Showing posts with label Mediums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mediums. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Sinister Ascension by Marc L. Abbott; School Spirit (and Vampires and Mediums)

 

Sinister Ascension by Marc L. Abbott; School Spirit (And Vampires and Mediums) 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Sinister Ascension Marc L. Abbott’s graphic eldritch Supernatural Horror novel involves a coven of vampires that infiltrate a University and interfere with mortal’s lives for their goals.

Todd, a mysterious handsome charismatic newcomer enrolls in Bruckner University and catches the eye of Kim Morris. She is in a tempestuous relationship with her boyfriend, Eric Tucker which Todd takes full advantage of. However, Todd's not just there to be the third point in a love triangle. He's a vampire with a secret plan for “ascension” and needs a mate. He has many who oppose him including his fellow vampires and coven mates, Kevin and Zeborah, Eric, Dayton Conner, Eric's best friend, and Carmen Guerra, Kim’s roommate. Carmen actually has a secret weapon. She's a medium whose grandmother taught her how to communicate with ghosts and read the minds of otherworldly creatures.

Sinister Ascension has all of the usual earmarks of a decent Supernatural Horror: spiritual encounters, horrific monsters that are beyond description, love triangles gone fatal, and a confrontation between a sinister otherworldly creature with unbelievable abilities and a courageous worried human, often the Female Survivor/Final Girl, also with unbelievable abilities. There technically isn't anything new with what is done with the material, but it is an engaging ride with its ominous moments and genuine suspense.

Todd is a presence that alternates between charming and chilling. There are moments where he plays the role of the sympathetic potential boyfriend to the hilt, maneuvering Kim and Eric’s relationship in his favor. They have personality conflicts about missed dates, spending more time with friends, and mixed signals. These are often minor moments that create tension with any couples, but Todd is a master manipulator. He exaggerates Eric's flaws, builds up his own virtues, and plays on Kim's insecurities and sexual longings. 

Todd almost doesn't need supernatural abilities because he makes for a very effective manipulator and potential abuser. But he is a vampire and is capable of various powers like shapeshifting, hypnosis, and telepathy. As a 21st century vampire, he updates his technique. He spends a lot of time in labs breeding leeches and a subservient fellow vampire to extract the mortal blood. He goes through an eerie metamorphosis that strips away the handsome manipulative exterior to reveal the monster that had been lurking underneath.

The characters that fight against Todd are effective, particularly his rival vampires and Carmen. Kevin and Zeborah hover between being as antagonistic as Todd and justifiable in their fights against him. Kevin takes a more pragmatic approach towards humanity and Todd's fanatic megalomaniacal ambitions run counter to that. Even though he was willing to work alongside Todd on behalf of their coven previously, Kevin realizes that his colleague has gone too far and sides with the humans, specifically Carmen, against Todd. 

Zeborah also has his reasons to side against Todd. There are spoilers involved, but let's say his reasons are more emotional. He still has a soul despite his vampiric tendencies and is also tired of following Todd's orders especially when they led to much previous destruction. His journey towards atonement is one of the strongest aspects of this book.

By far Todd's strongest opponent and the primary protagonist is Carmen. She is beginning college just as she is discovering and developing her powers. Her conversations with her grandmother often consist of her asking questions about these growing powers that she doesn't understand and can't always control. Her abuela gives plenty of heartfelt advice born from a lifetime of using otherworldly talent in an ordinary world. 

Carmen's powers manifest themselves in different ways. Her encounters with ghosts are so mundane that she at first believes that she's talking to actual human students until something gives them away, usually when someone else does not see whom she is talking to. There is such an eerie chapter in which she talks to someone revealed to be a ghost during a stressful shocking night. 

Carmen also has the ability of sharing thoughts with some supernatural creatures most prominently Kevin. This skill allows these two unlikely allies to be on the same page as Carmen tries to protect Kim from Todd and Kevin fights against his one-time coven mate. 

With the ghostly encounters, telepathic conversations with vampires, and the migraines that often precede the use of her powers, Carmen is often on edge. Her abilities are amazing but they are clearly not a pleasant experience. They bring physical pain, mental confusion, and emotional loneliness when she can't tell anyone about them. Carmen recognizes the pain and discomfort but also realizes that it is a calling to help those in trouble particularly her friend and ultimately everyone around her.

Sinister Ascension is a worthy addition to any Supernatural Horror book collection. It has a lot of depth, scares, and plenty of spirit.




