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Conjuring the “Magickal Gothic”—A Supernatural Genre-Blend for Readers

Conjuring the “Magickal Gothic.”

September 23, 2026

 

Magickal Gothic Fiction

 

How wild is your heart? How far will you let your imagination journey into the unknown realms of magickal powers?

Stories in the Magickal Gothic fiction genre tell readers they are in for a supernatural adventure, a terror that expands the mind and elevates the imagination. When mystery and magick, romance and ghosts, intertwine with the supernatural, there is a terrifying haunting.

An emotional intensity captures the reader. If you’ve not experienced Magickal Gothic fiction, I’m here to define and recommend this new level of Gothic Horror—although horror is the root category, in Magickal Gothic we experience a distinctive phenomenon.

 

Ann Radcliffe, known as the originator of the Female Gothic Movement (The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794), explained that “Terror and horror are so far opposite, that the first expands the soul, and awakens the faculties to a high degree of life; the other [horror] contracts, freezes, and nearly annihilates them.” She explains that “terror is a very high one” and “lies in the uncertainty and obscurity.”

Stephen King reminds us of the three types of terror: I recognize terror as the finest emotion and so I will try to terrorize the reader. But if I find that I cannot terrify, I will try to horrify, and if I find that I cannot horrify, I’ll go for the gross-out. I’m not proud.”  Danse Macabre.

 

King describes this sublime terror as, ‘when the lights go out and you feel something behind you, you hear it, you feel its breath against your ear, but turn around and there’s nothing there.’ But of course something is threatening there, and we instinctively know it.

In storytelling, this terror exists in Magickal Gothic fiction because Gothic, by its very nature, is sublime. For example, in Elizabeth Hand’s Wylding Hall, this story has a deep subtlety to it, with music being the supernatural power of magick, mixed with folklore and psychological uncertainty, ghostly presences, and all wrapped in an atmospheric mystery. This is not the kind of literal horror that contracts and freezes the reader, but it is a serious haunting for the reader.

Defining Magickal Gothic exhibits a range of variations and includes the following. Settings are dark, ancestral estates; a structured magickal or suggested occult power rules this fictional world (spell-craft, magickal artifacts, rituals, curses, art, ancient books, or folklore and history); hidden realms play into the action; ghostly or otherworldly entities drive the theme; characters seek emotional or psychological answers about themselves or a lost one, which drive the plot.

Romantic intrigue or sexual tensions are a classic element that raises the stakes. Language, of course, is a defining feature, the prose acting as an instrument of the intense dread, beauty, and mystery—descriptive narrative breaks open the fictional dream for the reader.

What books lurk in these magickal Gothic shadows? To name a few of these genre-blending, or genre-bending, novels . . .

The Discovery of Witches, Deborah Harkness: witches, demons, magickal manuscripts, vampires, blood magick.

Mexican Gothic, Silvia Moreno-Garcia: haunted house, ghosts, science, evil, magickal arts, cultural feminist themes.

Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke: magickians, ghosts, literary secrets, historical powers.

The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafon: ghosts, cursed books, magickal powers.

Wylding Hall, Elizabeth Hand: occult music, folklore, ghostly presences, magickal blends of spell-craft.

The Death of Jane Lawrence, Caitlin Starling: alchemical magick, spell-craft, magicians, feminist themes, ghosts, love story, body horror.

The Peculiar Garden of Harriet Hunt, Chelsea Iversen: London estate, magickal garden, ambiguous ghostly presenses, psychological and feminist themes, love story.

Affinity, Sarah Waters: Victorian England, unruly ghosts, magick, spiritualism, romance.

The Year of the Witching, Alexis Henderson:  Dark forest setting, ghostly shadows, ancient witch magick.

Everything Is Magick

Readers love the fictional dream of fantastical realms, magick, and ghostly worlds beyond. As you explore the various genres (and many overlap into cross-genres), whether it be Urban or Rural Gothic, Southern or Suburban Gothic, Paranormal Gothic, Historical Gothic, Dark Romantic Gothic, Cosmic or Eco Gothic, Folk or Crime/Mystery Gothic, Sci-fi or Techno Gothic, Fantasy Gothic, there is a new and excited readership for Magickal Gothic among these diversities.

Gothic writers will continue to terrify readers with their high creativity. These stories will enlighten and grow our understanding of fear, oppression, endurance, and morality.

Is Gothic a mirror or a mask? Let’s find out if the ghost in the mirror is you or trying to become you.

Coming soon . . .  An International Gothic Reading Month! Watch this blog for when and where this event will be made public. We are on a mission to encourage and proliferate Gothic readers and writers, authors and publishers, and Gothic books displayed in shops and libraries. Why? Because Gothic communicates that the mysteries of our spirituality possess wisdom, beauty, and redemption.

 

I sign off with my own Magickal Gothic adventure.

