Alexander Gordon Smith's Blog / en-US Sat, 16 Mar 2019 23:13:42 -0700 60 Alexander Gordon Smith's Blog / 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg /author_blog_posts/8185503-book-review-shutter Sun, 12 Apr 2015 01:56:04 -0700 Book Review: SHUTTER /author_blog_posts/8185503-book-review-shutter Just look at that cover!!! *ShutterShudder*


Ìý


One of my favourite video games when I was younger was Fatal Frame, a Japanese survival horror where you fended off ghosts by capturing them with your camera. I never actually used to play it, I just watched my sister play it, but I loved the atmosphere, the horror, and the idea that you can fight evil with something other then a gun. To be honest, it wasn’t an amazing game. The plot was pretty unimaginative, and the action got tedious after a while, and I’m not sure if we ever actually finished it or not. But the lasting feeling the game left me with was that this was a concept I wanted to see more of: I thought the idea would make an amazing movie, and an even more amazing book.


Which is why I was SO excited about Courtney Alameda’s SHUTTER! Now, a quick declaration: I know Courtney. We met a few years back when I was in Utah and she worked for the library. We did a tour of schools together (during which, when she found out I had never eaten a Twinkie, she ran out and grabbed me one, so I will love her forever), and in the downtime between events we talked non-stop about writing and stories and the things we enjoyed. I remember her telling meÌýabout SHUTTER back then, and knowing immediately that this was a book I wanted to read. I saw her again last year when I was back in the US, and I finally got my hands on a copy (thanks Courtney!). And it does not disappoint.



SHUTTER may share a superficial similarity to Fatal Frame, but the plot is completely different, and infinitely superior. It tells the story of Micheline Helsing, the teenage descendent of Abraham Van Helsing (yep, the guy who killed vampires). Micheline is a cadet member of the Helsing Corp, which is essentially an army dedicated to protecting the world from evil. And in this world, evil is everywhere. Ghosts and monsters are real, and they are dangerous. Very, very dangerous. It quickly becomes clear just how treacherous this world is when Micheline and her fellow cadets answer an emergency call at an old hospital (which is pretty much the creepiest location you can imagine). What should be a routine exorcism turns out to be something far worse, something unimaginably awful�


From there, the story is relentless. It barrels along at a brutal pace as Micheline and her friends try to undo the damage that was caused in the hospital, and discover who is responsible. The action scenes are brilliantly written, they flow with an effortless energy and read like a movie. But it’s the horror that I love most. And be under no illusion, this is a horror novel. The ghosts and the monsters are genuinely terrifying, they gave me goosebumps and I am a hardened horror fan. There were moments, reading this, when I was checking over my shoulder, and when I had to flick on the lights at night just to be sure�



With the intense action and furious horror it would be easy to have a central character that fades into the background. But that’s the real genius of SHUTTER â€� Micheline is a fantastic hero, a beautifully strong presence who effortlessly holds the world of the story together. A teenage girl with a tragic past and a responsibilityÌýto her powerful family, Micheline is real and believable, torn by her sense of duty and her loyalty to her family (including her thuggish, overpowering father) and her friends. There’s a love interest there too, of course, but it never takes centre stage at the expense of the story, it isn’t there just because the author feels it should be. It’s just a natural part of Micheline’s conflicted and complicated home life. But characters are conflict, and Micheline’s backstory is what makes her such a force of awesomeness. She is a total badass, but she’s vulnerable too. We care about her.


The plot, too, is perfect. I won’t say too much, for fear of spoilers, but in SHUTTER there exists a world beyond ours, a ghostly plane called the Obscura (a generous nod to Fatal Frame). This was one of my favourite parts of the novel, and I had a mantra while I was reading � please let them go into the Obscura, please let them go into the Obscura � and bam! My wish was granted. It’s one of the absolute best parts of reading (as a writer), when an author thinks along the same lines as you, when the story drives in the exact same direction that you would have taken it (not that I wasn’t shocked and surprised along the way, there are some amazing twists here). It makes it such a pleasurable experience. This is a book that I totally wish I had written myself, because it really is such a fast-paced, scary, action-packed ride. I loved it!!