Sunday, January 16, 2022

Weekly Reader: Maids of Misfortune A Victorian San Francisco Mystery by M. Louisa Locke; Ho Hum Mystery and Dull Protagonist Do Not Meld In Average Historical Mystery

 


Weekly Reader: Maids of Misfortune A Victorian San Francisco Mystery by M. Louisa Locke; Ho Hum Mystery and Dull Protagonist Do Not Meld In Average Historical Mystery 


By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Maybe I'm just grouchy recovering from Covid but it's not a good sign when of the first five books reviewed this year, I would only label one as outstanding. Two had some good points about them, like setting and world building, but suffered from average or confusing plots. One starts strong then peters out. One would normally be something I would love, but somehow never rises above average or mediocre. The good thing is some of the books that I am currently reading show promise so my mood might be uplifted soon, I hope.


It's unfortunate because I want to like Maids of Misfortune, the first book in M. Louise Locke's Victorian San Francisco Mystery Series. I keep telling myself that I should like it. It's Historical Fiction, one of my all-time favorite genres. It's a Historical Mystery with a female detective so that should make it better. But the book doesn't interest me like other recent books that I have read in the genre.  I hope this isn't an ongoing trend and that I am not getting bored with the genre. That this is just a one time thing.

But Maids of Misfortune doesn't help, because it never gets beyond mildly interesting. The protagonist is introduced pretty well but lags once the investigation starts. The mystery is dull. This book is just average and I apologize for saying this (after all maybe it is just me), but in a genre filled with great reads, that somehow makes my ambivalent feelings towards it worse.


Annie Fuller learned that her late husband has left her in debt and she will be forced to give up her boarding house to pay it off. However, she moonlights as a fraudulent clairvoyant under the name of Madam Sybil. Unfortunately, one of her closest friends and clients, Mr. Matthew Voss has died. Disagreeing with the official verdict of suicide, Annie believes that he was murdered and sets off to investigate on her own with attorney, Nate Dawson conducting his own investigation and falling in love with her.


One of the more fascinating aspects to Annie's character is her time as a fradulent clairvoyant. I actually found that to be a more intriguing plot than the actual investigation. Since it's set in the late 19th century when Spiritualism is on the rise, it would be quite a twist to see the exact procedures that Annie does to fool her gullible public, how she stays ahead of the authorities, or perhaps what happens if she gets a brush with the supernatural or cons who are better at the game than she is.

 After having experienced the normal and paranormal horrors experienced by Letitia Hawkins in Behind The Veil by E.J. Dawson, Annie's experience could be a more seriocomic look at the phenomena, perhaps bordering on Dark Humor. But her career as a medium only ends up being the message to the mystery.


The title comes from the fact that for a time, Annie poses as a maid to ascertain information in the Voss case, which brings another missed opportunity. Why isn't Annie a maid herself? Or the lead investigator a maid or in service? It would be a far more interesting back story than the one we have already been given, and would brilliantly counter the mostly middle to upper class women who fill the majority of the female historical detective roster. 

After all, house servants are used to being ignored and overlooked by their employers, giving them the ability to gather information and intelligence from just paying attention to what employers and guests are saying and doing. They are often susceptible to gossip both in the servants and upper class quarters and because they have to be very detailed, they can pay attention to things that others miss. It would also be a great twist if the servant was smarter than her employer, sort of a female Jeeves. We saw what a brilliant woman posing as a house slave could do in Kit Sergeant's Underground, even help bring down the Confederacy. What else could one do as the star of her own Cozy Mystery Historical Fiction series?


It doesn't help that once the investigation begins that Annie becomes rather boring. She lacks the sparkle and wit of Ginger Gold, the toughness and experience of Fiona Figg, the resourcefulness and independence of Mona Moon, or the spunk and bravado of Molly Murphy. Instead, Annie pales in comparison to her fellow detectives. She just fades into the background for the mystery and such a lackluster mystery at that.


The mystery has the suspense of a cat chasing after the red dot. There is a lot of meandering and talking and not a lot of detecting.

It's the typical dead rich man's friends and family are suspects including opportunistic and snooty relatives, love interests and friends who specialize in gold digging and fortune hunting, and servants who know more than they let on. It's all generic and never gets beyond that. It's so generic that the killer is all too easy to guess and isn't worth the trouble of going back through the chapters to find out how the Reader is right and the detective solved it. 

There's more heat in the romance between Annie and Nate than there is in the mystery and even that is nothing to get excited about.


Maids of Misfortune could be another bright star in the lovely galaxy of the Female Detective Historical Mystery subgenre. However, instead it just dims.