Monday, March 29, 2010

Mailbox Monday 3/29

Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came into their house last week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists. Thanks, so much, to Marcia at The Printed Page, for hosting this awesomely fun meme!!

Very Valentine: A Novel
Very Valentine by Adriana Trigiani (from publisher)


Brava, Valentine: A Novel
Brava, Valentine by Adriana Trigiani (from publisher)

The Karma Club
The Karma Club by: Jessica Brody (from publisher)

The Blue Orchard: A Novel
The Blue Orchard by: Jackson Taylor (from Simon & Schuster)

Shadow Princess: A Novel
Shadow Princess by: Indu Sundaresan (from Simon & Schuster)

The Finishing Touches
The Finishing Touches by: Hester Browne (from Simon & Schuster)

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter by: Seth Grahame-Smith (purchased at Barnes & Noble)

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass - Original Version
Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll (bday gift)




Sunday, March 28, 2010

Personal WIP - input please

Prologue:

Screams echo, resounding and piercing the quiet cloak of the night. Mockingly, bright stars glisten and carpet the sky above, speaking of heavenly dreams, even as hell is erupting upon the earth.

His hand slides down her body, the rough texture like sand on satin. She cringes as she smells the whiskey on his breath. Lips near her ear whisper, “You are mine.”

Twisting her head side to side, her hair silver in the moonlight, her skin like alabaster. She screams again and again, as the noxious scent of him fills her nostrils, fills her pores and fills her mind with visions of death. This time there would be no escape.

“You thought you could get away, didn’t you? Think again, bitch. You are mine and eternally your soul will burn in hell with me.”

Feeling a sense of hopelessness surround her, chocking off all hope, she closes her eyes tight, praying that it will be quick, painless and that God will have mercy upon her soul. The tip of a knife pierces her, hard steel cutting into softness. A whimper escapes her, it reaches out from deep within. She feels the knife retreat, a glimmer of hope sparks to life within, only to be quickly extinguished as pain erupts from her side, a pain unlike any other she has ever felt before.

Opening her eyes wide, she looks up into his. Bright blue, shimmering evil. A pure and unadulterated evil, as menacing laughter surrounds her. Slowly, she feels the blood drain from her body, as her life begins to seep from her.

“No, no, noooooo! Please, nooooo!” She screams, or at least her mind echoes with her screams. Whether or not they reach beyond her, was anyone’s guess. Darkness, deep and unforgiving, takes over as she closes her eyes for a final time.

Chapter 1

Screaming, with sweat dripping from her body, Emma jerks upright in her bed. Gasping for breath, as if a blanket has just been removed from her face, she twists her head from side to side. Taking in the sweat- soaked and twisted blankets around her, she slowly begins to calm herself. She is home, safe, in her own bed. Just another dream. No, another nightmare. When would they ever stop? Would she ever escape and have her life fully back?

The shrill ring of the telephone brings Emma back to herself, or at least what little of herself was left. Glancing at the bedside clock, the blood-red numbers let her know that it is 7:30. It is Saturday morning, her first morning off in over two weeks. Who could be calling this early and why?

Wiping her sweat-soaked hair away from her face, Emma reaches for the phone, realizing for a split second that her hand is shaking like a coke addict in withdrawals.


*copyright April Pohren 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

Feature Friday

Here are a few great sounding books that I came across to share. I would love to hear from anyone who has read any of them! They have, of course, made it to my wish list, lol!

Black Rain: A Thriller
Black Rain
By: Graham Brown 
Mass Market Paperback: 528 pages 
Publisher: Dell; Original edition (January 26, 2010) 
Language: English 
ISBN-10: 0553592416 
ISBN-13: 978-0553592412

Far from the gleaming monuments of Washington D.C., talented and headstrong operative Danielle Laidlaw  commands an American expedition into the darkest reaches of the Amazon. Their goal: a lost Mayan city that does not belong in the Amazon and find that could transform the very world. 

Leaning on the knowledge and wisdom of a troubled university professor named McCarter and protected by 
an ex-patriot American mercenary named Hawker, the team sets out with the truth hidden from them—they are replacements for a group that went out weeks before and was never heard from again.
Attacked by a ruthless competitor, threatened by a violent, indigenous tribe and stalked by an hidden enemy that leaves only battered corpses in its wake, the team fights for survival.  Their only hope may lie in the connection between the deadly reality of the Mayan legend; the nomadic tribe that haunts them; and the chilling secret buried deep beneath the ancient ruins.