So, in short, if you’re a fan of horror, of video games, of action movies, of shows like Supernatural and the Avengers, of survival horror, of classics like Dracula, of gore, of super-cool tech, of kick-ass heroes, of the excitement of books like Divergent and The Hunger Games, then READ THIS BOOK!!!


Just one question, Courtney, when will we see the sequel?


:-)



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on March, 16 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/7631630-happy-new-year Thu, 01 Jan 2015 06:11:50 -0800 Happy New Year!!! /author_blog_posts/7631630-happy-new-year


I hope you’re all enjoying the holidays, and that 2015 is an amazing year for you!! Here’s a short vlog to celebrate a brand new year, it has pugs in it!!


:-)


I promise I will try to keep more up to date with the blog this year�


I’m much more active on Facebook, so feel free to send me a friend request !


Or join the for exclusives and giveaways!


I’m also doing a selfie a day for 2015, I have no idea why. And by selfie, I probably mean pictures of the pets more than me, but that still kind of counts� I’ll be posting them on Instagram, so feel free to follow me there too!



Here’s the first selfie, Happy (New Year) Pugs!!



Anyway, have an amazing New Year everyone! Thanks again for reading the books and for being fans!


All for one, and let’s get the hell out of 2014!!



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on March, 15 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/6773725-latest-vlog-the-day-i-killed-darren-shan Wed, 06 Aug 2014 07:50:45 -0700 <![CDATA[Latest Vlog: The Day I Killed Darren Shan!]]> /author_blog_posts/6773725-latest-vlog-the-day-i-killed-darren-shan



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on October, 06 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/6459593-latest-vlog-ten-things-you-never-knew-about-furnace Thu, 12 Jun 2014 11:40:21 -0700 <![CDATA[Latest Vlog: Ten Things You Never Knew About Furnace!]]> /author_blog_posts/6459593-latest-vlog-ten-things-you-never-knew-about-furnace



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on January, 11 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5666633-the-fury-exclusive-chapter Sat, 01 Feb 2014 10:13:05 -0800 The Fury: Exclusive Chapter!! /author_blog_posts/5666633-the-fury-exclusive-chapter The Fury is a huge book, but it was almost even huger (is that a word�?)! We ended up cutting a few chapters to keep the pace up, but I’d still love for you guys to read them! This chapter is from the middle of the book, and although it’s a stand alone chapter with no major spoilers, it may give away some of the twists in the book, so be warned!


Stay Furious!!


:-)


�


"Ours is not to reason why..."


Harry


London, 09.14 am


Captain Harry Botham’s stomach flipped the way it always did on take off, but it had settled by the time he banked the chopper round and pulled it out of Portsmouth Naval Base. The Apache’s monstrous Rolls Royce engine growled, the whump of the blades settling into him like a heartbeat as the ground shrank and the sky opened up.


‘Coordinates locked,� said Simon Marshall. The gunner was sitting in front and below him, but his voice was fed through Harry’s helmet speakers. ‘North, we should be there in twenty minutes.�


Harry checked the heads up display then pushed the throttle, taking the bird up to 1,000 feet and 180 miles per hour. Up here sunlight poured into the cockpit like liquid gold, his visor darkening automatically to cut out the glare. Two blips appeared on his radar, moving fast, and a second later a pair of RAF jets screamed overhead. Their contrails were the only blemish against the blue, an absolutely flawless summer day. God knew they didn’t get many like this, not even in the middle of summer, and Harry had been sunning himself outside the barracks when he was called up. As much as he loved being airborne, he could have done with another couple of hours R and R. Especially as nobody had told him why the RAF’s entire fleet was being mobilised.


‘It’s the Chinese, I’m telling you,� said Marshall, reading his mind. ‘They’ve finally decided they want to rule the world.�


Harry snorted.


‘Don’t be an idiot,� he replied, his voice fed back into his own ears and making him sound not quite real.