 

Please share your thoughts about Magickal Gothic. Comment if you have a title to add or author you admire who writes in this genre. Are you an author of Magickal Gothic? I invite authors to post your titles and links in the comments. Please join me in promoting Magickal Gothic literature!

Gothic shadows are whispering. What are yours saying?

Darkness can possess its own shining.

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

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The Old Wolf Under the Tree, a Fantasy

Tuesday’s  Mystical Music,  August 12

 

 

The Old Wolf Under the Tree awakens Nature and the forest inside us. Trees are living creatures and hold great power to communicate. In my novel Draakensky, I explored the consciousness of trees because they played such a vital role in the story. Especially for the character Charlotte who drew sketches of them throughout her life, and, because Marc Sexton has a Celtic ogham tree grove on his land that performed magickal events.

 

Today, I bring you The Old Wolf Under the Tree for your listening pleasure.
‘A forest druidess becomes one with the rhythm of roots and the stillness of time. Far beyond the tangled woods, where moss climbs stone and silence grows thick, an old wolf rests beneath a tree she planted long ago – and listens.

Let yourself drift through slow-growing thoughts, quiet soil, and sacred winds.’  Lord Pecalon.

Druids were among the ancient Celts. They acted as priests, teachers, and judges. The earliest known records of the Druids came from the 3rd century BCE. Their name may have come from a Celtic word meaning “knower of the oak tree.”

These days, in my research of the Celts for Marc Sexton in Secret Mysteries of Wolf Magick, launching in 2026, this is the music I listen to while writing the Draakensky sequel. I hope you enjoy the spirituality of this Old Wolf Under the Tree. I am inspired!

This is from Lord Pecalon on YouTube, click the link to enjoy this musical mystical adventure:

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

 

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

1 Comment

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The Tenants of Ladywell Manor, Willam Meikle, Author of the Month

The Tenants of Ladywell Manor  William Meikle July Author of the Month 

July 24, 2024

 

The Tenants of Ladywell Manor, a short story, weaves a thick dash of Lovecraftian fervor, set in 19th century Bath, England, with an ancient evil and supernatural music. The young lady Anne, Captain Wentworth of the Royal Navy, Lucy a very strange younger sister, and Lt. Barclay a mysterious officer, all create a highly suspenseful intrigue. The prose is magnificent with shadowy depths and delivers a trembling haunting on the reader.

Listen to the FREE audio (36 minutes) of The Tenants of Ladywell Manor here, scroll down to title (script included if you want to read along: https://www.williammeikle.com/freebies.html .

 

If you read a range of supernatural fiction and horror, you are probably familiar with William Meikle’s work. With over 300 short stories sold and some 30+ novels published in the horror, fantasy, mystery, sci-fi, and thriller genres, he is a giant in  the literary industry.

His gift is creating intense atmospheric stories that not only haunt, but also float you into mysterious lands of the mind  and otherworlds. Willie has fans  worldwide. His narratives are inventive, weird, and strong with seductive prose. If you love deep dives into ghostly realms and monstrous powers, this is your guy.

Reviews

“One of the premier storytellers of our time.” — Famous Monsters of Filmland

“William Meikle is an entertaining writer with a knack for Lovecraftian fiction.” — Lovecraft eZine

“Willie Meikle has a gift for writing highly entertaining thrilling novels.  A roller-coaster ride that will leave you breathless come the last page.” — Ginger Nuts of Horror

“Meikle’s stories are shining examples of what is missing in horror fiction today: atmospheric in style, old-school in character, with an intriguing story to be told.”—David Wynn, Mythos Books

 

Avid horror readers know his amazing Carnacki Books, his Derek Adams The Midnight Eye Files, and the Sherlock Holmes series.

 

 

Willie is a Scottish author, currently living in a small fishing town on the eastern side of Newfoundland on the Atlantic shore with whales, bald eagles, and icebergs. And he continues to be inspired to write. One of his recent publications is an anthology,  An Unholy Triquetra, Celtic Fairy Tales, published by Crystal Lake Publishing.

 

In this book, malevolent supernatural beings lurk in these short stories full of adventure, heroism, and even romance. Stories-within-stories, wonderfully done by a threesome of seasoned authors. I reviewed this on Amazon and can say here that Willie’s story Summons has awesome characters, conflict, and a climax that is far more than a haunted house tale.

Here is a taste of Meikle’s writing from The Dark Island, published in Innsmouth in 2012.

The sun was closing in on the mountainside, laying layers of orange and red across the sky. The loch itself glowed gold like the whisky I was missing so much, a gold that was slowly turning blood-red.

You can read The Dark Island, free, here https://innsmouthfreepress.com/fiction-the-dark-island/

 

Interview with Willie, July 2024

Willie was kind enough to answer a couple of questions for me. I asked him . . .