But can they discover it in time?


Wish Her Safe at Home (New York Review Books Classics) 
Wish Her Safe at Home
By: Stephen Benatar
Paperback: 240 pages 
Publisher: NYRB Classics (January 19, 2010) 
Language: English 
ISBN-10: 159017335X 
ISBN-13: 978-1590173350

Rachel Waring is deliriously happy. Out of nowhere, a great-aunt leaves her a Georgian mansion in another city—and she sheds her old life without delay. Gone is her dull administrative job, her mousy wardrobe, her downer of a roommate. She will live as a woman of leisure, devoted to beauty, creativity, expression, and love. Once installed in her new quarters, Rachel plants a garden, takes up writing, and impresses everyone she meets with her extraordinary optimism. But as Rachel sings and jokes the days away, her new neighbors begin to wonder if she might be taking her transformation just a bit too far.

In Wish Her Safe at Home, Stephen Benatar finds humor and horror in the shifting region between elation and mania. His heroine could be the next-door neighbor of the Beales of Grey Gardens or a sister to Jane Gardam’s oddball protagonists, but she has an ebullient charm all her own. 

Shattered
Shattered
By: Karen Robards 
Hardcover: 400 pages 
Publisher: Putnam Adult (March 23, 2010) 
Language: English 
ISBN-10: 0399156275 
ISBN-13: 978-0399156274

Secret, betrayal, and a mysterious family history plague the heroine in the latest novel from New York Times-bestselling author Karen Robards.

The past is never over. It just gets dusty.

Lisa Shewmaker was a rising star in a prestigious law firm in Lexington, Kentucky; that is, until the firm went bankrupt and she lost her job. With an ailing mother to care for, Lisa takes the first position she can find: research assistant to District Attorney Scott Buchanan. Scott is as disagreeable as he is sexy, and Lisa suspects the only reason she got the job is because of her privileged upbringing as the daughter of a wealthy federal judge.

While reviewing cold cases in the Fayette County courthouse, a particularly thick manila envelope draws Lisa's attention. The details of the case are engrossing: An entire family-father, mother, and two children-disappeared more than twenty-eight years ago. Except that's not all: The mother in the photo could have been Lisa's twin, and the toddler in the picture bears an uncanny resemblance to Lisa herself. Before Lisa can learn more about her past, a series of catastrophes strike close to home. Lisa confides in Scott, and their relationship develops into something completely different. Together Lisa and Scott unravel a terrifying web of criminal connections that could destroy the very fabric of Lisa's life-if she lives long enough, that is. 


Dying to Meet You: 43 Old Cemetery Road 
Dying to Meet You: 43 Old Cemetery Road
By: Kate Klise 
Reading level: Ages 9-12 
Hardcover: 160 pages 
Publisher: Harcourt Children's Books (April 6, 2009) 
Language: English 
ISBN-10: 0152057277 
ISBN-13: 978-0152057275

Grade 4–6—When former best-selling children's author I.B. Grumply moves into a Victorian mansion in Ghastly, IL, to write the latest installment in his "Ghost Tamer" series, he is hindered by more than just his overwhelming case of writer's block. He is dismayed to find the mansion already occupied by an 11-year-old boy named Seymour Hope, his cat, and Olive C. Spence, a ghost living in the cupola who is unhappy because she never managed to publish her books in her lifetime. Similar to the Klises' other offerings, the story is successfully told through letters, newspaper clippings, drawings, and related devices. Although Grumply has written ghost tales, he himself is a nonbeliever, and Olive and Seymour attempt to convince him. They then collaborate on a book about their own experiences, including the possibility of the demolition of the mansion, a ghost who falls in love with the occupant of her house, and Seymour's parents and their lack of responsibility for his care. This first title in a new series will appeal to readers, especially reluctant ones, as it moves quickly and leaves its audience eager for book two, which is announced in this ghastly and fun tale.—Michele Shaw, Quail Run Elementary School, San Ramon, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.




