Liz Sower's Blog: Every Month is October
November 1, 2018
Claire, by Liz Sower
Claire
I received my first professional review!
Wellesley author pens spooky ghost story, in which Mrs. Swellesley makes an appearance.
By Deborah Brown of the Swellesley Report
A couple year ago Wellesley was blessed with a new blog, Ghosts in the Burbs. Or cursed. It all depends on how you feel about spine-tingling ghost stories all set in Wellesley, a town that apparently attracts spirits galore, both benign and evil, due to its particularly placed “ley lines and vortexes.”
In her blog posts, Wellesley mom and former Wellesley Children’s Room librarian, Liz Sower has a way of pegging the town’s residents with her incredible ear for dialogue and eye for the town’s social scene. Now she’s applied those skills to her first novel, Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Volume 1. The eerie little self-published, 185-page book tells the story of three sort of bitchy and rather inseparable queen-bee type moms — Hillary, Vanessa, and Jill — living the Wellesley dream. They’re thin, rich, live in big houses, drive big cars, know how to dress casually yet stunningly, and they do love their wine. It all sounds perfectly normal so far.
Not all as it appears
They also all grew up in Wellesley, ran in the same clique together at WHS, married their WHS high school sweethearts, and live in the same neighborhood. Ok, that’s all a little strange, but still sort of idyllic-sounding, in a way. There’s just one tragic flaw in the three women’s perfect lives. In their senior year back in the 90s after a night of drinking and carousing at Morses Pond, the fourth member of their cozy crew, Claire, apparently drowned. Claire’s body may have attended a proper funeral and burial, but her spirit is very much still wandering around the soccer fields and beautifully renovated homes of Wellesley. The question is, why is Claire’s spirit still here? And why is she so present in the lives of her old “friends”?
Fast forward 15 or so years and Hillary, Vanessa, and Jill tell Sower what really happened that night at Morses Pond, and the book gets scarier and scarier. In Claire, Sower expands on one of her earlier stories telling her readers, “Three women told me a horrific tale from their past and in doing so involved me in their horror. You may have heard part of this story before but I didn’t tell you everything….. This is the complete story of Claire.”
Mrs. Swellesley is a character, but you already knew that
I am delighted to appear in the book as the local news source with answers. Because part of the story is set in the 1990s, a time when according to Vanessa “…you could actually keep personal events quiet,” Claire’s drowning story has been more or less forgotten, and it’s not something that turns up with a simple Google search. But Sower knows how to at least verify that a young girl died at Morses Pond years ago. “I reached out to Deborah Brown. She and her husband created The Swellesley Report, an online news source for all things Wellesley. If anyone would know something about the drowning, Deborah would.”
Yes!
In the book, my character promises to dig into it.
Please let the book me be able to find something out about it, I prayed, please don’t have Sower have to kick the question over to The Townsman, oh please let me be the journalist hero. Indeed, I found this to be by far the most terrifying part of the book. As I read on, I experienced a rare, powerless lack of editorial control, and it didn’t feel good. But then, triumph.
Oh yeah, book character Deborah Brown came through with answers, big time.
You never know…
But enough about me, let’s talk some more about Claire. It was a great, fast, Halloween-time read that left me wanting more. There’s no shortage of spirits, ghosts, and subplots that all tie together. The greatest of spooky story tropes are liberally and effectively mixed in. Look for Ouija boards, sage smudging, exorcisms by Catholic priests, mediums, creepy reflections in mirrors, and ethereal figures that dart around corners so quickly they might not have been there at all. Except they were.
By the end, there were characters who had only just begun to experience the comeuppances they deserved. That’s why I’m waiting anxiously for Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Vol. 2. I just have to find out more about what happens to those seemingly perfect Wellesley families behind the closed doors of those seemingly perfect Wellesley houses. Surely they won’t be allowed to stay that thin and that rich and that smooth-browed, all without the rigors of diet, yoga, and Botox.
No, indeed, certain characters must pay for what they’ve done. Let the horror continue.
