I grew up hundreds of miles from the sea, and during my early years the idea of the ocean meant very little to me. My only trips to the beach when I was a kid consisted of two trips to Jekyll Island, Georgia when I had a cousin that lived there, and a single family vacation to Panama City, Florida. Oh yes, I almost forgot, we got to tag along with Uncle Jack and family when he won a contest vacation to St. Augustine. During that trip I don't even remember seeing the sea, as my cousin Nicky and me spent most of our time exploring the great and gracious Ponce de Leon Hotel. This Spanish style resort was unlike anything we had ever been exposed to; we knew we had entered a more rarefied atmosphere when on our first visit to the dining room we had an array of forks to choose from; their mysterious arrangement appearing as a test to determined who really belonged in such a place. I remember mom and dad appearing uncomfortable as they studied the baffling silverware. I have no memory of how we resolved the issue, but I don't recall going away hungry.
The other visits to the sea I mentioned were not without challenge, either. My very first time in the Atlantic my very life was in peril. Nicky and I (I always seemed to be with Nicky when things went wrong) had waded out to our waists at low tide and were splashing merrily about, as eight-year-olds are wont to do, when he returned to land to retrieve something. In the meantime, I lost myself in the warm water and gentle waves, feeling almost sleepy beneath a very hot sun, only remotely aware of a distant shouting. After a few moments of this dreamy inattention, it suddenly broke through to my consciousness that this shouting was drawing closer and closer. I also became aware of a lot of splashing. Turning back to face the beach, I could see that everyone to my right was fleeing toward shore, and even as I stood there, amazed and uncomprehending, the people to my left began to very actively join in this stunning migration. Then a single word separated itself from the others and floated from shore to me, somehow rising above all the din..."Shark!"
Though I had never given sharks much thought, and the book and movie version of "Jaws" was yet many years in the future, that single word managed to convey to me a keen sense of terror. As if dreaming, I turned my head in the direction the exodus had begun, and there, not so terribly far away, a large fin sliced through the calm waters further out, following the coastline at a leisurely pace. I could even see its tail whipping along behind it. Then I did what every rational person does in such a situation, I began to wade as quickly as my short, little legs would carry me toward terra firma, splashing and thrashing away; neither in a position to run nor to swim. It was then that I realized how life hangs on a moment...especially when it involves the great and billowing sea. I made it to shore unscathed, though rather shook up. I was told that despite all my agitation in the water, the great shark never wavered in its course, obviously uninterested in bony little boys...at least for that moment. I used this experience in a story entitled, "Natural Causes", which appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's November 2003 issue.
On my next visit, I was stung by a very small sting ray. It hurt, but didn't require medical attention. The only catastrophe of note that occurred during the Panama City visit was a sunburn that I shall never forget. Lest you think Cousin Nicky escaped unscathed, during the St. Augustine trip, on our first trek beyond the safety of the walls of the hotel courtyard he was attacked by a dog and bitten several times. A short time later he would make headlines by becoming stuck between two buildings and having to be removed by the fire department. My aunt keeps a yellowed copy of the local paper covering this extraordinary event which contains a grainy black and white photo of my favorite cousin wedged into a small gap between two brick office buildings. I was not with him, so can offer no explanation.
The second half of my life I have spent cheek-by-jowl with the Atlantic. And though time and experience has improved my overall opinion of the sea, it has certainly not lessened my respect for its power and capriciousness. Hurricane Sandy demonstrated that just recently. We were largely spared the worst of it here, but to the north of us there is great devastation. There could have been no hurricane without the cooperation of the mighty sea.
Sandy is only one of many, many storms I have lived and worked through; not to mention floods. The sea is always at work trying to reclaim the land. It also claims people. Hardly a winter goes by that a clamming or scallop boat is not lost at sea off our coast. During the balmy summer months swimmers are taken by rip-tides.
Sometimes the sea returns things: A lady once came into my police department to speak with a supervisor. As I was the sergeant on duty, I met with her and inquired how we might be of service. Opening her rather large hand-bag, she extracted something yellowish, placed it on the desk between us and asked, "Do I have to turn this in?" It was the lower jaw bone of a human being and still retained most of its teeth. Some bore fillings. My own lower jaw may have hit the desk; I don't remember. Being a crack investigator however, I cried, "Where the hell did you get that?" You might guess her answer. "I found it on the beach after a storm." The next statement surprised me a little. "I've been using it as a paperweight on my desk."