(23) Horns by Joe Hill

Horns: A Novel
Horns
By: Joe Hill

Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: William Morrow (February 16, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0061147958
ISBN-13: 978-0061147951

Joe Hill is an author like no other that I have read before - and believe me when I say that I have read plenty, lol!  This is a man that can write the most twisted of scenes one minute and then the most human of scenes the next minute.  After reading Heart-Shaped Box, I was instantly hooked on Mr. Hill's writing style.  Needless to say that when I found out about this newest release, Horns, I grabbed it and gobbled it up right away. 

Blending horror and paranormal, Joe Hill weaves a story of one man's spiral into the deepest and darkest journeys that a soul can go. A year after the death of his longtime love Merrin, Ig wakes up after a night of drinking and doing some not so nice things (including relieving himself on a statue of Mary) at a memorial site where Merrin's body had been found.  Feeling a bit on the strange side, Ig visits the bathroom, glances into the mirror and is shocked, beyond words, at reflects back at him.  Are those horns growing from his head?!?!  Surely his eyes are playing tricks on him.  However, when the relentless throb continues at his temples and the strange ability to hear everyone's innermost sinful thoughts disturbingly continues, Ig knows he has a problem.

Tagged as Merrin's killer, but free from lack of evidence, not many hold Ig in very high standards.  However, Ig knows he is innocent and will do anything to find the person who raped and killed Merrin.  With his new minding-reading ability, he makes some startling discoveries, not to mention several undesired discoveries, which may just help Ig in his mission.

Horns has a very deep soul-searching effect on the reader - whether this is intended or not.  Delivered with chapters of flashbacks intertwined with present time happenings, Joe Hill presents a very layered and intense story.  A bit exhausting in it's intensity, (this, being a good thing) once I began reading, I was hardly able to stop.  The flow of the story, the continuous "cliff hangers" delivered between scene switches, leaves the reader wanting to constantly see what happens next.  While some readers may view Ig as a monster, I found myself feeling very empathic toward him.  His thoughts, during his transformation, are rather thought-proving for the reader and though Ig is suppose to be turning "evil", he puts forth some rather compassionate actions.

I do want to extend a warning to those easily offended by sexual overtures, strong religious beliefs and offensive language, Horns does contain a large portion of all of these things.  This is a book meant for entertainment purposes, so should be taken as such, not to heart.

Readers and fans of horror and paranormal will revel within Horns.  The writing is marvelous and the ability that Mr. Hill demonstrates to interweave time frames and varied scenes is excellent.  I highly recommend Horns and can't wait for the next release from the enormously talented Joe Hill!

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Horns rated: 4 cups of joe out of 5!

About Horns:

At first Ig thought the horns were a hallucination, the product of a mind damaged by rage and grief. He had spent the last year in a lonely, private purgatory, following the death of his beloved, Merrin Williams, who was raped and murdered under inexplicable circumstances. A mental breakdown would have been the most natural thing in the world. But there was nothing natural about the horns, which were all too real. Once the righteous Ig had enjoyed the life of the blessed: born into privilege, the second son of a renowned musician and younger brother of a rising late-night TV star, he had security, wealth, and a place in his community. Ig had it all, and more—he had Merrin and a love founded on shared daydreams, mutual daring, and unlikely midsummer magic.

But Merrin’s death damned all that. The only suspect in the crime, Ig was never charged or tried. And he was never cleared. In the court of public opinion in Gideon, New Hampshire, Ig is and always will be guilty because his rich and connected parents pulled strings to make the investigation go away. Nothing Ig can do, nothing he can say, matters. Everyone, it seems, including God, has abandoned him. Everyone, that is, but the devil inside. . . .

Now Ig is possessed of a terrible new power to go with his terrible new look—a macabre talent he intends to use to find the monster who killed Merrin and destroyed his life. Being good and praying for the best got him nowhere. It’s time for a little revenge. . . . It’s time the devil had his due. . .

