Dust off your vampire cloaks and polish your fangs. It's time to head into the night and enjoy costumed diversions amid other vampire fans. Mark your calendars for the following events this October...
Endless Night Vampire Ball of Florida: September 30-October 1 - Hollywood, FL
Vampire The Ball: September 30-October 2 - Heathrow, England
Festival of the Dead: October - Salem, MA
Vampyre Night Out: October 15 - Chicago, IL
The Vampires' Masquerade Ball: October 22 - Salem, MA
Vampire Ball: October 27 - Flint, MI
Bram Stoker International Film Festival: October 28-31 - Whitby, England
EyeCon: The Vampire Diaries 2 Celebrity Convention: October 28-30 - Atlanta, GA
Hallowhedon: October 28-30 - Heathrow, England
Theatre of the Vampires Ball: October 28 - New Orleans, LA
Undead Con: October 28 - New Orleans, LA
Carnival Du Vampires Rock: October 29 - Liverpool, England
The Endless Night Vampire Ball: October 29 - New Orleans, LA
Suburban Vampire is not affiliated with any of the above events. Please check age restrictions before you head out the door.
If you know of any other vampire celebrations scheduled for October 2011, please send me a note at suburbanvamp AT gmail.com.
Friday, September 30, 2011
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Interview & Giveaway: K.A. Corlett's EVER YOUR SERVANT or HOW RETAIL REALLY SUCKS
Joining me today is novelist K.A. Corlett, author of the sharp, witty, and romantic vampire tale Ever Your Servant or How Retail Really Sucks. I had the privilege of reading an earlier version of K.A.'s novel and absolutely loved her blend of vampires, workplace woes, and biting satire. Be sure to check out the Ever Your Servant giveaway at the end of the interview.
______________________________
Suburban Vampire: Welcome, K.A.! How did you first come up with the idea of merging the bloodsucking world of retail with an actual bloodsucker?
K.A. Corlett: Truly, when it all began, I was working in a department store and blithely collecting anecdotes as a form of protest. I mean, the most stupid, utterly puerile things occur in retail every day! And old-school department store retail is the dreary bastion of pastel walls, grimy baseboards, and water-stained ceiling tiles. Of soul-suckage, really. Then, one evening, as I was puzzling over how redemption might ever be achieved, this tall, elegant gent waltzed across my mind's eye. He was grinning ear to ear—not a pleasant smile, exactly, but one that was in sync with my own sentiments at the time. I was slow to sort out the ironies. But soon enough it became clear: even a pastel apocalypse needs its Pale Rider.
SV: What was your oddest experience in your own life as a retail employee?
KAC: Hmm... I actually can't repeat that one in polite company. But it did terminate in one of the best one-liners ever: (Read aloud in a Greco-Italian posturing accent) "I'm doin' you a fave-uhh 'cuz I know you like it."
SV: Oh, my. On a slightly less sinister note, tell us a little about your vampire, Maximillien Lambert (and feel free to make sure we're pronouncing his last name correctly).
KAC: Mais oui, that would be a nasal French 'a' (kind of an 'awm' said through your nose, without the 'm' actually being pronounced separately). The 'ber' is a lot more like 'bear' or 'bairrr'. Skip the final 't' while you're at it. It will still cause a raised eyebrow, but what can we do? Max is a disturbingly charming dead guy. He plays a mean jazz piano and an even meaner harpsichord. He's also an adept yogi who can mess with mortal wiring at fifty paces. When it comes to Death, he works for the Really Big Guns: Max is a devotee of Kali Ma, the fearsome blood-drinking Black Goddess of Hindu lore. Sleep with one eye open... you may already know too much.
SV: What would Max say about the current vampire entertainment craze?
KAC: Hmm... when I asked him, I believe he said, "This too shall pass." Then he smirked and added, "On the other hand, a more intimate relationship with Death could improve the human condition immensely."
SV: When and how did you first become interested in vampires?
KAC: I suppose I'd have to blame that on bad Saturday afternoon horror flicks back in the 1970s. That Bela Lugosi was one snappy dresser.
SV: What are some of your all-time favorite novels?
KAC: Alexandre Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo is right up there for me, and Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities runs neck and neck (pardon the pun) with that. Nothing like a good bleak bit of historical fiction set in France to get me going. Victor Hugo's Ninety-Three, Sabatini's Scaramouche... but I daresay I'm striking a bit of a theme. (Did I mention I'm obsessed with the French Revolution?) Before we leave the 18th and 19th centuries, of course, I mustn't neglect to mention Dracula and Frankenstein in their delicious horrible-ness... Ah, when folks could still write macabre sans splatter! The Phantom of the Opera is one weird little book (best Erik epithet ever read in a translation: "You booby!")... In terms of more contemporary pieces, I adore Christopher Moore's Lamb: The Gospel According to Bif, Christ's Childhood Pal, and pretty much drooled over Jonathan L. Howard's Johannes Cabal the Necromancer. And anything by Angela Carter, oh that goddess of poetic prose, but especially Nights at the Circus!
SV: What are you currently writing?