‘What then?� he replied. ‘An exercise?�


‘They told us this wasn’t an exercise,� Harry replied. His commanding officer had made that very clear, but the man’s hurried briefing hadn’t provided any information other than the fact that something was going down in London. Something big.


‘Probably terrorists,� he replied with a shrug.


‘Well wait till they get a load of me,� Marshall said, patting his control panel. Harry smiled. The Apache was fully loaded � a 30-millimetre chain gun under the fuselage, capable of pumping out 625 rounds per minute, and a sweet mix of Hellfires and Hydras mounted on the hardpoints. Whatever was waiting for them, it was about to get blown to kingdom come.


So why was there still a tickle of discomfort in his stomach, one that had nothing to do with the motion of the helicopter? He’d flown on two tours in Afghanistan and hadn’t once felt like this, not even when he’d been clipped by a ground-fired RPG out in Helmand and had to crash land. Back then the adrenaline had stripped every shred of fear from his system, had turned him into a machine. This was different, he felt way too human, way too vulnerable. Maybe it was because he was flying over home ground, the fields and towns of England floating below like debris on a slow, green river. Maybe it was because he was flying into London, the city he’d once lived in. Maybe. He gulped down more air, suddenly uncomfortable in his seat.


All they had been told for sure was that there had been some kind of attack on the capital. The order to scramble had come from General Stevens himself, which was a good indication how serious it was. That dude didn’t get out of bed for anything less than a world war.


‘Identify and intercept the target,� he’d said over the comm. And that was that, their orders, five words they had to obey even if it meant life and limb.


‘Ours is not to reason why,� he said, the only poem he’d ever committed to memory. They all had, everyone in the unit.


‘Ours is but to do and die,� Marshall finished. ‘Hell yeah!�


Harry checked the coordinates, nudged the stick a little to bring the bird back on course. They were over Guildford, a minute or two off the M25. The Apache just ate up the miles.


‘Whoa,� said Marshall. ‘What the…�


Harry squinted through the narrow window, past the sweeping colours of his HUD. Something had a hold of the horizon, a fist of black smoke. The chopper rocked in a bout of turbulence and Harry had the sudden idea that the clenched, knuckled hand was shaking the world, trying to rip it free from its mounting. He glanced at their position, still a good twenty miles away from ground zero, surely too far away to get a visual. He felt his guts squirm again, his hand twitching, wanting to bring the bird around one-eighty. He had to force himself to keep moving forward.


‘That thing is� It must be huge, Harry.�


‘Base, we have eyes on,� he said, knowing that the command centre had an open line into the chopper. ‘Looks like some kind of explosion. How should we proceed?�


There was a sharp hiss of static, then the XO’s voice fed through.


‘As ordered, Captain. Investigate and intercept. Maintain a perimeter, five miles. We don’t know how dangerous this thing is.�


‘Roger,� he said, slowing the apache down and lifting her to 2,000 feet. Whatever was down there, he wanted to be as high above it as he could get without entering RAF airspace. Nothing would kill him half as fast as a mid-air collision with a jet. ‘Do we go weapons hot?�


Another pause, then, ‘Yes, weapons hot.�


Harry felt his skin go cold and prickly. Any hope that this was an exercise had just been obliterated � there was no way in hell that they’d be given weapons hot status above the biggest city in Europe unless this was real.


The windscreen was gradually filling with smoke, so thick and so dark that it looked like a huge granite mountain sprouting from the city. No, it was more like somebody had hacked a section out of the sky. Harry’s polarised visor compensated for the dimming light and he found himself craning forward in his seat trying to make sense of what he was seeing.


‘There’s nothing there,� Marshall said, his voice whispered into Harry’s ear. ‘Oh Jesus, there’s nothing there.�


Of course there’s something there, Harry thought. There had to be, with all that smoke. Only it wasn’t smoke, he realised as they closed in. It was things. It was a spiralling cloud of matter � there were buildings in there, crumbling into pieces as they churned upwards. He could make out glinting shapes that might have been cars, and smaller, darker ones � not people, those can’t be people � that twitched and struggled as they rose. The tornado spun relentlessly, maybe five miles across, sucking everything towards�


What was that? There was a shape in the chaos. Everything spiralled around it, like filthy bathwater circling a drain, sparking off fingers of lightning that were dark instead of bright, which left huge black scars against Harry’s retinas. He didn’t blink. He didn’t dare close his eyes for even a second in case this thing, this impossible nightmare, came for him. He just stared at the figure in the centre of the storm � because that’s what it was, a man. Huge, yes, and deformed, as though his body was a balloon pumped up almost beyond recognition, but still unmistakably human. And the worst thing was its mouth, immense and gaping, breathing in everything with an endless howl that could be heard above the chopper’s engines.