Oh and by the way, over coffee at Caffe Nero, Sower mentioned ever-so-casually that if Swellesley readers want to contact her for no special reason at all, just to, you know, say hi-I’ve-got-a-ghost-in-my-house-can-you-please-listen-to-my-story, or whatever, they can email her at ghostsintheburbs@gmail.com. Click here to follow her on Twitter.
Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Volume 1 is available on Amazon and Kindle.
https://theswellesleyreport.com/2018/...
I received my first professional review!
Wellesley author pens spooky ghost story, in which Mrs. Swellesley makes an appearance.
By Deborah Brown of the Swellesley Report
A couple year ago Wellesley was blessed with a new blog, Ghosts in the Burbs. Or cursed. It all depends on how you feel about spine-tingling ghost stories all set in Wellesley, a town that apparently attracts spirits galore, both benign and evil, due to its particularly placed “ley lines and vortexes.”
In her blog posts, Wellesley mom and former Wellesley Children’s Room librarian, Liz Sower has a way of pegging the town’s residents with her incredible ear for dialogue and eye for the town’s social scene. Now she’s applied those skills to her first novel, Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Volume 1. The eerie little self-published, 185-page book tells the story of three sort of bitchy and rather inseparable queen-bee type moms — Hillary, Vanessa, and Jill — living the Wellesley dream. They’re thin, rich, live in big houses, drive big cars, know how to dress casually yet stunningly, and they do love their wine. It all sounds perfectly normal so far.
Not all as it appears
They also all grew up in Wellesley, ran in the same clique together at WHS, married their WHS high school sweethearts, and live in the same neighborhood. Ok, that’s all a little strange, but still sort of idyllic-sounding, in a way. There’s just one tragic flaw in the three women’s perfect lives. In their senior year back in the 90s after a night of drinking and carousing at Morses Pond, the fourth member of their cozy crew, Claire, apparently drowned. Claire’s body may have attended a proper funeral and burial, but her spirit is very much still wandering around the soccer fields and beautifully renovated homes of Wellesley. The question is, why is Claire’s spirit still here? And why is she so present in the lives of her old “friends”?
Fast forward 15 or so years and Hillary, Vanessa, and Jill tell Sower what really happened that night at Morses Pond, and the book gets scarier and scarier. In Claire, Sower expands on one of her earlier stories telling her readers, “Three women told me a horrific tale from their past and in doing so involved me in their horror. You may have heard part of this story before but I didn’t tell you everything….. This is the complete story of Claire.”
Mrs. Swellesley is a character, but you already knew that
I am delighted to appear in the book as the local news source with answers. Because part of the story is set in the 1990s, a time when according to Vanessa “…you could actually keep personal events quiet,” Claire’s drowning story has been more or less forgotten, and it’s not something that turns up with a simple Google search. But Sower knows how to at least verify that a young girl died at Morses Pond years ago. “I reached out to Deborah Brown. She and her husband created The Swellesley Report, an online news source for all things Wellesley. If anyone would know something about the drowning, Deborah would.”
Yes!
In the book, my character promises to dig into it.
Please let the book me be able to find something out about it, I prayed, please don’t have Sower have to kick the question over to The Townsman, oh please let me be the journalist hero. Indeed, I found this to be by far the most terrifying part of the book. As I read on, I experienced a rare, powerless lack of editorial control, and it didn’t feel good. But then, triumph.
Oh yeah, book character Deborah Brown came through with answers, big time.
You never know…
But enough about me, let’s talk some more about Claire. It was a great, fast, Halloween-time read that left me wanting more. There’s no shortage of spirits, ghosts, and subplots that all tie together. The greatest of spooky story tropes are liberally and effectively mixed in. Look for Ouija boards, sage smudging, exorcisms by Catholic priests, mediums, creepy reflections in mirrors, and ethereal figures that dart around corners so quickly they might not have been there at all. Except they were.
By the end, there were characters who had only just begun to experience the comeuppances they deserved. That’s why I’m waiting anxiously for Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Vol. 2. I just have to find out more about what happens to those seemingly perfect Wellesley families behind the closed doors of those seemingly perfect Wellesley houses. Surely they won’t be allowed to stay that thin and that rich and that smooth-browed, all without the rigors of diet, yoga, and Botox.
