Archive for November, 2009

Bite is a short story book by favorite great fantasy book writers like Charlaine Harris, Laurell K. Hamilton, MaryJanice Davidson, Angela Knight and Vickie Taylor.

This book contains a diverse range of short stories with one thing in common: the stories revolve around vampires and their distant relatives, the werewolves. The sometimes light-hearted humor and sometimes suspenseful adventure make this collection of fantasy short stories a delightful and exciting one.

Here’s a quick summary of each story:

The Girl Who Was Infatuated with Death by Laurell K Hamilton
This story is about a desperate mother who seeks out the vampire hunter, Anita Blake, for help in finding her daughter. Why? Because her daughter is trying to turn into a vampire in order to escape her cancer. Anita agrees to find her, knowing that if the girl has already become a vampire, she’ll have to stake the vampire that turned her since turning a teenager is against the law. In this tale Anita and her boyfriends, Jean-Claude (a vampire), and Ulfric (the leader of a wolf pack) have their work cut out for them.

One Word Answer by Charlaine Harris
Sookie Stackhouse, a psychic waitress in Louisiana, has another case to solve. While doing yardwork with her vampire ex-boyfriend, Bill Compton, a mysterious man pulls up in a limousine and informs Sookie that her cousin, Hadley, has died and left Sookie all of her possessions. But Sookie distrusts this news and has a hunch that the messenger’s not human and that there’s more to the story than meets the eye. She’s right on both counts for she’s about to be lured into a much bigger and more dangerous mission.

By the way, the latest entry in the True Blood books series, Dead In The Family, will be released May 2010!

Biting in Plain Sight by MaryJanice Davidson
Sophie Trudeau is a veterinarian in a small, quiet Minnesota town. She’s a vet that only tends to sick animals in the middle of the night. She also never seems to grow any older. People know there’s something different about her, but they don’t push it because she’s a great doctor. However when a chain of deaths occur, Sophie suspects a rogue vampire. So Sophie, along with her good friend Liam, set out to solve the crime with the help of a ditzy vampire queen. This story combines humor and a good plotline to make for a wonderful short story.

Galahad by Angela Knight
The setting is Mageverse, and King Arthur and his vampire knights dedicate themselves to saving the day and humanity as a whole, with the help of some witches. However, the witches’ aid comes with a condition; their power can only be activated by having sex with a vampire. Caroline Lang, a new witch, is just starting to learn the ropes when an evil cult threatens to take over the universe. Can Caroline get her magic “activated” in time for her to join the battle? As you can imagine, Galahad is an adventurous and lustful (and I do mean LUSTFUL) tale.

Blood Lust by Vickie Taylor
Daniel Hart has developed what many thought impossible: a flawless synthetic form of blood. But his vampire employer steals both his work and his girlfriend. Daniel, not one to take things lying down, seeks to turn himself into a vampire and go after what was stolen from him. However he discovers that becoming one of the undead is an almost impossible challenge. Blood Lust is an engaging short story with lots of fun characters.

I had a lot of fun reading Bite and comparing the different writing styles of the authors in this funny and sexy fantasy book. Check it out.

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Blood Bargain is a great sequel in the new Blood Line fantasy book series by Maria Lima. Once again we meet Keira, a half breed in a powerful family clan who is going through her “change” and acquiring new, amazing powers. We originally met her in the first book in this fantasy book series, Matters of the Blood (click the link to read my review – the book was awesome).

In this installment, Keira just wants to be left alone to be with her sexy vampire boyfriend, Adam Walker. But her family keeps butting in. And Adam has his own problems – he’s trying to persuade his fellow vampires to give up drinking human blood. And, to add to the mix, her great grandmother just sent Kiera’s 1,200 year old shape shifter brother, Tucker, to watch over her. Kiera’s feeling just a bit stifled – to say the least.

