Horror Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
Heavy Oceans
Group Reads: Guest Author Invite
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January 2024 Group Read #1 with Guest Author, Tyler Jones

A huge thanks to those who are participating, and to those who will be reading the book and chiming in with questions/comments. I'll do my best to answer and reply to everything.
Really looking forward to hanging with you all this month.
TJ

Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you have one. If not, I recommend getting one. A sharp one.

You rock, Candace! Thank you! Hopefully you enjoy it the second time around.
Tyler wrote: "Kimberly wrote: "Count me in on this one--just purchased it! Thank you for joining us, Tyler."
Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you have one. If not, I recommend ge..."
I have a spare. ;)
Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you have one. If not, I recommend ge..."
I have a spare. ;)

This was a wild and incredible ride! Very much processing it, and looking forward to firing off some questions because so much is packed in such a small story!

It's truly an honor to hang out with you guys, and thank you for picking up the book. Hope it gives you an escape from the real world for a few hours.

This was a wild and incredible ride! Very much processing it, and looking forward to firing off some questions because so much is packed in such a small story!"
Rex, thanks a ton for reading it! Fire away with those questions whenever you're ready.

I almost typed, "Expect the unexpected" but that seemed too cliched. So...I'll just say, "Anticipate the unanticipated."
But no, that's even worse.
Okay, real answer, we kept the description on the book purposefully vague. Hopefully, you'll just go along for the ride and enjoy where it ends up. Thanks so much for giving the book a shot.

Awesome! Thanks for picking it up!

Rock n roll! Hope it thrills you.

Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you have one. If not, ..."
Really, we all should. But I guess you're just more prepared than most.
Tyler wrote: "Kimberly wrote: "Tyler wrote: "Kimberly wrote: "Count me in on this one--just purchased it! Thank you for joining us, Tyler."
Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you h..."
Country girl! I plan on starting tomorrow....if I can update my reading progress by then.. LOL!
Thank you, Kimberly! Hold on tight and sharpen your machete...if you h..."
Country girl! I plan on starting tomorrow....if I can update my reading progress by then.. LOL!
Finished last night!
Here's a link to my review for anyone interested: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... .
I love stories that leave something to the imagination, and this really fit the bill!
Here's a link to my review for anyone interested: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... .
I love stories that leave something to the imagination, and this really fit the bill!



Here's a link to my review for anyone interested: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... .
I love stories that leave something to the imagination, and this really f..."
Kimberly, thank you so much for the wonderful review! I'm thrilled you enjoyed it.

Pisces, thank you so much! I'm really glad to hear the ending worked for you.
Roger Ebert once wrote that the best ending to a film is not the one you want, but the one that's inevitable. Meaning, it has to end that way, even if you don't want it to. Right or wrong (which is really up to the reader) that was only way I could end the book. Nothing else left me as excited. Personally, I tend to prefer endings that suggest the story continues moving beyond the page. We close the book and think about what happens next, and whatever a reader envisions is correct.
I didn't want to leave it so ambiguous that a reader would be confused. Clarity is one of the most important things in a story (to me anyway) but I did want to leave some room for a reader's imagination to participate in whatever happens after that last page.
Thank you again, and if you give BURN THE PLANS a shot, I hope you love that one too. It contains a short story called "Full Fathom Five," which might be my favorite thing I've ever written.
Tyler wrote: "Pisces51 wrote: "Hi, I posted my review this morning but no spoilers. I loved it. Tyler has made a new fan. I cannot wait to read more of his work."
Pisces, thank you so much! I'm really glad to h..."
I do love some ambiguity in my horror, which is WHY this was just the perfect "tone" for me. I'm going to be looking up BURN THE PLANS next.
Pisces, thank you so much! I'm really glad to h..."
I do love some ambiguity in my horror, which is WHY this was just the perfect "tone" for me. I'm going to be looking up BURN THE PLANS next.

Pisces, thank you so much! I'm re..."
Awesome! So glad to hear it. And thank you so much for digging into BURN THE PLANS. I hope you love it.



Kudos to you, Tyler Jones! This was incredible. It felt like Lovecraftian "Trainspotting" meets "Reservoir Dogs" meets "Ultimate Fishing." On acid.

Right on, and welcome to the party! Thanks so much for joining in, and I really hope you enjoy the book.

Okay, I'm using that description from now on!
Seriously, I'm so grateful you enjoyed the book. And thank you, a million times, for such a wonderful review. Very humbling. I'm just thrilled you connected with it.



Netanella wrote: "Re: Burn the Plans, my brain is adverse to audiobooks. I've tried and tried to listen to them but I can't seem to do it. I guess I'm just an old school reader. But thank you for the..."
Still haven't been able to get the hang of audiobooks either, but I'll buy a physical or kindle copy. :)
Still haven't been able to get the hang of audiobooks either, but I'll buy a physical or kindle copy. :)


MM, thank you so much! I hope it thrills you to pieces.

Thank YOU for buying the book!

I hear you loud and clear. I struggle with audiobooks, too. For me, it comes down to the narrator. So many horror narrators read very low, and very sloooooowwww. Like every sentence is ominous and dread filled, whether they are or not.
Thankfully, I've had the privilege to work with a few truly gifted narrators who have helped bring the stories to life in such a unique way, so that it almost becomes an "audio drama."

Nothing wrong with old school reading. I struggle with ebooks, too. Just doesn't feel quite like reading unless I have paper in my hands. I still print my manuscripts and edit with a red pen, and I recently learned a number of my writer friends edit entirely on a computer, which just sounds psychotic.
Books mentioned in this topic
Burn the Plans (other topics)Burn the Plans (other topics)
Burn the Plans (other topics)
Burn the Plans (other topics)
https://www.amazon.com/Heavy-Oceans-T...