KAC: I've got a few things up me wee sleeve, including the anti-sequel to Ever Your Servant, tentatively titled In Her Service (lame, but I had to think of something, because the working title has so far been Tabernak. Oops.). I'm also working on a novella, The Commission, which is set in eighteenth-century France. Bubbling on the back burner are future projects like the story of the Vicomte de Porte-Noire's life (imagine Max not dead!), and a book that belongs just to Tony, that sexy Irish necromancer (before he became a sidekick). A collection of short stories is also in the works.
SV: Where can readers learn more about you and your work?
KAC: I cordially invite them, one and all, to join me at my web site, www.kacorlett.com. They can read a snatch of Ever Your Servant's opening chapters, a few short stories, and sneak previews of upcoming works there. They may also want to eye up my wares at Amazon.com, where they can snap up the new Coachlight Press e-book and POD editions of Ever Your Servant.
SV: Thanks so much for joining me in the burbs, K.A.! I wish you the best for Ever Your Servant.
KAC: My pleasure—thanks for having me!
CONTEST RULES:
K.A. Corlett has graciously offered to give away a free ebook copy of Ever Your Servant. To enter:
1. In the comments section of this post, answer the following question: What's the most miserable job—or most miserable job moment—you've ever had, be it in retail or otherwise?
2. Please include your email address or a website containing your contact info if you don't plan to check back on the day I draw the winner.
______________________________
Suburban Vampire: Welcome, K.A.! How did you first come up with the idea of merging the bloodsucking world of retail with an actual bloodsucker?
K.A. Corlett: Truly, when it all began, I was working in a department store and blithely collecting anecdotes as a form of protest. I mean, the most stupid, utterly puerile things occur in retail every day! And old-school department store retail is the dreary bastion of pastel walls, grimy baseboards, and water-stained ceiling tiles. Of soul-suckage, really. Then, one evening, as I was puzzling over how redemption might ever be achieved, this tall, elegant gent waltzed across my mind's eye. He was grinning ear to ear—not a pleasant smile, exactly, but one that was in sync with my own sentiments at the time. I was slow to sort out the ironies. But soon enough it became clear: even a pastel apocalypse needs its Pale Rider.
SV: What was your oddest experience in your own life as a retail employee?
| K.A. Corlett |
SV: Oh, my. On a slightly less sinister note, tell us a little about your vampire, Maximillien Lambert (and feel free to make sure we're pronouncing his last name correctly).
KAC: Mais oui, that would be a nasal French 'a' (kind of an 'awm' said through your nose, without the 'm' actually being pronounced separately). The 'ber' is a lot more like 'bear' or 'bairrr'. Skip the final 't' while you're at it. It will still cause a raised eyebrow, but what can we do? Max is a disturbingly charming dead guy. He plays a mean jazz piano and an even meaner harpsichord. He's also an adept yogi who can mess with mortal wiring at fifty paces. When it comes to Death, he works for the Really Big Guns: Max is a devotee of Kali Ma, the fearsome blood-drinking Black Goddess of Hindu lore. Sleep with one eye open... you may already know too much.
SV: What would Max say about the current vampire entertainment craze?
KAC: Hmm... when I asked him, I believe he said, "This too shall pass." Then he smirked and added, "On the other hand, a more intimate relationship with Death could improve the human condition immensely."
SV: When and how did you first become interested in vampires?
KAC: I suppose I'd have to blame that on bad Saturday afternoon horror flicks back in the 1970s. That Bela Lugosi was one snappy dresser.
SV: What are some of your all-time favorite novels?
KAC: Alexandre Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo is right up there for me, and Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities runs neck and neck (pardon the pun) with that. Nothing like a good bleak bit of historical fiction set in France to get me going. Victor Hugo's Ninety-Three, Sabatini's Scaramouche... but I daresay I'm striking a bit of a theme. (Did I mention I'm obsessed with the French Revolution?) Before we leave the 18th and 19th centuries, of course, I mustn't neglect to mention Dracula and Frankenstein in their delicious horrible-ness... Ah, when folks could still write macabre sans splatter! The Phantom of the Opera is one weird little book (best Erik epithet ever read in a translation: "You booby!")... In terms of more contemporary pieces, I adore Christopher Moore's Lamb: The Gospel According to Bif, Christ's Childhood Pal, and pretty much drooled over Jonathan L. Howard's Johannes Cabal the Necromancer. And anything by Angela Carter, oh that goddess of poetic prose, but especially Nights at the Circus!
SV: What are you currently writing?
KAC: I've got a few things up me wee sleeve, including the anti-sequel to Ever Your Servant, tentatively titled In Her Service (lame, but I had to think of something, because the working title has so far been Tabernak. Oops.). I'm also working on a novella, The Commission, which is set in eighteenth-century France. Bubbling on the back burner are future projects like the story of the Vicomte de Porte-Noire's life (imagine Max not dead!), and a book that belongs just to Tony, that sexy Irish necromancer (before he became a sidekick). A collection of short stories is also in the works.
SV: Where can readers learn more about you and your work?
KAC: I cordially invite them, one and all, to join me at my web site, www.kacorlett.com. They can read a snatch of Ever Your Servant's opening chapters, a few short stories, and sneak previews of upcoming works there. They may also want to eye up my wares at Amazon.com, where they can snap up the new Coachlight Press e-book and POD editions of Ever Your Servant.