Harry was throwing up before he even knew it, ripping off his mouthpiece just in time, his breakfast hitting the reinforced glass screen that separated him from his gunner. The chopper banked hard, the ground looming up in the right hand window.


‘Christ, Harry,� Marshall yelled, and Harry realised he’d dropped the stick. He grabbed it, levelled out, bringing the Apache to a standstill and wiping his free hand over his mouth. He spat acid, his whole body drenched in sweat and his stomach cramping hard.


There was a rip of thunder as a jet flew by overhead, the hiss of two sidewinders being launched. The missiles hurtled into the morning night, impacted right in the middle of the storm. An explosion bubbled out of the chaos, the shockwave making the chopper bounce. But the fire didn’t last, sucked into the man’s vast, dark gullet, extinguished as though the missiles had been fired underwater. If anything it seemed to make the tornado churn faster, harder, more of the ground peeling away and carried up by the vortex. And the man still hung there, his eyes two pits of boiling pitch, his mouth sucking in everything it could.


‘Fire,� Harry screamed, feeling a creeping tickle of madness in the corner of his mind. He had to destroy this thing � not to save London, but because he understood that if he had to look at it for much longer then his brain was going to short-circuit. ‘Fire goddammit!�


Marshall didn’t hesitate, unleashing the chain gun. A deafening rattle filled the cabin, streaks of tracer fire cutting a path towards the man in the storm. The barrage tore through some of the spiralling debris before finding its target, but the rounds dissapeared into the carnage. There was a soft hiss, the chopper rocking as four missiles blasted outwards. Harry counted the seconds � one, two, three � before they detonated in a ball of rippling gold. Once again the explosion was swallowed up, pulled into the man’s cavernous mouth along with the constant stream of debris. Marshall tried again, emptying the Apache’s payload and turning the sky to fire.


‘It’s not working,� the gunner said. But Harry wasn’t listening. The smoke was clearing, and more of the world had been erased. It wasn’t just black, the way things disappear in the dark, it was gone. It was utterly empty. Just looking at it made his head hurt, because there was no way he could comprehend what he was seeing. It just didn’t make sense.


‘H²¹°ù°ù²â, get us out of here,â€� Marshall shouted. He had turned around, his eyes wide and white. ‘Harry!â€�


Something popped, like a canon blast, and the chopper lurched downwards. It took Harry a moment to realise that it was the pressure changing as air was sucked into the storm. They were being pulled towards it, caught in the flow, the chopper’s demented alarm ringing into his headset. Marshall was banging on the window that separated them, but Harry couldn’t pull his gaze from the windscreen. The bird was tilting downwards, giving him a perfect view of the streets below. They were breaking up, dissolving like sand sculptures in the wind. Buildings and cars and people alike exploded into powder, sucked up into the tornado.


‘H²¹°ù°ù²â, please,â€� said Marshall. Harry felt the chopper buck. It turned slowly, the engines whining, but the force that was pulling them was too strong. It was like they were in a boat heading for a waterfall. No, it was more like they were in a space ship, being wrenched towards a black hole. There was nothing they could do, he realised. It was over.


‘Ours is not to reason why,� he said. The Apache shook, so violently that his head smacked against the top of the cockpit. Metal groaned, then the rotors ripped free overhead, spinning off into the darkness. Marshall was shrieking, and Harry tore off his helmet, suddenly drowning in the howl of the storm and that same endless inward breath from the hanging man.


