Sunday, May 8, 2011

Interview and eBook Giveaway with Author Scott Nicholson

Hi everyone. We have an Amazon bestselling author joining us today. Welcome Scott Nicholson, author of Liquid Fear. We are excited to chat with Scott about his latest book. He is also giving away a copy of three of his eBooks, Duncan the Punkin, October Girls, and Speed Dating with the Dead. If you would like a chance to win one of these book, please leave your email address in your comment in the following format: parayournormalteam (at) gmail (dot) com

Now, for the interview...

Where did you draw inspiration for liquid fear?
I’d been researching the moral questions of using pharmaceuticals to “enhance” people—not just to alter mood but to conduct the emotional equivalent of plastic surgery. The president’s bioethics council filed a big report and that was the basis for some ideology, but what frightened me the most was a government having a new “tool” to use on its citizens that they might not ever know about. What if you had a secret drug that could make you agree with everything the government did, or weakened any will you had, or stunted any challenging thought or memory?

Which character did you enjoy writing most?
I always like the bad guys because they get to do things I don’t have the nerve to try but probably, secretly, want to. I’m a bad boy like Roland, though, but with a good heart. Since I’m working on the sequel, I get to revisit these guys—except for those who died, of course…

Is writing a conscious choice for you, or isn’t it something that just happens?
Hmm, I don’t know. I have been creating since the cradle, so it feels like a natural part of me. That said, writing is hard work—doodling in a coloring book is “creative” but doesn’t truly seek to communicate. Meeting a reader halfway is a big responsibility that one should take seriously by giving your best.

How long have you been writing?
Like I said, always. I’ve been an artist, musician, writer, and occasional actor forever. I’ve been in rock bands and underground presses and won awards and sometimes you get paid in beer and sometimes you make some money, but it’s all part of the same energy. I’m still the kid in sixth grade who was sneaking my Super Peanut comic strip around the class to impress the girls and get a little attention.

Aside from Liquid Fear, how many other books have you written?
I haven’t counted lately but probably around 30 or more. Some are collections and some are comics, and the word “book” is getting rapidly outdated anyway.

Are they all traditionally published, or have you indie published as well?
Six were in the Big Leagues, three in small press, and the rest are self-published. The self-published ones have done far, far better and reached many more readers, which is the real goal.

Do you have any new projects you’re working on?
I am writing the Liquid Fear sequel, Chronic Fear, which I plan to publish in late June. I am writing a YA vampire novel Night School with HT Night and JR Rain, and putting together another children’s book.

Tell us a random fact about yourself.
I love organic gardening. Writing is just the means for me to spend more time in the garden.

In which genre you would be least inclined to write?
Probably pure romance, though I feel like I am one of the few male romantic suspense writers. I love Sandra Brown and Mary Higgins Clark and old Barbara Michaels. Heck, I read Nancy Drew when I was young. I always have a romantic element in my books. Leaving out love, or the pathetic reach for it, would be as unreal as having characters who didn’t cuss or have any spiritual position.

Where can readers find your books?
Mostly on e-reading devices—you should be able to find me on pretty much everything that clicks, except network TV. There are some paper versions available through Amazon and used booksellers, and of course I am in the cheap quarter-a-copy dumps in America’s finest thrift shops.

Where can readers connect with you on the web?
Anywhere that clicks. Just try “hauntedcomputer” and you’ll find me. Another Scott Nicholson got all the “Scott Nicholson” frontier on the web, and he’s not me, so I went with Haunted Computer from an old Ray Bradbury poem.

Can you share an excerpt of you book?
Liquid Fear—available for 99 cents at Amazon, BN.com, and Smashwords 
   CHAPTER ONE
 