Excerpt:


Chapter One
Ignatius Martin Perrish spent the night drunk and doing terrible things. He woke the next morning with a headache, put his hands to his temples, and felt something unfamiliar, a pair of knobby pointed protuberances. He was so ill—wet-eyed and weak—he didn’t think anything of it at first, was too hungover for thinking or worry.
But when he was swaying above the toilet, he glanced at himself in the mirror over the sink and saw he had grown horns while he slept. He lurched in surprise, and for the second time in twelve hours he pissed on his feet.
Chapter Two
He shoved himself back into his khaki shorts—he was still wearing yesterday’s clothes—and leaned over the sink for a better look.
They weren’t much as horns went, each of them about as long as his ring finger, thick at the base but soon narrowing to a point as they hooked upward. The horns were covered in his own too-pale skin, except at the very tips, which were an ugly, inflamed red, as if the needle points at the ends of them were about to poke through the flesh. He touched one and found the point sensitive, a little sore. He ran his fingers along the sides of each and felt the density of bone beneath the stretched-tight smoothness of skin.
His first thought was that somehow he had brought this affliction upon himself. Late the night before, he had gone into the woods beyond the old foundry, to the place where Merrin Williams had been killed. People had left remembrances at a diseased black cherry tree, its bark peeling away to show the flesh beneath. Merrin had been found like that, clothes peeled away to show the flesh beneath. There were photographs of her placed delicately in the branches, a vase of pussy willows, Hallmark cards warped and stained from exposure to the elements. Someone—Merrin’s mother, probably—had left a decorative cross with yellow nylon roses stapled to it and a plastic Virgin who smiled with the beatific idiocy of the functionally retarded.
He couldn’t stand that simpering smile. He couldn’t stand the cross either, planted in the place where Merrin had bled to death from her smashed-in head. A cross with yellow roses. What a fucking thing. It was like an electric chair with floral-print cushions, a bad joke. It bothered him that someone wanted to bring Christ out here. Christ was a year too late to do any good. He hadn’t been anywhere around when Merrin needed Him.
Ig had ripped the decorative cross down and stamped it into the dirt. He’d had to take a leak, and he did it on the Virgin, drunkenly urinating on his own feet in the process. Perhaps that was blasphemy enough to bring on this transformation. But no—he sensed that there had been more. What else, he couldn’t recall. He’d had a lot to drink.
He turned his head this way and that, studying himself in the mirror, lifting his fingers to touch the horns, once and again. How deep did the bone go? Did the horns have roots, pushing back into his brain? At this thought the bathroom darkened, as if the lightbulb overhead had briefly gone dim. The welling darkness, though, was behind his eyes, in his head, not in the light fixtures. He held the sink and waited for the feeling of weakness to pass.
He saw it then. He was going to die. Of course he was going to die. Something was pushing into his brain, all right: a tumor. The horns weren’t really there. They were metaphorical, imaginary. He had a tumor eating his brain, and it was causing him to see things. And if he was to the point of seeing things, then it was probably too late to save him.
The idea that he might be going to die brought with it a surge of relief, a physical sensation, like coming up for air after being underwater too long. Ig had come close to drowning once and had suffered from asthma as a child, and to him, contentment was as simple as being able to breathe.
“I’m sick,” he breathed. “I’m dying.”
It improved his mood to say it aloud.
He studied himself in the mirror, expecting the horns to vanish now that he knew they were hallucinatory, but it didn’t work that way. The horns remained. He fretfully tugged at his hair, trying to see if he could hide them, at least until he got to the doctor’s, then quit when he realized how silly it was to try to conceal something no one would be able to see but him.
He wandered into the bedroom on shaky legs. The bedclothes were shoved back on either side, and the bottom sheet still bore the rumpled impression of Glenna Nicholson’s curves. He had no memory of falling into bed beside her, didn’t even remember getting home—another missing part of the evening. It had been in his head until this very moment that he’d slept alone and that Glenna had spent the night somewhere else. With someone else.