No, indeed, certain characters must pay for what they’ve done. Let the horror continue.
Oh and by the way, over coffee at Caffe Nero, Sower mentioned ever-so-casually that if Swellesley readers want to contact her for no special reason at all, just to, you know, say hi-I’ve-got-a-ghost-in-my-house-can-you-please-listen-to-my-story, or whatever, they can email her at ghostsintheburbs@gmail.com. Click here to follow her on Twitter.
Claire, Ghosts in the Burbs Volume 1 is available on Amazon and Kindle.
https://theswellesleyreport.com/2018/...
October 14, 2018
Sawkill Girls
Sawkill Girls
The craggy island. The frightening secrets. The lonliness and fear. Sawkill Girls is infecting my dreams and giving me a tight feeling in my chest. It's wonderful.
The craggy island. The frightening secrets. The lonliness and fear. Sawkill Girls is infecting my dreams and giving me a tight feeling in my chest. It's wonderful.
Published on October 14, 2018 17:53
•
Tags:
halloween-prep, horror, monsters
September 29, 2018
The Last Days of Jack Sparks, by Jason Arnopp
The Last Days of Jack Sparks
I can't unknow this story. Though I read it months ago I still wake up in the middle of the night thinking of the girl in the church, of Jack's reaction to her and of everything that came after. Always on the hunt for a good demonic possession tale, I was delighted to meet the unlikeable Jack and watch his fall down the rabbit hole.
I can't unknow this story. Though I read it months ago I still wake up in the middle of the night thinking of the girl in the church, of Jack's reaction to her and of everything that came after. Always on the hunt for a good demonic possession tale, I was delighted to meet the unlikeable Jack and watch his fall down the rabbit hole.
Published on September 29, 2018 08:11
•
Tags:
demons, halloween-prep, horror, possession
September 24, 2018
Will Storr vs. The Supernatural, by Will Storr
Will Storr vs. The Supernatural: One Man's Search for the Truth About Ghosts
Everything about this book makes my heart sing. I want so desperately to tag along with Will Storr as he wades into the paranormal. The book gave me the chills several times and there are scenes from it that haunt me. This book had a major influence on my own writing. Must-read for pre-Halloween prep.
Everything about this book makes my heart sing. I want so desperately to tag along with Will Storr as he wades into the paranormal. The book gave me the chills several times and there are scenes from it that haunt me. This book had a major influence on my own writing. Must-read for pre-Halloween prep.
Published on September 24, 2018 14:14
•
Tags:
demons, ghost-hunting, halloween-prep, horror
September 23, 2018
Come Closer, by Sara Gran
Come Closer
Just days from our high-holy season I'm re-reading this exquisite tale of demonic possession for the third time. I am so in love with this book because it drags me every time through the stages of "oh, this is not good," to "She's gotta tell someone about this," to "I shouldn't be reading this."
I woke up the other night wondering if the voice in my head berating me for some ridiculous mistake was my own voice or something else. Thank you Sara Gran! This book gets me every time. A must-read to get in the mood for Halloween.
Just days from our high-holy season I'm re-reading this exquisite tale of demonic possession for the third time. I am so in love with this book because it drags me every time through the stages of "oh, this is not good," to "She's gotta tell someone about this," to "I shouldn't be reading this."
I woke up the other night wondering if the voice in my head berating me for some ridiculous mistake was my own voice or something else. Thank you Sara Gran! This book gets me every time. A must-read to get in the mood for Halloween.
Published on September 23, 2018 04:30
•
Tags:
demons, halloween-prep, horror
Every Month is October
A blog about creepy books to be read all year long.
"Outside of a dog, a book is a [wo]man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read."
-Groucho Marxs A blog about creepy books to be read all year long.
"Outside of a dog, a book is a [wo]man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read."
-Groucho Marxs ...more
"Outside of a dog, a book is a [wo]man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read."
-Groucho Marxs A blog about creepy books to be read all year long.
"Outside of a dog, a book is a [wo]man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read."
-Groucho Marxs ...more
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