SV: Thanks so much for joining me in the burbs, K.A.! I wish you the best for Ever Your Servant.
KAC: My pleasure—thanks for having me!
CONTEST RULES:
K.A. Corlett has graciously offered to give away a free ebook copy of Ever Your Servant. To enter:
1. In the comments section of this post, answer the following question: What's the most miserable job—or most miserable job moment—you've ever had, be it in retail or otherwise?
2. Please include your email address or a website containing your contact info if you don't plan to check back on the day I draw the winner.
DEADLINE: Monday, October 3, 2011, 8:00 AM Pacific Time
Monday, September 26, 2011
Music Monday: MY DADDY IS A VAMPIRE by The Meteors
We're heading back to 1981 for today's featured song: "My Daddy Is a Vampire" by British psychobilly band The Meteors.
"What's psychobilly?" you may ask. Combine punk rock, rockabilly, and lyrics containing black magic, horror, and science fiction imagery, and you'll get an idea of their distinctive musical sound. "My Daddy Is a Vampire" originally appeared on the band's first album, Meteor Madness, and in a short early-1980s film, also called Meteor Madness.
The Meteors' Website: kingsofpsychobilly.com
Download "My Daddy Is a Vampire" at Amazon.
"What's psychobilly?" you may ask. Combine punk rock, rockabilly, and lyrics containing black magic, horror, and science fiction imagery, and you'll get an idea of their distinctive musical sound. "My Daddy Is a Vampire" originally appeared on the band's first album, Meteor Madness, and in a short early-1980s film, also called Meteor Madness.
The Meteors' Website: kingsofpsychobilly.com
Download "My Daddy Is a Vampire" at Amazon.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Reading Events to Keep You Busy through October
Halloween is creeping around the bend, which means authors, publishers, and book bloggers are already in the midst of offering dark and eerie entertainment.
Here are a few activities already underway or coming soon:

Hosted by Stainless Steel Droppings, the annual event invites readers to "confront gothic, creepy, horror stories in all their chilling delight."
To participate in the challenge, which runs through Halloween, head to www.stainlesssteeldroppings.com/r-eaders-i-mbibing-p-eril-vi.
A month-long celebration of horror and thriller books, hosted by JennsBookshelves.com, home of Frightful Fridays. During the entire month of October, Jenn will host guest posts and giveaways for fans of the dark side of fiction.
Check out details at www.jennsbookshelves.com/2011/08/05/frightful-friday-murders-monsters-mayhem.
From now through November 4, novelist Stefan Petrucha will be tweeting a quote a day via @SPetrucha for his upcoming zombie noir from Roc Books, Dead Mann Walking.
The synopsis:
JUST BECAUSE YOU'RE DEAD
DOESN'T MEAN YOU CAN'T HAVE A LIFE...
After Hessius Mann was convicted of his wife's murder, suppressed evidence came to light and the verdict was overturned — too bad he was already executed.
Thanks to the miracles of modern science, Hessius was brought back to life. Sort of. Now that he's joined the ranks of Fort Hammer's pulse-challenged population, Hessius attempts to make a “living” as a private investigator.
But when a missing persons case leads to a few zombies cut to pieces, Hessius starts thinking that someone's giving him the run-around — and it's not like he's in any condition to make a quick getaway...
Sample Tweet: "Eventually the damage gets too severe to patch with Krazy Glue. But so what if pieces dangle?"
twitter.com/SPetrucha
Guests & Giveaways Right Here at Suburban Vampire
Make sure you pay me a visit every Tuesday from now through Halloween. I'll be hosting new and established authors in the vampire genre and offering heaping helpings of Halloween treats.
Next Tuesday's guest: K.A. Corlett, author of Ever Your Servant or How Retail Really Sucks.
Happy reading.
Here are a few activities already underway or coming soon:

The Sixth Annual R.eaders I.mbibing P.eril Challenge
Hosted by Stainless Steel Droppings, the annual event invites readers to "confront gothic, creepy, horror stories in all their chilling delight."
To participate in the challenge, which runs through Halloween, head to www.stainlesssteeldroppings.com/r-eaders-i-mbibing-p-eril-vi.
Murder, Monsters, Mayhem
A month-long celebration of horror and thriller books, hosted by JennsBookshelves.com, home of Frightful Fridays. During the entire month of October, Jenn will host guest posts and giveaways for fans of the dark side of fiction.
Check out details at www.jennsbookshelves.com/2011/08/05/frightful-friday-murders-monsters-mayhem.
Stefan Petrucha's Dead Mann Walking Tweets
From now through November 4, novelist Stefan Petrucha will be tweeting a quote a day via @SPetrucha for his upcoming zombie noir from Roc Books, Dead Mann Walking.
The synopsis:
JUST BECAUSE YOU'RE DEAD
DOESN'T MEAN YOU CAN'T HAVE A LIFE...
After Hessius Mann was convicted of his wife's murder, suppressed evidence came to light and the verdict was overturned — too bad he was already executed.