   The rain fell like dead bullets.
   David Dunn blinked against the drops. Darkness slathered both sides of his eyelids and the air smelled of burnt motor oil. The silvery salvo of precipitation swept over the expanse of a lighted billboard.
   “Need a lawyer?” read the emblazoned pitch, followed by an alphabet soup of advertising copy that swam in David’s vision. The sign was upside down.
   No.
   He was flat on his back, looking up, his clothes soaked. He couldn’t lift his head. The rain beat tiny tattoos on his face, pooling and racing down in tracks as warm as blood. The surface beneath him was hard and cold. He let his head tilt toward the right and he saw a cluster of distant lights.
   Buildings. A town.
   But which town?
   And, the bigger question, who was he this time?
   He tested his fingers. None were broken, though the knuckles were sore. Maybe he’d been in a fight. Or mugged and left to leak fluids onto the pavement.
   Dunn. David Dunn.
   That was his name. The one he’d been born with, not the name they’d given him. Whoever “they” were.
   He focused on the billboard. It featured a bland, stern face. No doubt the attorney of record, one desperate to cash in on the misfortunes of others.
   Injured in a car crash? Worker compensation claims? Product liability lawsuit? The bottom of the ad heralded a toll-free number.
   David wondered if he owned a cell phone. He usually didn’t, but sometimes they gave him one, slipped it into his jacket pocket with prepaid minutes.
   Prepaid minutes. That was a laugh. “Pay as you go” was the name of this game.
   The rain must have pounded him for a while, because he lay in a puddle. And it was summer because he wasn’t shivering. A car horn blared, probably 50 feet away, and tires spat white noise across the wet asphalt.
   They were coming for him again. They were always coming for him. Or else they already had him.
   He moved his lips, mouthing the words “Need a lawyer?”
   The car hissed onward, weaving in the gloom, its twin taillights like the eyes of a retreating dragon.
   With a groan, he rolled onto his side, cheek chafing against crumbled tar. He wore no hat. A wristwatch adorned his left wrist and he snaked his arm near his face. The LED numerals flickered red.
   11:37. Nearly noon or nearly midnight, it was all the same.
   Unless it was time for the next dose.
   The rain spattered and drummed around him in staccato fusillade. Constant war, the Earth versus the sky. Us versus them. David Dunn against himself.
   A nudge to his back.
   He didn’t have the strength to fight them this time. No running left in those freighted legs. No direction safe. All avenues took him back to the Research Triangle Park in the heart of North Carolina.
   Home—the place of no escape.
   He closed his eyes and flopped to one side, hoping they would make it quick this time.
   “Home, home on the range,” he sang.
   The nudge again, this time to his shoulder. “Hey, get up.”
   Swim, swim, swim. His head went nowhere. He tried to smile, his last act of will, his final defiance. But his lips were the cold, limp corpses of twin snakes.
   “Are you okay?”
   A woman. But which one?
   “I think I need a lawyer,” he said, though he wasn’t sure his mouth moved.
   Hands explored him, angled his head from side to side. The fingers were strong and sure.
   “Can you move your arms and legs?” the woman said.
   He nodded, or at least dipped his chin.
   “We have to get out of here.”
   Here. Out. She must be new to the program. There was no “out” and everywhere was here. The universe was their lab, the world their maze, and the cheese was the disease.
   The cheese was the disease. Probably a nursery rhyme in there somewhere, a modern retelling of “Hickory Dickory Dock.” Maybe he had a new song.
   David licked his lips and they tasted of chemicals. Rain in the city got scarier every day. Why did they even bother with the program anymore?
   Civilization would accomplish the mission, given time. But time was money and money was energy and energy was power. Maze opening onto maze, forever and ever, amen.
   She tugged at the collar of his jacket, sopping his head into the puddle like a biscuit into weak gravy. “Sit up, David.”
   She knew his name. They were getting smarter, all right. Changing the flavor of the cheese. He dared not open his eyes, but he couldn’t resist.
   He could never resist.
   He blinked and squinted through the jewels of water on his eyelashes. Her face was a fuzzy pale moon and her naked body was glistening. He blinked again. Squinted. Focused. Which one would it be?
   Her. Who else?
   He clawed at the concrete, digging to bury himself alive in the wet, filthy soil of the city. Back to the nothingness of the womb. A tomb of cool, welcoming clay, not of hot, harboring flesh.