They had gone out together the night before, but after he’d been drinking awhile, Ig had just naturally started to think about Merrin, the anniversary of her death coming up in a few days. The more he drank, the more he missed her—and the more conscious he was of how little like her Glenna was. With her tattoos and her paste-on nails, her bookshelf full of Dean Koontz novels, her cigarettes and her rap sheet, Glenna was the un-Merrin. It irritated Ig to see her sitting there on the other side of the table, seemed a kind of betrayal to be with her, although whether he was betraying Merrin or himself, he didn’t know. Finally he had to get away—Glenna kept reaching over to stroke his knuckles with one finger, a gesture she meant to be tender but for some reason pissed him off. He went to the men’s room and hid there for twenty minutes. When he returned, he found the booth empty. He sat drinking for an hour before he understood that she was not coming back and that he was not sorry. But at some point in the evening, they had both wound up here in the same bed, the bed they’d shared for the last three months.
He heard the distant babble of the TV in the next room. Glenna was still in the apartment, then, hadn’t left for the salon yet. He would ask her to drive him to the doctor. The brief feeling of relief at the thought of dying had passed, and he was already dreading the days and weeks to come: his father struggling not to cry, his mother putting on false cheer, IV drips, treatments, radiation, helpless vomiting, hospital food.
Ig crept into the next room, where Glenna sat on the living-room couch, in a Guns N’ Roses tank top and faded pajama bottoms. She was hunched forward, elbows on the coffee table, tucking the last of a doughnut into her mouth with her fingers. In front of her was the box, containing three-day-old supermarket doughnuts, and a two-liter bottle of Diet Coke. She was watching daytime talk.
She heard him and glanced his way, eyelids low, gaze disapproving, then returned her stare to the tube. “My Best Friend Is a Sociopath!” was the subject of today’s program. Flabby rednecks were getting ready to throw chairs at one another.
She hadn’t noticed the horns.
“I think I’m sick,” he said.
“Don’t bitch at me,” she said. “I’m hungover, too.”
“No. I mean . . . look at me. Do I look all right?” Asking because he had to be sure.
She slowly turned her head toward him again and peered at him from under her eyelashes. She had on last night’s mascara, a little smudged. Glenna had a smooth, pleasantly round face and a smooth, pleasantly curvy body. She could’ve almost been a model, if the job was modeling plus sizes. She outweighed Ig by fifty pounds. It wasn’t that she was grotesquely fat but that he was absurdly skinny. She liked to fuck him from on top, and when she put her elbows on his chest, she could push all the air out of him, a thoughtless act of erotic asphyxiation. Ig, who so often struggled for breath, knew every famous person who had ever died of erotic asphyxiation. It was a surprisingly common end for musicians. Kevin Gilbert. Hideto Matsumoto, probably. Michael Hutchence, of course, not someone he wanted to be thinking about in this particular moment. The devil inside. Every one of us.
“Are you still drunk?” she asked.
When he didn’t reply, she shook her head and looked back at the television.
That was it, then. If she had seen them, she would’ve come screaming to her feet. But she couldn’t see them because they weren’t there. They existed only in Ig’s mind. Probably if he looked at himself now in a mirror, he wouldn’t see them either. But then Ig spotted a reflection of himself in the window, and the horns were still there. In the window he was a glassy, transparent figure, a demonic ghost.
“I think I need to go to the doctor,” he said.
“You know what I need?” she asked.
“What?”
“Another doughnut,” she said, leaning forward to look into the open box. “You think another doughnut would be okay?”
He replied in a flat voice he hardly recognized, “What’s stopping you?”
“I already had one, and I’m not even hungry anymore. I just want to eat it.” She turned her head and peered up at him, her eyes glittering in a way that suddenly seemed both scared and pleading. “I’d like to eat the whole box.”
“The whole box,” he repeated.
“I don’t even want to use my hands. I just want to stick my face in and start eating. I know that’s gross.” She moved her finger from doughnut to doughnut, counting. “Six. Do you think it would be okay if I ate six more doughnuts?”
It was hard to think past his alarm and the feeling of pressure and weight at his temples. What she had just said made no sense, was another part of the whole unnatural bad-dream morning.
“If you’re screwing with me, I wish you wouldn’t. I told you I don’t feel good.”
“I want another doughnut,” she said.
“Go ahead. I don’t care.”
“Well. Okay. If you think it’s all right,” she said, and she took a doughnut, pulled it into three pieces, and began to eat, shoving in one chunk after another without swallowing.
Soon the whole doughnut was in her mouth, filling her cheeks. She gagged, softly, then inhaled deeply through her nostrils and began to swallow.
Iggy watched, repelled. He had never seen her do anything like it, hadn’t seen anything like it since junior high, kids grossing out other kids in the cafeteria. When she was done, she took a few panting, uneven breaths, then looked over her shoulder, eyeing him anxiously.