With little grace, she reluctantly parted with her prize. I had obtained enough information to both identify and locate her should I need to. Perhaps you can also guess what my first line of inquiry was? Yes, that 's it--I quickly determined whether any significant other in this strange lady's life had gone missing. She had a divorced husband, but he was still amongst the breathing. The jaw appeared quite old, though this can be very deceptive after not a very long time in the ocean. It did strike me that the fillings appeared to be made of steel, not something commonly, or at all, used in the U.S.--many foreign freighters pass our coastline, and men overboard are more common than it is comfortable to think about. In any event, the jaw was packaged off to the state medical examiners office. To my knowledge, a match with a missing person has never been made. It remains a mystery of the deep. Other things have been brought ashore by the sea, but are too grisly to discuss here.
Even so, most of us are very drawn to that same dangerous sea. On sunny days there's nothing more pleasant than lying on the warm sands as the sea laps the shore mere yards away, and gulls wheel in a flawless sky. It is, after all, where life began...even if it is also where it sometimes ends.
Countless mystery and suspense stories occur on, or next to, the sea. Most of mine do. I suspect you could name dozens of stories and novels inspired by the sea if you put your mind to it. In fact, if the sea were to vanish tomorrow (and we were to somehow survive this catastrophic event) half the stories yet to be written would probably remain so.
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
13 November 2012
15 October 2012
The Thirteenth Child
by Fran Rizer

Okay, I confess I don't like writing reviews. For one thing, while I lie for a living, I refuse to mislead readers by glorifying books that, to me, don't cut it.
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| David Dean checks out his new novel. |
If you enjoy being scared to go to bed alone, this is your kind of read. With a well-written, well-paced, yet steadily climbing, plot, The Thirteenth Child is a terrifying journey that will make the reader crazy with intrigue that turns to fear and then crashes into sheer horror at the end. It's not the customary roller coaster ride mentioned in many reviews. Instead, it's a fast uphill trip in a
police cruiser.
David Dean doesn't bog the reader down with info dumps or excessive backstory. The characters come alive on the pages through their actions, thoughts, and feelings. As the main storyline progresses, they grow to be so captivating that the reader fears for them and shares their pains and apprehensions.
Preston Howard, a former English Literature professor, isn't interested in anyone or anything as much as his bottle of high quality scotch or rotgut whiskey, depending on how much money he's swiped from his daughter Fanny that day. Preston doesn't grow inebriated--he gets stinking drunk. In that condition, he prefers to sleep in a shanty hidden in the woods near an elementary school instead of in the comfortable bed his daughter provides. He befriends a feral boy named Gabriel who is dangerous as well as spooky. This lands Preston smack in the middle of the cases of a missing seven-year-old girl and two teenage boys.

Nick (Police Chief Nicholas Catesby) has more than his share of problems. Single since his wife stepped out on their marriage and then left him, he's attracted to Preston's daughter Fanny, but how will that work when her father becomes a person of interest and then a suspect? A leak in the police department further complicates his life while deceitful betrayal by one of his officers looks as though it might cost Nick his job as well as control of the investigation of the youngsters who have disappeared.
Fanny Howard, Preston's daughter, is overwhelmed by the responsibilities of supporting her father financially and worrying what kind of new troubles his drinking will bring them. About the time that the chemistry she shares with Nick Catesby fires up the pages as well as Fanny's bed, the relationship is forbidden because her father's situation creates a conflict of duty for Nick. Even more chilling, though Fanny is a grown woman, she becomes the monster's next target.
Tension begins on page one and rises constantly with characters and action that pull the reader in. There's a monster to be vanquished, and identifying who (or what) he is creates an urgency that makes it impossible to stop reading until the explosive final confrontation.
Author David Dean describes the book as a horror story with "a bit of police procredural woven into it. It's not a gore-fest, but it is scary."