‘Ours is but to do and die,� he went on, louder now. ‘Ours is not to reason why, ours is but to do and die,� again and again, like a chant, like a prayer, as the front of the chopper began to come apart, breaking into pieces like a kit model. Then Marshall, his arms and legs and head coming loose, hanging there against a backdrop of boiling black skies. Harry looked down, realising that he was no longer inside the helicopter. Pieces of it floated beside him, suspended in the turbulence a mile above the vanishing ground. He’d dreamed of this as a child, night after night, of being able to fly. That memory blew out the fear, and even though he could see his own flesh begin to unravel, layers of pink then red then white trailing out like sherbet, he found himself smiling.


‘Ours is not to reason why,� he said through crumbling lips. Then his mind ruptured into white noise and black light, and everything that was Harry Botham was pulled into the abyss.


Ìý



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on February, 03 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5602671-book-recommendation-the-rule-of-three Wed, 22 Jan 2014 02:22:07 -0800 <![CDATA[Book Recommendation: The Rule of Three]]> /author_blog_posts/5602671-book-recommendation-the-rule-of-three

Rule of Three: Find this book, buy this book, read this book!


One of the coolest things about being an author is that you get sent books to read all the time! I love getting the chance to read things before they’re published (although saying that, I’m quite a slow reader, so even though I often get them before they’re published they’re usually out by the time I finish).


Just before Christmas I got sent a proof copy of The Rule of Three, the new book by . It’s an absolutely fantastic read, I couldn’t put it down. Eric is also a really cool guy who does some important work with orphans and disadvantaged children in Kenya, which is another reason why you should buy this book!


Anyway, this is what I thought about the book:


�The Rule of Three is a fantastic, compelling, unforgettable book! Its simple premise—what if one day all modern technology stopped working—becomes a blisteringly fast tale of survival in a world gone to hell.


The genius of the novel isn’t its likeable, reluctant hero, teenage pilot Adam, or its explosive, bullet-ridden, nail-biting action scenes—it’s howbelievable it is. Walters perfectly captures the fragile nature of civilisation, and how easily that veneer can shatter in times of crisis. The escalation of the plot—the way society implodes as quickly and as violently as a black hole—leaves you breathless.


This book makes The Walking Dead look like a walk in the park, because inÌýThe Rule of Three the monsters howling outside your gates aren’t the undead but your friends, your fellow students, your coworkers. It will leave you looking over your shoulder to try to work out who would be your friend after the world ends, and who would very quickly become your enemy.


Combined with some deft humour, a carefully handled love story, and some white-knuckle plane rides over the growing chaos,ÌýThe Rule of Three is one of my favourite books of 2014. I just hope there’s a sequel!â€�


Go read it!


:-)



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on January, 14 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5545497-book-review-the-hunt Wed, 15 Jan 2014 10:44:35 -0800 Book Review: The Hunt /author_blog_posts/5545497-book-review-the-hunt I was really lazy with reading last year, I’m ashamed to admit. There was just so much cool stuff on telly (I blame you, Walter White). But I wanted to get back into reading and reviewing this year, because books are awesome and I miss them. So I’ve started off the year with a book that I’ve been wanting to read for a while now, The Hunt by Andrew Fukuda.


The Hunt


The Hunt has a great premise: our world has been taken over by vampires (not that the V word is ever mentioned, but there’s no doubt about what these sun-hating bloodsuckers are), with humankind hunted almost to the point of extinction. Those humans who remain survive by hiding in plain sight � living amongst their predators and in constant terror that their true identity will be revealed. Don’t smile. Don’t blush. Don’t sweat. Don’t cry. If you’re found out then your life ends in the most brutal fashion imaginable, because human blood is like a drug to the vampires, driving them into a frenzy and causing them to tear their poor victims to shreds before devouring them.


One of the surviving humans � or hepers, as they are known � is Gene, a 17-year-old boy who does his best to fit in at a school full of vampires. Admittedly it’s a bit of a stretch that nobody has discovered him for what he truly is � given that hepers smell extremely potent to vampires � but this is where the excitement of the book lies. Fukuda does an amazing job of ratcheting up the tension, because if Gene makes the slightest mistake then it’s game over. It’s palpable, and it keeps you right on the edge of your seat.