“I didn’t even like it. My stomach hurts,” she said. “Do you think I should have another one?”
“Why would you eat another one if your stomach hurts?”
“ ’Cause I want to get really fat. Not fat like I am now. Fat enough so you won’t want to have anything to do with me.” Her tongue came out, and the tip touched her upper lip, a thoughtful, considering gesture. “I did something disgusting last night. I want to tell you about it.”
The thought occurred again that none of it was really happening. If he was having some sort of fever dream, though, it was a persistent one, convincing in its fine details. A fly crawled across the TV screen. A car shushed past out on the road. One moment naturally followed the last, in a way that seemed to add up to reality. Ig was a natural at addition. Math had been his best subject in school, after ethics, which he didn’t count as a real subject.
“I don’t think I want to know what you did last night,” he said.
“That’s why I want to tell you. To make you sick. To give you a reason to go away. I feel so bad about what you’ve been through and what people say about you, but I can’t stand waking up next to you anymore. I just want you to go, and if I told you what I did, this disgusting thing, then you’d leave and I’d be free again.”
“What do people say about me?” he asked. It was a silly question. He already knew.
She shrugged. “Things about what you did to Merrin. How you’re like a sick sex pervert and stuff.”
Ig stared at her, transfixed. It fascinated him, the way each thing she said was worse than the one before and how at ease she seemed to be with saying them. Without shame or awkwardness.
“So what did you want to tell me?”
“I ran into Lee Tourneau last night after you disappeared on me. You remember Lee and I used to have a thing going, back in high school?”
“I remember,” Ig said. Lee and Ig had been friends in another life, but all that was behind Ig now, had died with Merrin. It was difficult to maintain close friendships when you were under suspicion of being a sex murderer.
“Last night at the Station House, he was sitting in a booth in back, and after you disappeared, he bought me a drink. I haven’t talked to Lee in forever. I forgot how easy he is to talk to. You know Lee, he doesn’t look down on anyone. He was real nice to me. When you didn’t come back after a while, he said we ought to look for you in the parking lot, and if you were gone, he’d drive me home. But then when we were outside, we got kissing kind of hot, like old times, like when we were together—and I got carried away and went down on him, right there with a couple guys watching and everything. I haven’t done anything that crazy since I was nineteen and on speed.”
Ig needed help. He needed to get out of the apartment. The air was too close, and his lungs felt tight and pinched.
She was leaning over the box of doughnuts again, her expression placid, as if she had just told him a fact of no particular consequence: that they were out of milk or had lost the hot water again.
“You think it would be all right to eat one more?” she asked. “My stomach
feels better.”
“Do what you want.”
She turned her head and stared at him, her pale eyes glittering with an unnatural excitement. “You mean it?”
“I don’t give a fuck,” he said. “Pig out.”
She smiled, cheeks dimpling, then bent over the table, taking the box in one hand. She held it in place, shoved her face into it, and began to eat. She made noises while she chewed, smacking her lips and breathing strangely. She gagged again, her shoulders hitching, but kept eating, using her free hand to push more doughnut into her mouth, even though her cheeks were already swollen and full. A fly buzzed around her head, agitated.
Ig edged past the couch, toward the door. She sat up a little, gasping for breath, and rolled her eyes toward him. Her gaze was panicky, and her cheeks and wet mouth were gritted with sugar.
“Mm,” she moaned. “Mmm.” Whether she moaned in pleasure or misery, he didn’t know.
The fly landed at the corner of her mouth. He saw it there for a moment— then Glenna’s tongue darted out, and she trapped it with her hand at the same time. When she lowered her hand, the fly was gone. Her jaw worked up and down, grinding everything in her mouth into paste.
Ig opened the door and slid himself out. As he closed the door behind him, she was lowering her face to the box again . . . a diver who had filled her lungs with air and was plunging once more into the depths.




About Joe Hill:

Joe Hill is the author of a novel, Heart-Shaped Box, a collection of short stories, 20th Century Ghosts, and an occasional comic book series, Locke & Key. His second novel, Horns, will be available from William Morrow, in February of 2010. He lives in a small stone cell at the bottom of a chasm; there is only one steep, treacherous trail leading down to it, and the way is protected by fierce goats. You can get nearly daily doses of his pithy one-liners and mind-numbing insights over on Twitter, where he goes by the inspired handle of joe_hill. Now and then he even updates his blog.

Be sure to visit Joe Hill's website!