Now, it would seem that Keira wouldn’t need much “watching over” in a little town like Rio Seco, Texas, but trouble just seems to naturally follow her. She’s finally found a man that she loves more than anything, but something weird is happening to Adam; he seems to sleep all of the time. And strange things are happening in town; teenagers and ranch hands are disappearing. On top of this, Keira has been hearing strange whispers.

As we read the book we start to wonder how Kiera will handle so many problems. People are disappearing, her boyfriend won’t wake up – it’s just too much! This is where Kiera’s “network” helps out. Keira has several good friends who help her along and, for once, her family might actually be a help instead of a hindrance. However Keira keeps hearing pesky little whispers from an unknown source which makes her wonder whether her family is responsible for some of the recent problems.

If you like the vampire fantasy genre, then this book is a definite “Next on Your List”. The storyline is wonderfully unpredictable and Maria Lima introduces several different types of supernatural beings which kept me intrigued and entertained. While Adam, Keira’s boyfriend, did not play as big a role in this book as he did in the first one, it didn’t detract from the romantic aspect of the book. Also, there are plenty of interesting characters in this book to keep you captivated and entertained. Definitely take the opportunity to check out Blood Bargain, an engrossing, well constructed sequel by Maria Lima.

Categories : New Fantasy Books
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The latest Fringe episode, Of Human Action, starts with everybody’s favorite – a good old fashioned police chase. The police reach the top of a parking garage and find their suspects sitting in the car – not moving. Inside the car are two men and a teenage boy. The police cautiously get out of their cars as one radios in to say the hostage appears to be unharmed. All the while, the three people in the car just sit there looking at each other as the officers yell for them to get out of the car. Finally the two men open the doors and get out. They get down on their knees, telling the police ‘you have no idea what you’re dealing with’. That part is definitely true because the next thing you see is one of the officers throw himself off the roof of the parking garage as another officer shoots all the other policeman on the scene – instead of shooting at the bad guys. Then, that officer shoots herself. Obviously, the Fringe Team must be called in.

A teenage boy named Tyler Carson is the hostage who was in the car with the two men. The Fringe Team is told that he had disappeared thirty six hours earlier. As Olivia is looking around the crime scene, she tells Walter that the bodies of the slain officers are being shipped to his lab but he dismisses the whole thing, saying it is easy to see that this was some sort of hypnotism. But, the team still has to find the boy and time is of the essence. They find out that Tyler Carson’s father works for the aerospace division of Massive Dynamic, bringing that mysterious group back into the picture, and the team heads out to interview him. They meet Dr. Carson in the office of Nina Sharp, head of Massive Dynamic. He tells them he did not know his son was missing until the kidnappers called. The kidnappers have been identified as Patrick Hickey and Tom Dobbins and Nina assures Olivia and Peter that they have never worked for Massive Dynamic. Dr. Carson tells Olivia that the only thing the kidnapper said to him was to wait for further instructions. He says that he works on highly classified systems for the military and his work is his life. His wife died when his son was young and he does not know what he will do if he loses his son too. These statements affect Walter because of the similarity to his own life and he leaves the room as Peter follows.

Peter finds Walter standing at the windows outside the office thinking about his life and his partnership with William Bell from many years before. William Bell founded and built Massive Dynamic while Walter spent his life committed in a mental institution. He tells Peter that William Bell was how he met Peter’s mother. He seems to be regretting the fact that he has not achieved all that William Bell did. At this point, we switch back to the kidnappers as Tyler tells them he is hungry so they stop at a convenience store to get food. One of the kidnappers tells the clerk to give him all the money in the register but the clerk laughs because the kidnapper has no weapon. Then a customer comes over to add his two cents worth and gets a whole lot more than he bargained for when the kidnapper somehow forces him to pour a pot of hot coffee over his own head and run through a plate glass window. The kidnapper then turns back to the clerk who is now holding a gun. The kidnapper says you should have just given me the money as the clerk is forced by some force to put the gun down and electrocute himself.