Available from Genius Book Publishing as paperback or eBook, David Dean's The Thirteenth Child delivers in all areas. How many stars? On a scale of one to five, I give it six stars, and I'll read it again.
Here are links for your convenience:
Until we meet again...take care of you and treat yourself to a good scare with David's new book.
Labels:
David Dean,
Fran Rizer,
horror,
police procedural
Location:
Columbia, SC, USA
29 May 2012
It's Alive!
by David Dean
Have you ever noticed that, as an adult, good news always seems to have a catch? When I was a kid it was very different. When something good happened, such as getting great presents on my birthday or at Christmas, I never questioned it and didn't have to hold my breath waiting for the dreaded catch. After all, what more could be asked of me when I had lived up to my end of the bargain? If I got a birthday present it was because I had survived another year--done! As for Christmas, well, if I hadn't been good all year, then what were those presents doing under the tree? Hah! No take backs, no conditions. Then I grew up and became a writer.
Writing, as we all know, is a odd profession that begins with a solitary writer pecking away somewhere all on his lonesome. Then, once his/her muse has been properly summoned and appeased, said writer produces a manuscript. This creation, upon subsequent readings, suddenly develops a life of its own and has to be wrestled to the ground in order to regain mastery. This sad contest can go on for days, weeks, even months or years. Meanwhile, our chastened writer must write anew, repeating the process over and over, thus populating his world with dozens of clanking, questing creations, some of which he may never drive forth into the greater world and readership. Instead, they occupy dusty corners of his home, and worse, his imagination, occasionally sitting up and looking about in confusion at having been left behind and glaring with hatred at their creator; rattling chains and straining to have at him. I believe I read once that the talented James Lincoln Warren has succeeded in having every story that he has written published. And he should have...if you've read his work then you know that he's very good at what he does. I have not fared quite as well, yet I persist. And sometimes this persistence pays off...but there's the catch.
A few years back I wrote a horror novel set in southern New Jersey. I know what you're thinking, "A horror novel? Have you lost your mind--what do you know about horror...or even novels?" Not much, I'm thinking, but that has never stopped me in the past, and it didn't this time. I wrote it and was moderately pleased that I had come up with something fairly unique and readable; maybe even commercially viable. Even my editorial board (Bridgid, Julian, and Tanya) didn't condemn it outright, but deemed it "entertaining". I was encouraged by this ringing endorsement.
Every agent I submitted it to disagreed. Dozens...actually more than dozens (I don't think it benefits anyone to go into actual numbers), managed to turn down my generous offer of partnership on this merry voyage. "Fools!" I cried. "You damned fools...I'm letting you in on the blockbuster of the year and you say...no?" They did.
After a while, I coaxed the monster back into its cell and padlocked it. For months afterward, I would be awakened in the night by its cries, threats, and laments. I drank heavily. At some point, I can't recall when, the cries, which had been growing fainter and fainter, faded away altogether, leaving the house in silence. I tried to forget. I wrote and wrote. There were successes and failures, but the "Novel" as I had come to call it, kept returning to haunt me at odd, unguarded moments. Finally, one day when Robin was away for the afternoon, I dug the key out of the clutter of my desk drawer and went down there. I opened the door...I opened the damned door! It was still there, barely alive; covered with dust and cobwebs, breathing faintly, with a thready, uncertain pulse. I dragged it out into the light. And, of course...it all started again! I made a few rewrites, a different beginning, tightened up a sentence or two. It groaned and flailed weakly, but was still unable to rise and stand on its own. What had I been thinking leaving it alone for so long? I blamed Robin, she had never cared for horror and made no secret of it. Perhaps her disdain (for now I could see it for what it was), had seeped into my work, poisoned my best efforts. I found her watching me in unguarded moments; quickly looking away when I caught her at it. She hated my novel! I knew it! She wanted me to put it away again!
But I schemed and plotted and soon I had found a way around both her and the damned agents! E-publishing! That's the ticket. I contacted a reputable firm recommended by MWA to help me prepare my creation for its entry into the virtual world. I e-mailed my manuscript to their proofreader. I didn't need any stinkin' agents, or even a publisher. I'm the publisher now, baby! I'm my own man!
The firm contacted me a few weeks later. After having read my novel, they wanted to publish it.
