Wednesday, December 21, 2011

When men were men and vampires were monsters...

Salem's Lot...  Probably, in my humble opinion, the best vampire movie ever.  Hooper's adaption of King's classic novel varies somewhat from the book, but unlike a lot of King's work converted into film, Hooper manages to pull it off.  For instance, Kurt Barlow in the book came off as an average looking guy, non-menacing until you delved deeper into the story.  In the movie (the original, not the made-for-TV-remake with Rob Lowe and Rutger Hauer--which is yet another good flick) Barlow was downright monstrous as evidenced on the image above.  I still remember the sleepless nights 'The Master' caused me when I was a child.  I'm guessing Hooper was inspired by Orlock when he created his version of Kurt Barlow.

Friday, December 9, 2011

AT THE END OF ALL THINGS on sale now!


At the End of All Things on sale now!

Blood Bound Books has informed me that At the End of All Things is available for purchase just in time for Christmas!  What better gift than fiction about wholesale slaughter, deviant sex, demons, and zombies?!

http://www.amazon.com/End-All-Things-Stony-Graves/dp/0984540881/ref=sr_1_15?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323391270&sr=1-15


 “Stony Graves has created an apocalyptic masterpiece, breathing life into
characters and horrors on par with King’s The Stand.” - Charolette Nevers,
author of The Craving


When asked what At the End of All Things is about, I like to answer with: A sweet horror story about zombies, demons, prison rape, and puppies.

A better description is:

A plague of the undead have risen to make way for the Apocalypse, the
horsemen are drawing nearer, and those left behind after the rapture are
struggling to find their place in this new and savage world.
The survivors, relying on dreams, intuition and in some cases, even the
dead, find themselves being drawn to Blue Church, Ohio, where no doubt,
something monumental is about to happen. At the end of all things, will
God forsake humanity, can evil triumph, and will anyone even be left alive
to tell the tale.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Books Read 2011

The number of books I've read this year is drastically down from the 100 (give or take) from last year.  In 2011, I managed only 52 titles so far.  With two months left, I expect to add another 6 or 7 to the list.

2011 was different because I don't think I've ever read as many thousand pagers has I have this year.  The entire 5 books of The Song of Ice and Fire series, The Passage, Swan Song, and I reread The Stand and It--third time each.


Friday, November 4, 2011

DISPATCH by Bentley Little


This book felt a lot like Little's 'The Ignored', mostly by the narrative, I think, but overall a more satisfying read, IMO.  'Dispatch' follows Little's normal tendency of real world, mundane things going wildly, vividly, fantastically, and horrifically out of control.  This is what places Little firmly near the head of the class when it comes to good, fun, deviant horror.
Few writers can go from a typical, normal moment to jaw-dropping, shiver inducing anxiety quicker.

4 out of 5 gravestones!

Sunday, September 18, 2011

MIDNIGHT MASS by F. Paul Wilson




** spoiler alert ** Overall, I liked. I went in expecting something akin to Stephen King's "Salem's Lot"--Which this is NOT--and ended up with a suped up urban fantasy instead. Wilson's vampires were clearly evil (a gigantic plus), but I didn't care for their bickering among themselves and their too-organized militaristic approach.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The Passage by Justin Cronin





Cronin is a very, very good writer and The Passage is a very good book.

A few flaws: first, The Passage is the first part of a series, something I would have liked to know beforehand.

Second; dead is not dead in this book. Far too many times characters are believed dead but miraculously show back up alive and well.

Third: Way too slow and plodding in the middle. Cronin almost lost me after part 1 ended and I was assaulted with a dozen pages of italics from a character 100 years in the future, presented by someone 1000 years into the future. Confusing.

Other than that, I loved this book. Treat yourself to a smart, atmospheric, apocalyptic vampire tale that is penned by a true wordsmith.

Saturday, July 23, 2011


...Coming Soon from Blood Bound Books...


A double feature of unimaginable horrors!
SCARECROW - It’s holiday weekend in the English Fens, the long weekend. The Gypsies are passing through and setting up camp in the nearby fields. Madge can’t understand all the fuss, can’t understand that gypsies are their own kind of people; people are just people. But Madge and her husband, Bernie, are about to learn something about people when they meet the Mulrones, and if they aren’t careful, it just might become the longest weekend of their lives.


PLUS


All Tony wanted was to get out of Colorado, or even  just to his house, before the storm hit. All Dan wanted was to quiet that little tickle in the back of his brain—the one he couldn’t quite itch without the help of a bottle—and keep things the way they were with his family. But when the biggest snow storm since the blizzard of 2003 brings these men together, nobody’s going to get what they want. And before the storm blows over, both men will be in a struggle for their lives, and sanity. Who will survive THE MADNESS?

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Author Stony Graves: Excerpt from my novel, At the End of All Things

At the End of All Things
by Stony Graves

2
            The girl wouldn’t stop squirming. Pinky avoided her feet, but just barely. Lee leaned over on the girl’s back, pressing her to the trunk. Lee was laughing.
            “Just do it, Pinky.”
            “Nah, I’s best not, “Pinky said. His pants were around his knees and he had to really work his pecker to keep it hard. It felt like hot dough in his hand. Pinky wanted to stick his thing in Della, but something didn’t feel right about Lee holding her like that.

Friday, June 24, 2011

At the End of All Things on sale now!

Blood Bound Books has informed me that At the End of All Things is available for purchase just in time for Christmas!  What better gift than fiction about wholesale slaughter, deviant sex, demons, and zombies?!

http://www.amazon.com/End-All-Things-Stony-Graves/dp/0984540881/ref=sr_1_15?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323391270&sr=1-15


 “Stony Graves has created an apocalyptic masterpiece, breathing life into
characters and horrors on par with King’s The Stand.” - Charolette Nevers,
author of The Craving


When asked what At the End of All Things is about, I like to answer with: A sweet horror story about zombies, demons, prison rape, and puppies.

A better description is:

A plague of the undead have risen to make way for the Apocalypse, the
horsemen are drawing nearer, and those left behind after the rapture are
struggling to find their place in this new and savage world.
The survivors, relying on dreams, intuition and in some cases, even the
dead, find themselves being drawn to Blue Church, Ohio, where no doubt,
something monumental is about to happen. At the end of all things, will
God forsake humanity, can evil triumph, and will anyone even be left alive
to tell the tale.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Cover art

Blood Bound Books sent me the preliminary cover art for At the End of All Things.  The excellent artwork is done by Andrej Bartoluvic.  Andrej's work is amazing.  I cannot wait to see the final!



Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Game of Thrones

Wow!  What a great read.  I've never read Martin before until HBO's series aired.  The show is great, but the book is as intelligent and suspenseful as anything I can remember reading.  Move over Tolkien, there's a new R.R. in town.