The Fringe Team is called in again and the first order of business is to watch the surveillance video from the convenience store. They see the kidnapped boy in the store not trying to escape as well as what appears to be the kidnapper’s ability to control people through hypnosis. They are trying to understand why the boy has not tried to escape. The mystery deepens when they find out that the kidnappers are just car salesman who worked for the same company and had no criminal records. Their boss was shocked that they were involved in something like this so the team’s next question is – how did these two men get involved in a kidnapping?

Walter has been performing an autopsy on the bodies of the police officers and store clerk when he notices something odd about their brains. There are hematomas (areas of bleeding) on the brains which indicate there was some kind of trauma to the brain. He tells Olivia that what has happened is mind control – not hypnosis. Walter theorizes that the mind control works through sound and they decide that even if his theory is wrong, it is better to try something rather than nothing, because at this point no one can get even get near the kidnappers. Olivia tells Walter to design a device to block the sound that might be allowing the mind control.

Olivia returns to Massive Dynamic to see Dr. Carson when the kidnappers finally call. Tyler Carson is on the phone telling his dad to do whatever the kidnappers want. The kidnappers take the phone from Tyler and tell Dr Carson they want two million dollars in unmarked bills delivered that afternoon or his son dies. Olivia is really surprised that all they want is money. It seems like so much trouble for only money. She believes that they stole Dr. Carson’s son for some other reason and she wants to set a trap.

Walter has been at the lab thinking about how to stop the mind control when he remembers a teddy bear Peter had as a baby that produced white noise which recreates the feeling of being inside the womb. He thinks the white noise will block the mind control effect. Walter brings his new white noise device to the group that is going out to apprehend the kidnappers. He explains the premise of his protection device, putting on large headphones, it looks a little silly but they use it anyway. The trap is set with Dr. Carson waiting with the briefcase of money in his hand.

Things do not go quite as planned because the kidnapper arrives and jerks the money from Dr. Carter’s hand and tries to run. The team chases him but the other kidnapper drives through them all and purposely wrecks the car with a huge explosion. Olivia continues the pursuit of the surviving kidnapper until she finds him inside the warehouse, trying to kill himself yet asking her to help him at the same time. Peter is running to help her when the mind control affects him, apparently the white noise ear phones offer no protection. He turns and finds the boy, Tyler, there – it turns out he is really the bad guy. He has been controlling the kidnappers to extort money from his father and now he has control of Peter. He makes Peter drive him away from the scene. Walter and Olivia cannot find Peter and the kidnapper tells them, ‘you better hope he is not with that kid’.

Olivia finds camera footage that proves Tyler is the real kidnapper and that he now has Peter. She returns to Nina Sharp at Massive Dynamic to confront her about the fact that the son of one of her top scientists can control people’s minds. It is then that they finally tell Olivia the whole story about mind enhancing drugs that are being used to allow pilots to control their jets with their minds. It seems strange but apparently Dr. Carson took some of these drugs home for further research and Tyler found them. During the entire episode they have shown Tyler eating Pez candy like there is no tomorrow and now we know why. It is the Massive Dynamic drug that has allowed him to control minds and he IS eating it like candy. Dr. Carson says it could not be the drug that has caused this because the chemical was designed for computers. Walter chirps In that the brain is an organic computer and with Tyler in midst of puberty, there is no way to predict what the effects could be. Also, the fact that Tyler is taking Attention Deficit Disorder medication is likely making matters even worse.

Peter, as a hostage, is now trying to talk to the boy and make him realize how foolish he is being when a cop pulls them over. Peter asks Tyler to let him handle it but Tyler is not going to let this end happily. Tyler forces Peter to take the gun from the cop and kill him before he can call in their location. Peter begs Tyler not to make him kill the policeman and he relents. The policeman is saved but the chase continues.