Say what?
Now this really screwed things up. I had this all figured out; I didn't need anybody! But as the words of the email sunk in, I began to chuckle, then laugh aloud. The irony of it all! And the wonderful feeling of smugness at being backed in my opinion by a perfect stranger. This, I suddenly realized, was the gift...the perfect gift!
But then I continued reading...there was more--there was a catch. The publisher deemed that for us to go forward together more work was required. My manuscript was in desperate need of a good developmental editor. If at the end of six months it failed to meet his requirements, then all bets were off. Oh, how skillfully he had thrown out the bait, how cruelly he had set the hook. How dare he! More work? And what the hell is a developmental editor?
So you see, my friends, there is always a catch. They know us writers...they know what we want and what we'll do to get it. We want our creations to stand up and walk on their own. To breath and bellow! To be allowed to walk in daylight along with all God's creatures. But "they" always want more work, and then...more and more work!
So now I have been graciously granted six months to accomplish what he wants, and he calls the shots--I'm just the writer again; little more than a temporary employee sans benefits. But there's a chance now...just a chance, I admit, that my baby will yet be set free. And on that glorious day the whole world shall hear me cry, "It's alive...it's alive!"
By the way, I know that a lot of you have already been down this road and I'd appreciate hearing your experiences, especially about working with editors.
Writing, as we all know, is a odd profession that begins with a solitary writer pecking away somewhere all on his lonesome. Then, once his/her muse has been properly summoned and appeased, said writer produces a manuscript. This creation, upon subsequent readings, suddenly develops a life of its own and has to be wrestled to the ground in order to regain mastery. This sad contest can go on for days, weeks, even months or years. Meanwhile, our chastened writer must write anew, repeating the process over and over, thus populating his world with dozens of clanking, questing creations, some of which he may never drive forth into the greater world and readership. Instead, they occupy dusty corners of his home, and worse, his imagination, occasionally sitting up and looking about in confusion at having been left behind and glaring with hatred at their creator; rattling chains and straining to have at him. I believe I read once that the talented James Lincoln Warren has succeeded in having every story that he has written published. And he should have...if you've read his work then you know that he's very good at what he does. I have not fared quite as well, yet I persist. And sometimes this persistence pays off...but there's the catch.
A few years back I wrote a horror novel set in southern New Jersey. I know what you're thinking, "A horror novel? Have you lost your mind--what do you know about horror...or even novels?" Not much, I'm thinking, but that has never stopped me in the past, and it didn't this time. I wrote it and was moderately pleased that I had come up with something fairly unique and readable; maybe even commercially viable. Even my editorial board (Bridgid, Julian, and Tanya) didn't condemn it outright, but deemed it "entertaining". I was encouraged by this ringing endorsement.
![]() |
| Univeral Pictures "Frankenstein" 1931 |
But I schemed and plotted and soon I had found a way around both her and the damned agents! E-publishing! That's the ticket. I contacted a reputable firm recommended by MWA to help me prepare my creation for its entry into the virtual world. I e-mailed my manuscript to their proofreader. I didn't need any stinkin' agents, or even a publisher. I'm the publisher now, baby! I'm my own man!
The firm contacted me a few weeks later. After having read my novel, they wanted to publish it.
Say what?
Now this really screwed things up. I had this all figured out; I didn't need anybody! But as the words of the email sunk in, I began to chuckle, then laugh aloud. The irony of it all! And the wonderful feeling of smugness at being backed in my opinion by a perfect stranger. This, I suddenly realized, was the gift...the perfect gift!
But then I continued reading...there was more--there was a catch. The publisher deemed that for us to go forward together more work was required. My manuscript was in desperate need of a good developmental editor. If at the end of six months it failed to meet his requirements, then all bets were off. Oh, how skillfully he had thrown out the bait, how cruelly he had set the hook. How dare he! More work? And what the hell is a developmental editor?
So you see, my friends, there is always a catch. They know us writers...they know what we want and what we'll do to get it. We want our creations to stand up and walk on their own. To breath and bellow! To be allowed to walk in daylight along with all God's creatures. But "they" always want more work, and then...more and more work!
![]() |
| Universal Pictures "Frankenstein" 1931 |
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