   He had rolled and scrabbled about five feet across the abrasive surface when she called again. “David.”
   The word was an echo of childhood scolding. He wanted to cover his ears, but that would slow his crawling escape. The buildings slid into focus now, the lawyer gazing down from the billboard with poisonous solicitude.
   Against the foggy sheen of silver-gray that lay across the night air, the windows of a waffle house projected a beacon of cigarette smoke, cholesterol, and safety in numbers. His soaked jacket pressed against his back, water streaming from his hair. It was long, past his collar, in a style and length he hadn’t worn in years. Not since college, which was the last stretch of his life he clearly recalled.
   He crawled toward the smell of fryer oil and coffee. A bare foot appeared beneath his chin, the burgundy nail polish chipped, a raw scar along the arch.
   “David, it’s me.”
   Craning the cinder-block weight of his head, his gaze went up the plump calf and higher. Did he know that skin? Or was all skin a stranger, even the skin he now wore as David Dunn?
   “You don’t remember me, do you?” The words fell from above, as brittle and bracing as the rain.
   Of course he remembered her. His eyes traveled higher, to the dark patch of hair between her legs, then up to her belly where the blood ran in a thick rivulet.
   He couldn’t bear to see her face, which was haunted by the ghost of all abandoned fears. Traffic hissed in the distance, like rows of long reptiles entwining in venomous ecstasy.
   He raised himself to his knees, head spinning, distant buildings the ancient cliffs of an alien planet.
   Waffle house. Its squares of smeared yellow light promised some sort of security. Normality. Greasy reality. But first he had to get past her.
   “They’re coming for us.” She reached her hand toward him, fingers pale and slick as maggots.
   His stomach lurched. Dry, acidic air rushed up and abraded his throat. He had nothing to vomit. The hand touched his shoulder, and David found himself reaching up to her, surrendering. His arm was like a roll of sodden newspapers.
   They’ll get you anyway. They always get you.
   Or maybe they had you from the start.
   She helped him to his feet and he swayed, blinking against the rain. Car headlights swept over them. Two giant shadows loomed on the brick wall at his back.
   Eyes everywhere.
   He jerked free of the woman’s grasp and ran blindly away from the swollen and indistinct shapes. His legs were damp ropes but still he fled.
   Rubber squealed on pavement, the shriek of a hungry leopard. Car doors opened, rain ticked off the metal roof, and the engine mewled.
   “David!” the woman screamed.
   They had her, but David didn’t care. That was exactly what they would expect: for him to play hero again.
   He hadn’t saved her last time, and Susan was going to die again, but it wasn’t his fault.
   He plunged toward the dark, wet wedge between buildings, willing his legs forward. His heart knocked mallets against his temples. Sharp-toothed things would be waiting in the darkness, but they would be the lesser of two thousand evils.
   A kinder, gentler evisceration, because those monsters would do it from the outside in.
   Not from the inside out, like the people from the car would.
   Her shriek rose against the oppressive sky and shoe soles spanked the asphalt.
   “Stop!” someone shouted. Were they really dumb enough to think he’d obey them at this point? After all they’d done to him, all they had taught him?
   After what they had made him become?
   He ran into the alley, assaulted by the odors of rot, bum piss, and motor oil. A chain-link fence, ripped and curling away from its support posts, blocked his escape.
   David clutched the links, praying for the strength to climb. He dug the tip of one shoe into the fence and launched himself up. He slipped and hung like a crucifixion victim for three seconds, time for one deep breath before collapsing.
   He lay with his face against the fence, the links imprinting blue geometry against his cheek. He listened, waiting.
   Rain, tick tick tick.
   No footsteps, no shouts. No car engine.
   They had taken her. And spared him.
   No. That’s just what they wanted him to think. That he was safe, so the next game would be even more disturbing.
   Or maybe they wanted him to cower, to doubt, to face his monsters alone.
   With them, you could never be sure.
   Fear was their tool and his drug.
   He whimpered for his next pill and the blissful fog of amnesia.
   This was who he was.
   Whoever he was.
   He kissed the rain and it kissed back. 
-------------
Scott Nicholson is author of 20 books, including Disintegration, The Skull Ring, Speed Dating with the Dead, and The Red Church. He’s also written the children’s books If I Were Your Monster and Duncan the Punkin. Visit him at Haunted Computer