The Fringe team is removed from the case because the Government now believes that Tyler is working for a foreign national who is trying to get Massive Dynamic military secrets. They plan to apprehend him with all of the force necessary which means Peter could be hurt in the process. The Fringe Team has Tyler’s home computer and they notice that he has been searching obituaries and car accident articles for women who died at the age of 20 years old. The team sees that Tyler found information on a specific woman which leads them back to Dr. Carson. He tells them that the woman Tyler found is his ex-wife. Olivia realizes that there is much more to the story, because earlier the doctor said his wife was dead.

Dr. Carter tells Olivia that is wife was a drug addict who abandoned them but he told Tyler she was dead. They now realize that Tyler knows the truth about his mother and has found her through searching the internet. Tyler wants to be a family again. With the information from Tyler’s computer, Olivia and her boss, Phillip Broyles, head to the address of the woman Tyler found. Tyler and Peter arrive at the house first and he is so happy to see her. She seems happy also and invites him into the house but when Tyler sees she has another family, he gets angry again. He forces Peter to take a gun and aim it his mother and her new husband. Olivia and Phillip arrive just as this begins to happen. They have a new weapon Walter concocted but it incapacitates the boy only long enough to keep Peter from shooting Tyler’s mother. Tyler recovers and forces Peter to shoot Phillip. Olivia stops to make sure Phillip is okay before continuing after Peter and Tyler, who have run out of the house.

Walter and Olivia aim the new weapon at the car Tyler and Peter are escaping in to incapacitate Tyler, giving Peter time to drive the car into a telephone poll and knock Tyler out. The mind control effect has worn off now that he is not constantly popping the medication. This episode of the Fringe TV show ends with Dr. Carson looking through a set of files, all of them showing a kid who looks like Tyler with different Massive Dynamic scientists as their father. Lastly, Tyler is wheeled down a sterile hallway by his ‘father’ and you know he’s going to be locked away forever. Massive Dynamic lied again, it was all some huge conspiracy, human life has no value, and one wonders what the plans are for the other ‘Tylers’ out there. The possibilities are endless…

Categories : Fringe TV Show
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Nov
04

Fringe Episode 6 – Earthling

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Two whole weeks without my Fringe TV show and I was afraid I would not be able to handle it, but, thankfully, this week’s Fringe episode started out with one of the best, most shocking opening sequences I have ever seen on a sci-fi show. While there has been no mention lately of alternate universes or meetings with Nina Sharp, the latest episodes have focused on good old-fashioned detective work, even though the problems they were solving were very weird. This is Fringe Season 2 after all.

So, with that said, imagine your husband setting up the perfect anniversary surprise for you. You come home so happy to see that he’s not really on a flight out of town, but instead has set up a wonderful greeting for you at the door – beautiful flowers and the perfect card. You walk in, calling his name, telling him how he has really surprised you this time. That’s how this week’s Fringe episode starts, with a happily surprised woman’s husband sitting on the couch as she walks in, and as she touches him, he crumbles into a pile of dust. It was an awesome special effect as his head tilted off his body and crashed into an ashy pile. Instead of being all happy to begin your anniversary with the one you love, you end up screaming your head off.

FBI Lead Agent, Philip Broyles, gets a phone call because bodies dissolving into ash are definitely a job for the Fringe team. No sign of a struggle, no sign of forced entry. The body basically has to be vacuumed up to be taken back to the lab. Broyles asks specific questions about the dead man: Is he a doctor? No. Does he work in a medical environment? No. Broyles tells Fringe team member Olivia about a time when he saw this same type of death and shares the information he stored on previous, similar victims from four years ago. The 5 victims in question had all visited the same hospital at the time. Broyles had been contacted by the killer at that time, someone who seemed to want to turn himself in, but only if the police could decipher the meaning of a special formula he’d sent them. No one was able to identify the mystery formula and the previous deaths remained unsolved.

The Fringe team discovers that latest victim visited his mother in a medical treatment facility – just like the victims from four years before. Broyles and Olivia give the formula to mad scientist Walter to see what he can learn.