Thanks to the miracles of modern science, Hessius was brought back to life. Sort of. Now that he's joined the ranks of Fort Hammer's pulse-challenged population, Hessius attempts to make a “living” as a private investigator.
But when a missing persons case leads to a few zombies cut to pieces, Hessius starts thinking that someone's giving him the run-around — and it's not like he's in any condition to make a quick getaway...
Sample Tweet: "Eventually the damage gets too severe to patch with Krazy Glue. But so what if pieces dangle?"
twitter.com/SPetrucha
Guests & Giveaways Right Here at Suburban Vampire
Make sure you pay me a visit every Tuesday from now through Halloween. I'll be hosting new and established authors in the vampire genre and offering heaping helpings of Halloween treats.
Next Tuesday's guest: K.A. Corlett, author of Ever Your Servant or How Retail Really Sucks.
Happy reading.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Tim Burton's First DARK SHADOWS Photo
Entertainment Weekly just released the first official cast picture for Tim Burton's upcoming movie adaptation of the classic Gothic soap opera, Dark Shadows.
The photo looks frighteningly similar to my childhood in the 1970s, minus my family's orange couch and shag carpet, so I suppose Tim Burton is succeeding in capturing the essence of the original Dark Shadows time period.
The cast members include Johnny Depp as vampire Barnabas Collins (he's the one in the middle with the signature Barnabas-style cane), Helena Bonham Carter, Chloë Moretz, Eva Green, Gulliver McGrath, Bella Heathcote, Ray Shirley, Jackie Earle Haley, Jonny Lee Miller, and Michelle Pfeiffer. For the full Entertainment Weekly article, head to insidemovies.ew.com.
The photo looks frighteningly similar to my childhood in the 1970s, minus my family's orange couch and shag carpet, so I suppose Tim Burton is succeeding in capturing the essence of the original Dark Shadows time period.
The cast members include Johnny Depp as vampire Barnabas Collins (he's the one in the middle with the signature Barnabas-style cane), Helena Bonham Carter, Chloë Moretz, Eva Green, Gulliver McGrath, Bella Heathcote, Ray Shirley, Jackie Earle Haley, Jonny Lee Miller, and Michelle Pfeiffer. For the full Entertainment Weekly article, head to insidemovies.ew.com.
Winner of Denise Verrico's TWILIGHT OF THE GODS
The winner of an ebook copy of Denise Verrico's Twilight of the Gods is...
CLAIRE
Congratulations! Thanks so much to Denise for joining me again at Suburban Vampire. If you missed her visits, check out last week's post and her 2010 interview.
For more information about the author, head to www.deniseverricowriter.webs.com.
CLAIRE
Congratulations! Thanks so much to Denise for joining me again at Suburban Vampire. If you missed her visits, check out last week's post and her 2010 interview.
For more information about the author, head to www.deniseverricowriter.webs.com.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Last Chance to Enter to Win Denise Verrico's TWILIGHT OF THE GODS
The deadline to enter Denise Verrico's contest for a free ebook copy of Twilight of the Gods is tomorrow morning, Thursday, September 22, at 8:00 AM PDT. Don't miss out!
ENTER HERE
ENTER HERE
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
THE ANNOTATED CARMILLA Blog Tour
To celebrate the release of The Annotated Carmilla, editor D. MacDowell Blue is traveling the blogosphere with a rare Polish television adaptation of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's classic vampire tale. I'm sharing the video below, but the movie will only be available during the remainder of the blog tour, which ends October 12.
She was also hungry.
Ever since its publication in 1872, Carmilla has been a classic of the vampire genre. Now at last a comprehensive guide to Le Fanu's work exists, including answers to questions many have not even thought to ask!
Past Blog Tour Participants:
Night Tinted Glasses
Facebook Page of the Tour
A Paranormal Lovers View
Review of The Polish Carmilla
Search for the Lure of the Vampire
Chastity's Romance News
The Graveyard (Lair of Gary James)
Future Participants:
Dustin Bishop
Eventide Envisions
The Ramblings of Amy
Kay Dee Royal, Paranormal & Erotica Romance Musings
Illusions of Intimacy
The Annotated Carmilla at Amazon
The Annotated Carmilla Synopsis:
Surrounded by forests and empty valleys in Styria, Laura grew up with her father and almost no one else. Then SHE arrived. Carmilla. Beautiful and kind, fragile and lonely. As mysterious as she was devoted to Laura.She was also hungry.
Ever since its publication in 1872, Carmilla has been a classic of the vampire genre. Now at last a comprehensive guide to Le Fanu's work exists, including answers to questions many have not even thought to ask!
Rare Polish Television Adaptation of Carmilla:
Past Blog Tour Participants:
Night Tinted Glasses
Facebook Page of the Tour
A Paranormal Lovers View
Review of The Polish Carmilla
Search for the Lure of the Vampire
Chastity's Romance News
The Graveyard (Lair of Gary James)
Future Participants:
Dustin Bishop
Eventide Envisions
The Ramblings of Amy
Kay Dee Royal, Paranormal & Erotica Romance Musings
Illusions of Intimacy
The Annotated Carmilla at Amazon
Monday, September 19, 2011
Music Monday: Blondie's NO EXIT
Some of my earliest memories consist of dancing to music by Blondie in my family's living room, thanks to my dad's love of the band. I was singing songs like "Rip Her to Shreds" and "Atomic" long before I knew what the lyrics meant and envying my friend's Debbie Harry hairstyle.