***
We'd like to thank Scott for stopping by to chat with us. He will also be our guest on Blog Talk Radio this Wednesday, May 11th at 3:30pm PST. Our channel link is here. Make sure you stop in and listen. If you would like to ask Scott a question, feel free to call in at 619-639-4626, or you can leave a comment on our Blog Talk wall as well as @ us on Twitter on the day of the show.

Don't forget to sign up for our new newsletter. We'll be giving you a sneak preview of upcoming blog posts and more. Thanks everyone!

Winner Announcement

Happy Mother's Day to all our mommy followers.

We'd like to thank everyone who stopped by the blog and commented on our interview with J. F. Jenkins. We hope she will come back for another interivew when her new book comes out.

Now, to announce the winner of the eBook copy of Legend of the Oceina Dragon. Without futher ado, we'd like to congratulate Erin!

Erin, we will be forwarding your email info to J. F. Jenkins and she will be in contact with you regarding your prize.

Check back later today when we interview author Scott Nicholson, an Amazon bestselling author who will be doing an ebook giveaway on three of his titles.

Also, if you haven't already done so, please sign up for our newsletter. We'll be giving you info about upcoming reviews, guest posts, author interviews/giveaways as well as giving you an opportunity to ask the author a question and have it appear on our blog or radio show. Sign up for more details!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Interview with Legend of the Oceina Dragon Author J. F. Jenkins


Hey everyone. We have a great interview for you today. J.F. Jenkins, author of Legend of the Oceina Dragon is stopping by to chat with us. This a spectacular fantasy eBook that we're are excited for you to read.
J.F. is giving away a copy of her book. To enter for your chance to win, please comment with your name and email address in the following format: parayournormalteam (at) gmail (dot) com. Now, let's get to the interivew :-)

What inspired the storyline of Legend of the Oceina Dragon?
I had a dream one night about a girl being sacrificed to a deity. Instead of dying though, she was taken to his home where he promised her his entire kingdom if she agreed to be his bride. It spun off from there. 

Tell us about the Dragon Lord of Water
Darien is gentle in nature, but he'll fight for something he believes in. He never thinks of himself as the lord of the water dragons though. In fact, he'd prefer to be as normal as possible.  He doesn't like attention on himself at all, which makes it hard when he's in charge of an entire nation.

Besides water, are there other types of Dragon Lords?
There are fire dragons, wind dragons, and earth dragons.  Each has magic pertaining to their element, and completely different in appearance based on species. Fire dragons are small, quick, and have lots of sharp claws. Wind dragons are large, graceful, and look more like a traditional dragon. Earth dragons are enormous and bulky.
That is amazing. We love that concept.

How many books will be in the Dragon Saga?
I'm hoping for four full books, and two short stories. We'll see how the plotline plays out though.
 Fanastic! We love series :-)

Why did you choose to write in the fantasy genre?
For this particular story, it just fit. I write in just about every genre there is. I especially like fantasy/sci-fi though because of the lack of limitations.  Anything is possible, so there are so many different theories and ideas to play around with.

Do you ever get writer’s block?
All the time. It's awful because it keeps me from working for days and weeks at a time. It's also very hard to get back out of again.
We know what you mean!

Tell us a random fact about yourself.
My eyes are two different colors.  One is blue, the other is blue/green/goldish/brown.
Wow, that's interesting.

Do you have any favorite authors or authors you admire?
I'm a huge Stephen King fan. I can't say I've read all of his work, but I admire his style and inability to hold back based on “what's popular”. He marches to his own drum, and that's something I want to do as well.
Stephen King is great. He has an imagination from out of this world. We love it. 

What genre would you be least comfortable writing in?
Probably historical fiction. Lots of research makes me paranoid of messing something up. I like to stick to things I can make sound plausible, even if they aren't real.

Tell us about “The Graveyard”
I have a lot of writing supplies. In high school, just for fun, I'd keep track of how many gel pens I went through. Every time one of them “died”, I'd write down the date in my notebook. This is kind of a continuation of that. Every time I lose a pen, I write it down and how it got lost. I added notebooks too. It actually encourages me to write outside of my computer too. Plus I have soooo many notebooks and gel pens, and I'm always accumulating more.

Where can readers purchase your book?
I'm on amazon, barnes and noble, smashwords, and basically all of the major ebook sellers out there.  However, if you want to get it for less, go to my publisher's website.  Http://www.astraeapress.com.  There you can download it in any ebook format, and save yourself some money.  Plus you're supporting a great publishing house.