We next see a nurse walking the halls of the hospital with a ghost-like shadowy figure following her. Fringe members Olivia and Broyles show up at the hospital looking for a link to the killings from four years ago. Although Walter is examining the mystery formula in his lab with his son Peter, they can’t find a link between the employees at this hospital and the hospital from four years ago. We see the shadow figure visit someone in the hospital that Olivia and Broyles are visiting and then poof! another body is made of dust. As luck would have it, just as Olivia and Broyles find the new dust pile, they discover the name of the murderer from 4 years ago; Thomas Koslov. Not only did he work in the hospital where the previous deaths occurred four years ago, but he also works at the hospital they’re currently visiting. They discover that Thomas Koslov is an alias and that his records are total fakes, but they’re pretty sure he’s of Russian origin. The chase is on.

Based on the fingerprints they recover from Koslov’s apartment they discover that he’s being investigated by the Russians, the CIA, and a number of other agencies. The “big boy” agencies take the case from Broyles and as you can imagine, he’s not too happy about this because he’s emotionally vested in this case. It’s pretty obvious that he’s not going to stop investigating. Contacting Olivia, he tells her not to write anything down about their findings.

What Olivia discovers is that the Russians may have their own Fringe Team (I wonder if they have their own Fringe TV show too?) and the mysterious shadow figure may be a part of that technology. Fortunately, Broyles still has some friends in DC who know he’s decided to stay on the case. These friends send him a top secret document which provides additional information about Thomas Koslov. It turns out Thomas abducted his own brother (a Russian cosmonaut) from a hospital. His brother had been held there because of an unknown encounter in space which left him in a coma.

Peter and Walter hypothesize that the shadow figure passes through people to absorb their radiation and it dissolves them in the process, turning them into ash. All the victims had been having some kind of x-ray or radiation treatment, hence their attractiveness to the shadow figure. Walter has finally figured out what is going on by working on the formula and realizes that the shadow figure is something the cosmonaut brought back from one of his spacewalks. Not such good news though, because now he knows that the shadow can never be separated from the cosmonaut.

Thomas in the meantime has taken his brother from the hospital to a cheap motel where he has rigged some contraption trying to kept the shadow inside his brother. Turns out Thomas Koslov isn’t such a bad guy, he calls Broyles hoping to find new information about the formula and Walter tells them that the entity inside the cosmonaut can never be separated. Broyles tells Thomas he can help him but he must see his brother in order to be able to help him. Just as they begin to think Thomas is going to turn himself in, he turns into dust himself. Bummer, he’s the only guy who can handle his brother. The trace on the phone leads them to Thomas’ ash body and his brother is still there in a coma. Walter puts on a bulletproof jacket and checks the body of his brother, trying to find a way to contain the shadow before it is too late but, I think it is too late already because the shadow is on the loose and the next thing you hear is a little girl scream. Broyles shoots the ‘coma’ brother in the head thinking since the shadow and the brother were connected that killing the brother would kill both. It worked because the little girl is saved and the shadow disappears. Agent Phillip Bryoles saves the day.

Olivia asks Broyles why this case was so important to him. He tells he that this was the case that ended his marriage, due to his obsession. Broyles pays a visit to his ex-wife’s house when the case is solved to let her know that he finally closed the case. But, as usual, we all know that nothing is ever as it seems on the Fringe TV series. Phillip leaves his ex-wife’s house a little sad, no real resolution, only to find a strange man waiting for him in the middle of the street. It is the CIA, telling him next time he is warned off a case, he better cease and desist. I got the impression from their discussion that the cosmonaut started breathing again later and they ended up just shooting him back into space. Sort of like the idea one hears of taking all our trash and shooting it into space. I suspect that – just like our space trash is going to affect us in some way in the future – so too will this shadow figure visit us again in some strange way….on a future Fringe TV show episode.

Categories : Fringe TV Show
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