The book steps into Hunger Games territory with the concept of the titular Hunt. In order to keep the population content, the Ruler arranges a Neroesque annual tournament where vampires are selected by lottery to hunt, kill and eat a handful of unfortunate humans. Inevitably, Gene’s number comes up, and together with a bunch of bloodthirsty vampires he is brought to the hunt headquarters to begin his training. What follows are some absolutely nailbiting moments of anxiety and horror as Gene tries to keep his identity a secret with the walls rapidly closing in around him. It’s here that Gene also discovers some unexpected truths about the surviving hepers and the society he lives in�


The Hunt is a fast-paced, action-packed thrill ride that boys and girls will love. Gene is a great character, and Fukuda’s world building is fantastic. He obviously spent a great deal of time getting to know his vampires because their odd mannerisms are believable and disturbing � the scratching of wrists as a substitute for laughter was incredibly creepy! You feel immersed, which isn’t always a good thing when the world you’re immersed in is so terrifying.


I also love the fact that these are proper vampires � there’s no sparklyness going on here. These guys will tear you to strips and suck the marrow from your bones. It’s my favourite thing about the novel � the concept of a bloodlust so overpowering that vampires will run to their deaths in the sunshine if they so much as catch a whiff of heper blood. It is genuinely terrifying. It’s also the one thing that threatened to ruin the book for me, because (and this is a minor spoiler), at one point Fukuda overrides his vampire’s bloodlust, allowing them to control it in order to get his heroes out of a bad situation. I’m pretty sure you can’t change the rules like that when it comes to bad guys!! It was a disappointing moment in an otherwise faultless book, though, and I’m looking forward to reading the next instalment.


Highly recommended! Four out of five skulls.



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on February, 09 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5545498-happy-new-year Wed, 15 Jan 2014 08:35:47 -0800 Happy New Year!!! /author_blog_posts/5545498-happy-new-year Okay, so it’s not even a new year any more, sorry about that! I was planning to blog and vlog a little more this year, but I’ll just add that to the list of resolutions that I will doubtlessly break before the end of January (along with eating less butter, tidying the kitchen on a regular basis and going out for a run)!


Speaking of resolutions, here’s my New Year’s vlog!


I hope 2014 is a really wonderful year for you all!! If you’ve got any resolutions, feel free to share them below!


:-D




posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on February, 25 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5394761-winning-tales-of-terror Fri, 13 Dec 2013 05:03:09 -0800 WINNING TALES OF TERROR! /author_blog_posts/5394761-winning-tales-of-terror


Pakefield High School in Lowestoft is one of my absolute favourite places to visit � I have been there quite a few times now and it’s always so much fun working with the extremely creative and talented students! During my most recent trip the school ran a horror writing contest around the theme of the Furnace books � escaping from hell! The stories were AMAZING, and I had the impossible job of picking a winner. But the school and I wanted to show the world how brilliant and terrifying these stories were, so I’m putting them here for you guys to read! They are in no particular order, and all are guaranteed to keep you awake at night!!


Click on each author’s name to read their story, it will pop up in a new window!





(and )


(and )


(and )


(and )


(and / )


Congratulations to all the winners, I am so impressed!! If you are writing this well now then none of you will have any trouble becoming bestselling authors in the future. I’m looking forward to reading your books when they’re published!!


And thanks again to Pakefield for being awesome!


:-)



posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on December, 12 ]]>
/author_blog_posts/5337385-halloween-vlog-contains-evil-dolls Wed, 04 Dec 2013 06:26:15 -0800 <![CDATA[Halloween Vlog (contains evil dolls!!!)]]> /author_blog_posts/5337385-halloween-vlog-contains-evil-dolls I forgot to post this before I went off to the States! It’s too late for the giveaway, but the story is still fun (well, terrifying, but also fun, if you don’t mind stories with crazy evil dolls� I hate dolls, so it wasn’t fun for me at all, but, well, see what you think)!




posted by Alexander Gordon Smith on March, 18 ]]>