Where can readers connect with you online?
I'm on twitter as: jfjenkinstweets.
I have a facebook as well: http://www.facebook.com/jfjenkinsauthor
I'm on goodreads as: J.F. Jenkins
And I have my blog: http://jfjenkinswrites.wordpress.com

Can you share a small excerpt from your book?
He wanted to be with her, to be one with her, and it was the only thing he’d been looking forward to for months since the day he decided she was it for him. But as much as he wanted to be with her, he couldn’t help but be weary of the idea. He couldn’t tell if she meant it, and he wanted this moment to mean something. This would be the first time for them both. It was supposed to be special. The atmosphere was perfect though, and they were married. What could make it more special than that?
            “Of course I’m sure.” she said. She stared up into his eyes and he was completely swept away in hers. They were filled with certainty, and when he looked into them he did not see a dreamy, dazed, or confused look. Her pupils appeared normal, even her smell suggested she was recovered from the spell well and returning to her right mind. Her smell told him she lusted for him. If anything, she looked determined. Love at first sight? He’d heard a lot of stories about it, and while he had been hoping for it, he was also a little skeptical about the idea. Love at first sight had worked for his brothers, but it seemed too good to be true. Now he realized how much he worried over nothing. His dreams from the past six years were now coming true. That reassured him, and so did her words.
            “If you’re my husband, that means I love you more than life. I need you to love me. I want you. I feel safe now. Love me and protect me from the dragons.”
***
We'd like to thank J.F. Jenkins for stopping in to chat with us. We will be interviewing her Wednesday at 3:30pm PST, on Blog Talk Radio. Our channel is here. Be sure you stop in and listen. You can call 619-639-4626 with question. You can also post comments on our Blog Talk Radio wall, as well as @ us on Twitter during the interview. That's it for us for now. We hope you'll join us Wednesday, and of course, we'll see you on the stream ;-)

Winner Annoucement for Asylum Lake

Did the week fly by or is it just us? It's Sunday, and you know what that mean...winner announcement! We'd like to thank everyone who stopped by and left a comment. We're glad you enjoyed the interview and are sure you will enjoy the book.

Now, for the winners. For the 5 eBook copies of Asylum Lake, by R.A. Evans, we'd like to congratulate:
  1. Eriktiger
  2. bletssee2003
  3. Jennifer Wright
  4. Wulfie
  5. Shanna Clemens
We are passing your email address along to R. A. Evans. He will be in contact with you regarding your prize.

Be sure to stop by tonight when we interview J. F. Jenkins, author of Legend of the Oceina Dragon. We'll see you then.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Interview with R.A. Evans, Author of Asylum Lake

Hey everyone. Welcome back to another ParaYourNormal interview. We are excited to talk with R.A. Evans, author of the paranormal thriller, Asylum Lake. They say some memories are better fogotten, but what happens when the unremembered grow restless?

R.A. Evans is excited to share his novel with some of you. He has graciously agreed to giveaway 5 eBook copies of Asylum Lake! Be sure to leave a comment after the interview with you email address, and you will be entered into the contest. Now, for the interview.



Why did you start writing? 
A: Because the little voices in my head were driving me crazy! Honestly, writing has always been an escape for me. B: I do it for the advertising industry, but at night I get to write for pleasure. Besides, writing about all the dark and terrible things that go bump in the night keeps me sane.


Oh, we feel you. So,what inspired your storyline for Asylum Lake? 
I spent 10 years working for the public mental health system in Michigan doing PR and Marketing. During that time, I was able to visit some of the state psychiatric institutions and found it all quite unsettling. While visiting the Kalamazo State Hospital, which is actually located on the Asylum Lake Nature Preserve, I found myself wondering what sort of memories were trapped within its walls and within the nearby lake. That's when the idea took root.


Is there any character in Asylum Lake you can relate with? 
Several, actually. The protagonist in Asylum Lake is a young reporter dealing with the recent loss of his wife. he moves back to the home where he spent the summers of his youth only to find himself drawn into the mysteries of the abandoned asylum and its connection to his own painful memories. Like that character, I started my career as a newspaper reporter and even experienced my own painful memories when returning to my small hometown after years away. From the character's choice in music (Pearl Jam) to his twisted sense of humor, I was able to fill his personality with my own. Of course, he is far younger than I am, so I had to live vicariously through some of the other older characters, too. Especially the dark and twisted ones.


Can you tell us a little about your protagonist? 
Brady Tanner is a rising star at the Chicago Tribune when tragedy takes his young, pregnant wife. Couple his grief with unresolved issues from his childhood and it's the perfect recipe for disaster. He's smart, funny, and in way over his head. Readers really connect with him, and as an author, I do too.


