eating is my schtick. What I resent about the ten thousand sack lunches that I’ve prepared over my days is that I do it without any hesitation. I realize that I need to approach my writing in the same way as making the sack lunches.


I ease into my writing. I take notes. I research. I procrastinate with a little social media. I don’t follow the Nike slogan — just do it. It’s not the first thing I do in the morning…every morning without fail. So, why is it harder for authors to sit in front of the computer and write every day of the week?


I think we often wait for inspiration to strike, but I believe that if you just dive in, you can stir up that inspiration just like stirring the peanut butter jar for that sack lunch sandwich. I believe authors need to reach for the keyboard as readily as we put on our pants, get in the car, or for me, make those sack lunches. We just do it and we do those things every day as if they are the most normal things in the world.


So, I know what my New Year’s resolution is going to be…have a word with the cafeteria lady about the mystery stew! Nah, just kidding. I’m going to write…every day. Or at least, every sack lunch day.


 


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Published on November 10, 2014 07:03

November 3, 2014

The Chicken or the Egg of Story Telling

When it comes to launching a new story, what comes first for you? Is it the setting, the plot, or a character quirk? In other words, what’s your own personal chicken or the egg of story telling?


What I love most about being a writer, or perhaps it’s the reason I am a writer, is that inspiration and ideas can strike at any moment. I was reading an article in Travel & Leisure magazine about the best adventure destinations and I was immediately struck that any one of these would make a great setting for a book.


For this reason, I believe with all of my heart and soul that a writer must also be a voracious reader. Sure, we don’t always have time to launch into a full book, so when life gets busy at least read a magazine. The point is to read anything you can get your hands on.


I’m sure if you’re a writer you have a vivid imagination, but that doesn’t mean your ideas don’t get stale every once in awhile. It’s good to stir things up and turn to new sources for inspiration.


Besides, it’s fun to get lost in ideas. With regards to the article and photos that recently inspired me, they were also a welcome reprieve considering that I didn’t get away this past summer on a vacation. Here they are for you to enjoy…and perhaps gain inspiration from as well.


Travel and Leisure Best Vacation Destinations


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Published on November 03, 2014 10:02

October 31, 2014

Sleeping with the Sandman

Sleeping with the Sandman

Keep your eyes open for “Sleeping with the Sandman,” my latest edition to the Surprise Passion series of light, erotic novelettes. At double the length of all of the others in the series, this one has received accolades from early readers.


It’s the story of 25-year-old Savannah whose relationship with Sandman, the mythical creation of childhood dreams, is decidedly more adult in this particular story. Read on for the official synopsis:


Plagued by memories of the fire that claimed her family when she was younger, Savannah suffers from insomnia and nightmares. Although she is seeking help, Savannah finds that the best therapy is when Sandman visits her at night and not only soothes her mind, but also her body.


He is the only man she dares allow in her bed for fear that her issues would scare off a mere mortal. However, what starts off as a chance encounter with Jed, a handsome stranger, becomes a repeated occurrence as Savannah continually runs into him at a local coffee house. As much as the idea of dating Jed is appealing to her, she won’t accept his advances.


Can nightly visits from her other-worldly suitor help Savannah to move on with her life and take a chance on love with Jed? Or, will she decide that Sleeping with the Sandman is safer and more satisfying?


“Sleeping with the Sandman” will be available on Sunday, November 9, 2014. In the meantime, you can add it to your Goodreads’ TBR list here.


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Published on October 31, 2014 21:15

Ethel and the Merman

Ethel has made it her personal mission to avoid men. Twelve years ago, she fell for an actor whose charm and good looks won her over. That momentary lapse in judgement resulted in her getting pregnant.


Although she wouldn’t trade life with her son, Jonah, for anything, Ethel is constantly reminded that his father is less than responsible. Having nobody to lean on has made her leery of ever getting involved with another man. That is, until she meets Atlas, a Merman who is more man than any she has ever known.


Ethel and the Merman on Amazon


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Published on October 31, 2014 12:17

Alert the Media

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Published on October 31, 2014 12:16

Scent of the Centaur

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Published on October 31, 2014 12:15