Last week, I was ecstatic to discover Panic of Girls, Blondie's newly released studio album (their ninth). To celebrate the legendary group's return to the spotlight, I'm making today's Music Monday featured vampire song "No Exit," a track from Blondie's 1999 album of the same name.
Take Johann Sebastian Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D minor," combine it with rappers Coolio and Loud Allstars (Inspectah Deck, U-God, and Mobb Deep), and add Debbie Harry's signature voice declaring, "There's no sin in this: getting dressed to kill." The result: vampire music, Blondie style.
Download "No Exit" at Amazon
Download Panic of Girls (Amazon Exclusive)
Last week, I was ecstatic to discover Panic of Girls, Blondie's newly released studio album (their ninth). To celebrate the legendary group's return to the spotlight, I'm making today's Music Monday featured vampire song "No Exit," a track from Blondie's 1999 album of the same name.
Take Johann Sebastian Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D minor," combine it with rappers Coolio and Loud Allstars (Inspectah Deck, U-God, and Mobb Deep), and add Debbie Harry's signature voice declaring, "There's no sin in this: getting dressed to kill." The result: vampire music, Blondie style.
Download "No Exit" at Amazon
Download Panic of Girls (Amazon Exclusive)
Friday, September 16, 2011
Guest Post & Giveaway with Denise Verrico, Author of the IMMORTYL REVOLUTION Series
Guest blogging today is novelist Denise Verrico, who first chatted with me about her Immortyl Revolution series last September. She's here to discuss her newest release, My Fearful Symmetry, and the inspiration behind her vampire characters. Welcome, Denise!
______________________________
By Denise Verrico
When I set out to write Cara Mia my first Immortyl Revolution novel, I read a lot of books on vampire legends. I’ve always been attracted to the figure of the vampire. The all-powerful vampire appealed to me as a kind of dark superhero. Almost every culture has some sort of vampire myth. Like most people, I was familiar with the Eastern European vampire myths. In these stories, the vampire is typically thought of as an “undead” demon or re-animated corpse that feeds on the lifeblood or sometimes the soul or sexual energy of human victims.
As I dug further into the lore, I found that a lot of evidence points to these vampire legends first appearing in India. This gave me the basis of the Immortyl culture of my vampire series. Indian mythology provides many examples of vampire-like spirits and deities, but one deity often associated with vampirism is Kali, a fierce form of the mother goddess (Shakti) and consort of Shiva. Kali is an intimidating figure, usually depicted as emaciated with withered dark blue or black skin and three eyes. She even wears the body parts of her victims as jewelry and has a blood-red tongue that sticks out in defiance. Her favorite places are battlefields, where she and her attendants, the dakini, become intoxicated on the blood of victims.
Because of this fearsome image and some pop-culture references to her, Kali is an often-misunderstood figure in the West. However, Kali is the goddess of time, not death, and only slays evil demons. Symbolically, she annihilates the selfish impulses and ego that bind us to our material bodies. Her aspect may be ferocious, but she is called Kali Maa (Mother Kali) and is revered in many parts of India. Historically, only one group associated with Kali was known for violence, the Thugees. These devotees would waylay travelers and use them as blood sacrifices to the goddess. The Thugees were the inspiration behind the Kali worshipers in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, hence a lot of the western misconception.
Tantric cults often focus on Kali. Tantra is an older religious tradition than Hinduism, dating back before the Aryan tribes migrated into India. These groups center on Shakti (female principle) worship and sometimes use sex and even blood in their rituals. The idea behind this is to gain control over the body to capture divine energy and gain blessings. The more I read, the more I became fascinated with the stories surrounding Kali and tantric practices. This led me to imagine the origin of the Immortyl culture and their own religion based on tantra. In my research, I also came across accounts of the devidasi. These were female temple devotees, skilled in music and dance and frequently exploited as courtesans. Some of them actually wielded surprising power.
The devidasi inspired the adepts of the ancient arts in my series. These extraordinarily beautiful male and female Immortyls serve Kali as singers, musicians and dancers. Like their historical counterparts the devidasi, they are employed as courtesans. The sexual aspect of the adepts’ art is an elaborate tantric ritual symbolizing the act of Immortyl creation.
The latest Immortyl Revolution novel, My Fearful Symmetry, is set mostly in India at the chief elder’s court. Here Immortyls live much as they did three thousand years ago. Nineteen-year-old Cedric MacKinnon, fresh from the modern-day streets of London, is trained as an adept and becomes entangled in a web of intrigue centered on the revolution started by Mia and Kurt in the first two books. The young man soon realizes that the chief elder uses Kali’s fearsome reputation as a tool to exert control over other Immortyls. Cedric is at first highly skeptical of the Goddess’ power, but after much trial and tribulation he begins to question his disbelief.