Which genre would you be uncomfortable writing in? 
Ironic that you should ask this question. I just finished drafting a guest post for The Creative Penn where I touch on the difference between genres and how the vampire I write about in horror is vastly different those in Urban Fantasy or Paranormal Romance. At the end of the day, a good story is a good story no matter the genre. That being said, any genre that has Fabio on the cover is probably not a genre I would feel too comfortable in.



LoL, you have a great sense of humor. Do you ever get writers block? 
All the time. Mine is usually the kind of block that comes with trying to perfect a single line of copy. I've been brought to a screeching halt by a single word choice. Fortunately, it never seems to last too long.


Aside from Asylum Lake, how many books have you written? 
I've completed two novels. Asylum Lake was published in July 2010. Its sequel, Grave Undertakings, will hit the shelves in just a few short weeks.


You must be so excited. Do you have any projects you're currently working on? 
I just completed the first draft of FLIGHT. I'm really excited about it, too. Here's the tease: U.S. Air Marshal Liz Downie thought she had lucked out with her assignment – a half-empty red eye from London to the states. The passengers – an odd assortment of State Department staffers freshly plucked from the embattled U.S. Embassy in Iraq. These arent your usual friendly skies, however. Tucked into the passenger jet’s shadowy cargo hold hides a secret the U.S. Military will do anything to protect – and Liz Downie everything to stop.

Where do you run when you are 33,000 feet up?


That is very intriguing. Will you tell us a random fact about yourself?
I'm afraid of worms - like really afraid! I especially hate the smell of them after a heavy rain...when they are stretched out on the sidewalks...Yuck!


Do you have a favorite author? 
I grew up on Stephen King and am constantly amazed by his work. HIs son, Joe Hill, is also really high on my list.


Where can readers purchase your book? 
Asylum Lake is available on www.amazon.com for Kindle, www.barnesandnoble.com for Nook, at www.smashwords for other ebook formats, and autographed print copies can be purchased from http://www.schulerbooks.com/product/asylum-lake


Where can readers connect with you on the web?(website, twitter, Facebook, FB fanpage?) 
You can follow all of my dark musings, participate in promotions, and stay up to speed on my projects at www.raevanswrites.wordpress.com. On face book at www.facebook.com/asylumlake and even on twitter by following @raevanswrites


How about an excerpt?



November 10, 1971
Bedlam Falls, Michgan

Sheriff Buck Tanner arrived at the station shortly before sunrise and
parked his familiar truck around the block behind the library to mask his presence.
He wasn’t quite ready to be the official face of the investigation; let Frank
have a little more fun, he thought as he entered the darkened station and put on
a fresh pot of coffee.

As requested, Maddie had spent some time in the file room. A neatly organized
mess greeted him on his desk. To the left was a very thick and somewhat
intimidating appearing binder atop a stack of newspapers. Buck guessed at what
was contained therein and quickly turned his attention to the small stack of files
on the right side of his desk. Between the two piles rested a handwritten note.

Sheriff – Cupboard was left pretty bare. I’ll keep digging.

Buck recognized Maddie’s penmanship and set the note aside. He had
expected as much. His predecessor’s handling of the asylum affair had been less
than thorough. Sheriff Rylan Walters had his deputies snap some photos, ask
a few questions, and then basically wrote the whole thing off as though it was
livestock merely thinning its own herd. Rumors had run wild but soon they, too,
had died off from lack of interest.

Buck caught the scent of the cigar before he noticed Jim Bowling’s shadow
pass over his desk. “Morning, Jim.”

State Police Lieutenant Jim Bowling stood in the open doorway and
smiled down at the Sheriff.

“My, my, what do we have here? The long arm of the law finally come to
save us simple folk?” Bowling snickered around the cigar clamped between his
yellowed teeth. The Cheshire Cat should have envied the man’s smile.

Buck looked up from his cluttered desk and locked eyes with the trooper.
“You might call it that, Jim.” The Sheriff’s eyes glittered hungrily. He was in
no mood for Bowling’s bullshit. Buck had already heard enough from Deputy
Griggs about how uncooperative the little prick had been; best to put him in his
place right away. “Black, Jim, no sugar. How ‘bout you go fetch me a cup?”

Bowling blew out a long slow plume of gray smoke and stepped into Buck’s
office, the trooper’s beady little eyes full of instantaneous rage. “Excuse me?”
Subtlety wasn’t one of Buck’s strongest qualities – especially after recent
events.

With his son bandaged and broken, a young family butchered, and a
killer still roaming the streets, Sheriff Tanner didn’t have time to mince words.
Plus, having one’s skull cracked open with a golf club tends to set a person in
a foul mood.

“How long have your worn that badge, son? Five years? Certainly not
much longer.” Buck kept his voice calm and his eyes on the young trooper.
“Now, you may be a big deal down in Lansing -- hell, maybe even outside the
capital. But here, in Bedlam, you’re a guest - my guest. And I don’t take kindly
to my guests pissing in my cheerios.”

Buck paused, letting his words settle over his “guest.” “You ever work a
homicide, son? Not just string the yellow tape, but actually roll up your sleeves
and work one?”

Buck could see the anger leaving the man as he continued. “Now I ain’t
saying you don’t know shit, but dammit Jim, if you think running to channel
forty-one with every last detail is gonna actually help in any way, then it’s obvious
       you don’t know shit.”

Bowling’s face flushed with embarrassment. Buck held up a hand before
the man could comment.

“I get it – you’re pissed. You wanted this. Hell, maybe you even deserved
it.” Buck paused, and for the first time his calm demeanor and cool tone began
to fray at the edges. “But this isn’t about what you want…or what I think. This
is about justice – for the Reed’s, for my boy, and for Lord knows who else this
sick son of a bitch has hurt.”

Bowling stared across the desk at the Sheriff. The gray smoke hung heavy
between them, but the tension had finally broken. “What can I do?”
“I need your help, Lieutenant. You have access to records, files…information
that I could never lay my hands on. “

Bowling nodded, not fully understanding the request but suspecting he
might be bending a few rules in obliging the man. “Done,” he nodded, noting
the seriousness in Tanner’s eye. His hatred for Griggs’ aside, the trooper had a
modicum of respect for the aging sheriff.

Buck paused, reconsidering the man standing before him. He, too, had
been young and brash once. Perhaps not the asshole that Jim Bowling had shown
himself to be, but nonetheless there was no denying the kid had fire. That fire
may just be the catalyst to nailing the murderer.

The file was marked Lake View Asylum – 1958. Inside were half a dozen
sheets of handwritten notes and a few black and white photographs. Buck held
it out to the state trooper.

Bowling opened the file and glanced briefly at its contents. The trooper’s
brow furrowed with puzzlement.

Buck removed a photo from the binder on his desk and held it up for
Bowling. “Notice anything?”

The trooper’s eyes moved from the file’s contents to the photo Buck
held. Bowling had seen the Reed’s bathroom and quickly recognized the bloodscrawled
word -- Repent. Bowling’s eyes widened as he made the connection.
His reaction was immediate.

“No fucking way!”

Buck smiled in spite of himself, “Yeah, my thoughts exactly. I’m not sure
how or why -- but it’s your job to find a ‘fucking way.’

Bowling nodded, his mind spinning at the possibilities.

Buck rose to his feet, standing a full six inches taller than the young trooper,
and extended his hand. “I’ll talk to Griggs – let him know to give you a wide
berth and all.”

Lieutenant Jim Bowling accepted the offer and responded with a firm
shake of the Sheriff’s hand. Depositing the thin file on the Sheriff’s desk, he
left Buck’s office with something to finally dig his teeth into. Walking to his car
a few minutes later he had more than a passing suspicion that the elder lawman
was grasping at straws. Yet the photos were eerily similar.

Maybe I should just take a look around, he thought, Pointing his cruiser
east down Main Street. Placing his trademark mirrored sunglasses atop his nose,
Lieutenant Jim Bowling drove towards the rising sun over the Lake Hospital.
On that final drive, he never suspected how right Buck Tanner’s hunch would
turn out to be, or that, much like the countless souls before him who had ventured
through the asylum’s doors, he would never see the light of day again.


***

We would like to thank R.A. Evans for stopping by to talk with his book. Don't forget, we will be talking with him live on Wednesday, April 27th on Blog Talk Radio. Our channel is here. If you follow the link, you can set up a reminder for the day of the show. Feel free to call in at 619-639-4626 to ask questions, or for those of you who are little shy #nothingwrongwiththat ;-) leave a comment on the website and we'll do our best to ask the author your question during the interview! 


That's it for us for now. Be sure to leave a comment with your email address and you could be one of five lucky winners for the eBook copy of Asylum Lake! Thanks everyone~