I like to call Cedric my naughty boy. He’s highly irreverent, funny, sexy, and flamboyant. If he had his druthers, he’d be the front man of a rock band. The boy is irrepressible. Even after all the crap I put him through, he fights on. It was a blast writing from the point of view of this male character after writing two books from Mia’s.
If you haven’t read the first two books, never fear. My Fearful Symmetry can be read first in the series because the saga is seen through fresh eyes. The reader can then go back later and read Mia and Kurt’s story in the first two books.
Links:
immortylrevolution.blogspot.com
deniseverricowriter.webs.com
Facebook Page for Immortyl Revolution Fans
Facebook Page for Cedric MacKinnon, Male Vampire Courtesan and Badass
CONTEST RULES:
Denise Verrico has graciously offered a a free ebook copy of Twilight of the Gods, the second novel in her Immortyl Revolution series.
To enter:
1. Leave a comment for Denise or for her character Cedric—"Male Vampire Courtesan and Badass"—in the comments section of this post.
2. Please include your email address if you don't plan to check back on the day I draw the winner.
______________________________
A Different Take on Vampire Mythology
By Denise Verrico
When I set out to write Cara Mia my first Immortyl Revolution novel, I read a lot of books on vampire legends. I’ve always been attracted to the figure of the vampire. The all-powerful vampire appealed to me as a kind of dark superhero. Almost every culture has some sort of vampire myth. Like most people, I was familiar with the Eastern European vampire myths. In these stories, the vampire is typically thought of as an “undead” demon or re-animated corpse that feeds on the lifeblood or sometimes the soul or sexual energy of human victims.
As I dug further into the lore, I found that a lot of evidence points to these vampire legends first appearing in India. This gave me the basis of the Immortyl culture of my vampire series. Indian mythology provides many examples of vampire-like spirits and deities, but one deity often associated with vampirism is Kali, a fierce form of the mother goddess (Shakti) and consort of Shiva. Kali is an intimidating figure, usually depicted as emaciated with withered dark blue or black skin and three eyes. She even wears the body parts of her victims as jewelry and has a blood-red tongue that sticks out in defiance. Her favorite places are battlefields, where she and her attendants, the dakini, become intoxicated on the blood of victims.
Because of this fearsome image and some pop-culture references to her, Kali is an often-misunderstood figure in the West. However, Kali is the goddess of time, not death, and only slays evil demons. Symbolically, she annihilates the selfish impulses and ego that bind us to our material bodies. Her aspect may be ferocious, but she is called Kali Maa (Mother Kali) and is revered in many parts of India. Historically, only one group associated with Kali was known for violence, the Thugees. These devotees would waylay travelers and use them as blood sacrifices to the goddess. The Thugees were the inspiration behind the Kali worshipers in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, hence a lot of the western misconception.
Tantric cults often focus on Kali. Tantra is an older religious tradition than Hinduism, dating back before the Aryan tribes migrated into India. These groups center on Shakti (female principle) worship and sometimes use sex and even blood in their rituals. The idea behind this is to gain control over the body to capture divine energy and gain blessings. The more I read, the more I became fascinated with the stories surrounding Kali and tantric practices. This led me to imagine the origin of the Immortyl culture and their own religion based on tantra. In my research, I also came across accounts of the devidasi. These were female temple devotees, skilled in music and dance and frequently exploited as courtesans. Some of them actually wielded surprising power.
The devidasi inspired the adepts of the ancient arts in my series. These extraordinarily beautiful male and female Immortyls serve Kali as singers, musicians and dancers. Like their historical counterparts the devidasi, they are employed as courtesans. The sexual aspect of the adepts’ art is an elaborate tantric ritual symbolizing the act of Immortyl creation.
The latest Immortyl Revolution novel, My Fearful Symmetry, is set mostly in India at the chief elder’s court. Here Immortyls live much as they did three thousand years ago. Nineteen-year-old Cedric MacKinnon, fresh from the modern-day streets of London, is trained as an adept and becomes entangled in a web of intrigue centered on the revolution started by Mia and Kurt in the first two books. The young man soon realizes that the chief elder uses Kali’s fearsome reputation as a tool to exert control over other Immortyls. Cedric is at first highly skeptical of the Goddess’ power, but after much trial and tribulation he begins to question his disbelief.
I like to call Cedric my naughty boy. He’s highly irreverent, funny, sexy, and flamboyant. If he had his druthers, he’d be the front man of a rock band. The boy is irrepressible. Even after all the crap I put him through, he fights on. It was a blast writing from the point of view of this male character after writing two books from Mia’s.
If you haven’t read the first two books, never fear. My Fearful Symmetry can be read first in the series because the saga is seen through fresh eyes. The reader can then go back later and read Mia and Kurt’s story in the first two books.
Links:
immortylrevolution.blogspot.com
deniseverricowriter.webs.com
Facebook Page for Immortyl Revolution Fans
Facebook Page for Cedric MacKinnon, Male Vampire Courtesan and Badass
CONTEST RULES: Denise Verrico has graciously offered a a free ebook copy of Twilight of the Gods, the second novel in her Immortyl Revolution series.
To enter:
1. Leave a comment for Denise or for her character Cedric—"Male Vampire Courtesan and Badass"—in the comments section of this post.
2. Please include your email address if you don't plan to check back on the day I draw the winner.
DEADLINE: Thursday, September 22, 2011, 8:00 AM Pacific Time
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
THE DEAD HOUR
The first teaser trailer for the new season of the horror webseries The Dead Hour is now available:
The Dead Hour is an indie horror anthology series that centers around a mysterious and sexy radio DJ who brings her audience dark and twisted tales each night. The first season launched last fall, and webisodes can be seen exclusively at www.thedeadhour.com.
Season 2 is currently in production and will feature nine new episodes that will premiere October 18, 2011, also exclusively on the series' website.
More news, updates, and behind-the-scenes features can be found on the Magnum Pictures Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/magnumpictures.
The Dead Hour is an indie horror anthology series that centers around a mysterious and sexy radio DJ who brings her audience dark and twisted tales each night. The first season launched last fall, and webisodes can be seen exclusively at www.thedeadhour.com.Season 2 is currently in production and will feature nine new episodes that will premiere October 18, 2011, also exclusively on the series' website.
More news, updates, and behind-the-scenes features can be found on the Magnum Pictures Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/magnumpictures.
Monday, September 12, 2011
The Winner of Kathryn Leigh Scott's DARK PASSAGES
The winner of Kathryn Leigh Scott's
Dark Passages
is . . .
Congratulations, CJ!
Kathryn: Thanks so much for making Suburban Vampire your first stop on the Dark Passages blog tour. We'll eagerly await news of your next publications, and we can't wait to see your cameo in Tim Burton's upcoming version of Dark Shadows!
Thanks also to everyone who entered Kathryn's giveaway. If you didn't get a chance to win, make sure you run out and get your copy of Dark Passages
today.
Dark Passages at Amazon
Dark Passages
CJ Barnette
Congratulations, CJ!
Kathryn: Thanks so much for making Suburban Vampire your first stop on the Dark Passages blog tour. We'll eagerly await news of your next publications, and we can't wait to see your cameo in Tim Burton's upcoming version of Dark Shadows!
Thanks also to everyone who entered Kathryn's giveaway. If you didn't get a chance to win, make sure you run out and get your copy of Dark Passages
Dark Passages at Amazon
Contest for DARK PASSAGES Closed
The contest for Kathryn Leigh Scott's Dark Passages is now closed. I will announce the winner at ~10:30 AM PDT.
Friday, September 9, 2011
Release Party for BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER Comic Series, Season 9
Portland's Dark Horse Comics will be throwing a release party for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Season 9, written by creator Joss Whedon, with Andrew Chambliss of the CW's The Vampire Diaries.
WHEN: Wednesday, September 14, 2011
TIME: 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
WHERE: Things from Another World
4133 NE Sandy Blvd., Portland, OR
WHAT: Editor Scott Allie and artist Georges Jeanty will be on hand to answer questions. Guests will receive a free Buffy swag bag from Dark Horse with the purchase of Buffy Season 9 #1 (while supplies last) and enjoy free beer (with valid ID) from Columbia River Brewing Company.
If you can't make it to the premiere party, you can still enjoy Buffy by pre-ordering the newest issue at tfaw.com.
Season 9 Synopsis:
Season 8 ended with a bang when Buffy cut the world off from the hell dimensions and all supernatural influence. Great, right? Except Buffy has left her best friend, Willow, powerless, and ended the long line of vampire slayers, leaving her hated by the hundreds of girls who recently stood behind her. Newly relocated to San Francisco, Buffy can count on a fresh start, and focus on what she's good at—slaying.
www.darkhorse.com
WHEN: Wednesday, September 14, 2011
TIME: 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
WHERE: Things from Another World
4133 NE Sandy Blvd., Portland, OR
WHAT: Editor Scott Allie and artist Georges Jeanty will be on hand to answer questions. Guests will receive a free Buffy swag bag from Dark Horse with the purchase of Buffy Season 9 #1 (while supplies last) and enjoy free beer (with valid ID) from Columbia River Brewing Company.
If you can't make it to the premiere party, you can still enjoy Buffy by pre-ordering the newest issue at tfaw.com.
Season 9 Synopsis:
Season 8 ended with a bang when Buffy cut the world off from the hell dimensions and all supernatural influence. Great, right? Except Buffy has left her best friend, Willow, powerless, and ended the long line of vampire slayers, leaving her hated by the hundreds of girls who recently stood behind her. Newly relocated to San Francisco, Buffy can count on a fresh start, and focus on what she's good at—slaying.
www.darkhorse.com
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
A Belated Music Monday in Honor of My DARK SHADOWS Guest
You still have time to enter to win a copy of Kathryn Leigh Scott's vampire novel, Dark Passages
. Kathryn stopped by on Monday to chat about her life as a Dark Shadows regular, a Playboy Bunny, and an author. Details about her Dark Passages giveaway are listed at the end of her post.
I haven't featured any Music Mondays lately due to my hectic summer schedule. Even though it's Wednesday, two days later than usual (and there's no fun alliteration involved with "Music Wednesdays"), I've decided to spotlight the music of Dark Shadows in honor of Kathryn.
There are a few soundtrack options for fans of the Gothic 60s soap, from Dark Shadows: The 30th Anniversary Collection
to The Original Music of Dark Shadows
. The most extensive (and, therefore, priciest) choice is Dark Shadows: Complete Soundtrack Music Collection
, an eight-disc(!) CD set. The composer is Robert Cobert, who went on to create soundtracks for the various Dark Shadows series and movies that followed (although Danny Elfman will be composing the 2012 movie adaptation).
Here's a small taste of Cobert's classic spooky-60s sound:
If you'd like to try playing Cobert's music yourself, it might help to have a theremin in your house. If that's not possible, you can find arrangements for your piano or keyboard in the Dark Shadows Music Book
.
I haven't featured any Music Mondays lately due to my hectic summer schedule. Even though it's Wednesday, two days later than usual (and there's no fun alliteration involved with "Music Wednesdays"), I've decided to spotlight the music of Dark Shadows in honor of Kathryn.
There are a few soundtrack options for fans of the Gothic 60s soap, from Dark Shadows: The 30th Anniversary Collection
Here's a small taste of Cobert's classic spooky-60s sound:
If you'd like to try playing Cobert's music yourself, it might help to have a theremin in your house. If that's not possible, you can find arrangements for your piano or keyboard in the Dark Shadows Music Book
Monday, September 5, 2011
Guest Post & Giveway with Author/DARK SHADOWS Actress Kathryn Leigh Scott
![]() |
| Kathryn Leigh Scott |
Today she's kicking off a blog tour for her debut vampire novel, Dark Passages
About the Novel:
"Dark Passages is a deliciously wicked witches’ brew—a sly look at the swinging Sixties, a private glimpse behind the scenes of the New York Playboy Club, and, to top it all off, a supernatural tale of love and personal empowerment on the set of a hit TV show suspiciously similar to Dark Shadows—in which the author once starred!" —Robert Masello, author of The Medusa Amulet
"Reading Dark Passages was like being back on the sets of Dark Shadows, except with real vampires behind the scenes!"
—Jonathan Frid, Barnabas Collins on Dark Shadows
___________________________________________________
Guest Post:
KATHRYN LEIGH SCOTT, author of DARK PASSAGES
KATHRYN LEIGH SCOTT, author of DARK PASSAGES
Dark Passages is, for me, a very personal book. It’s a novel—certainly not a memoir! None of the events in Dark Passages actually happened in my own life, but I wanted to capture that period of great change and intense discovery that I did experience when I left my home town after high school and went to the big city.
It was not only a time of great change for me but also for our country, which is why I chose to bookend my story with two significant events: the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962 and the assassination of President Kennedy in November 1963, just a year and a month later. That time frame also marked my first year in New York City.
True, I did grow up on a farm in Minnesota and move to New York with dreams of becoming an actress. I did work as a Bunny at the New York Playboy Club to support myself until I got my big break, a role on the afternoon Gothic Romance soap, Dark Shadows—and all of that is part of the background, the setting for my novel. But Dark Passages is about Meg Harrison’s very secret life as a vampire living among mortals. Everything that a young woman would experience leaving her home and family for the first time, exploring a strange, new city, making friends, launching a career and finding love and romance, are all heightened by the fact that Meg has no one to guide her, no one to confide in or provide support. She also challenges herself with her commitment to make it on her own without utilizing her paranormal gifts.
When I was creating the character of Maggie Evans on Dark Shadows, I thought about a Carl Sandburg poem I read in high school, called "Mamie." “Mamie beat her head against the bars of a small Indiana town and dreamed of romance and adventure somewhere . . . down the railroad track.” That’s Maggie, and it also expresses the yearning and youthful dreams of Meg Harrison.
I also took a cue from Jonathan Frid, who created the iconic character of Barnabas Collins, the reluctant vampire who was repulsed by the curse that made him harm other people to satisfy his blood lust—and sought a cure. I have created my own world of vampire life, one that I am exploring further in my sequel to Dark Passages.
Obviously, I’ve written Dark Passages with more than a passing nod to Dark Shadows. This year, while we celebrate the 45th anniversary of Dark Shadows, Johnny Depp is playing Barnabas Collins in the new Warner Bros. film, directed by Tim Burton. Thanks to the Internet, it is now no secret that you may catch a glimpse of me, Lara Parker, David Selby, and Jonathan Frid in the new Warner Bros. film, due to be released in May 2012.
Readers of my nonfiction books about the series know what really happened all those years ago when a small company of actors got together and created the world of Dark Shadows. Now I’m satisfying my itch to write a novel about that time and that world—combining elements of horror, romance, and fantasy to tell my own story about a vampire, a witch, and unrequited love.
—Kathryn Leigh Scott
Contest Rules:
To enter:
1. You must have a U.S. mailing address.
2. Leave a comment for Kathryn in the comments section of this post (I've been told she'll be stopping by to chat with readers).
3. Please include your email address if you don't plan to check back on the day I draw the winner (you do not need to list your snail mail address).
DEADLINE: Monday, September 12, 2011, 8:00 AM Pacific Time
Good luck!
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