1. What aspect of your storytelling is the most difficult for you to write? Any particular kinds of scenes that really make you struggle?

“I’m good with dialogue and action, less so with description. I sometimes think I’m leaving far too much work for the reader to do to fill in the blanks, but when I try to describe anything in detail it just feels clunky to me and I end up deleting it.”

Because Scotland is known as the most haunted country in the world, I asked him:
2. With your years and experience in writing supernatural and horror, have you ever had an encounter with a ghost, been haunted, or any kind of supernatural event?
“I’ve got several, from the wee green man who followed me around when I was a student in Glasgow, to the old woman in our townhouse in Stonehaven in NE Scotland that used to be a shop, who kept saying “That’ll be sixpence, please.” when we went into the dining room. I grew up with a grannie with strong second sight … some of it rubbed off…”
If you’d like to hear more about the ghosts haunting Willie, stop by this interview by Morgan Scorpion (3.51K subscribers). He talks about his books, his characters, and his writing (May 2024).

 

And if you love Carnacki stories, here is an audio of Carnacki, The Hellfire Mirror:

 

You can view all his series books, in their order here:

William Meikle

His latest book is Haunted Scotland, which I am reading now. You will meet Derek Adams from The Midnight Eye Files in THE BROTHERHOOD.  Young Arthur Conan Doyle in THE BODY FROM THE MOSS. And, a story about an old folk song when a musical group performs in a studio in a converted castle. If you’ve not read Willie Meikle, Haunted Scotland is a great introduction to his work.

Speaking of music, my favorite of Willlie’s is Dark Melodies—clever stories about the power of sinister music and getting lost in the dance. The Tenants of Ladywell Manor is included in this collection.

Visit Willie’s website:  https://www.williammeikle.com

Visit his author Amazon page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/William-Meikle/author/B002BMOP0G

READING FICTION BLOG

Please join me in my reading nook.

Browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories. This is a compendium of over 300 short fiction by more than 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for once-a-month free short stories and Author of the Month. 

 

Follow me on Twitter,   Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social

Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Other Reading Websites to Visit

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such    Bibliophilica     Monster Librarian

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

1 Comment

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Come Meet Varlok. Flash Fiction

Varlok

 

Flash Fiction! Ready for a quick

100-word supernatural story?

The story below was part of a flash fiction contest at Horror Novel Reviews back in 2014. Some of you may know this website by Matt Molgaards. For the new year, I’ve been looking back at some of my work and decided to reprint this  tale that was published on Matt’s site.

 

Varlok by Paula Cappa   © 2014

 

The ninth hour. Julietta carries her violin up the darkened stone bridge. “I seek Varlok the music falcon, a blind creature of the ninth chorus.”

Julietta plays her sulky étude to the vale of sky, squeaking such discord she fears the black falcon will flee. “Dearest Varlok, I give you my perfect green eyes. Please grant me your immortal sonatas.”

The music falcon flies the Dusha River. He pecks her eyes, releasing glittering harmonies. Julietta breathes in the triumphant notes, grows dizzy, splashing into the river like a coin. Varlok soars the stars, consuming her lustful soul like a tasty fish.

 

 

Psst. Varlok is a character in my novel Greylock.

 

Check it out on Amazon.com or Smashwords.com

Gold Medal Winner, 2022 Global Book Awards.
Chanticleer Book Award Winner, 2015, First Place.
Best Book Award Finalist, 2017, by American Book Fest.

“Greylock is a smart, entertaining supernatural thriller. Think Stephen King meets Raymond Chandler with a score by Tchaikovsky. The author’s passion for both the arts and the natural world shines through on every page. Briskly paced and yet lovingly detailed, this novel was a genuine pleasure to read.” —David Corbett, award-winning author of The Mercy of the Night.

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Greylock Wins the Gold Medal

Hello to All My Readers of My Published Fiction and my Followers Here at Reading Fiction Blog!

I am happy to share this news with you that my supernatural mystery Greylock has won the Gold Medal at Global Book Awards, 2022.

The category, of course, is Supernatural and Occult (“quiet horror”). Global Book Awards  is named one of the “Top 29 Book Awards” in 2022, along with the Hugo Awards, Nautilus, USA Best Books, Feathered Quill, Eric Hoffer Awards, IBA, Readers’ Favorite International, Chanticleer Book Awards, Book Excellence Awards, Page Turner Awards, and others by Scott Lorenz of Westwind Communications.

U.S. Review of Books: “Cappa’s latest is nothing less than a mind-boggling mystery … always keeping an elusive edge to her characters’ personas—a plot replete with all the wonderful trappings of a romance-laced mystery with unexpected twists and turns. Greylock has the potential of being earmarked as another award winner.” RECOMMENDED by the U.S Review of Books.

I’ve been writing mysterious novels for over 10 years and Greylock has exceeded my expectations. Besides the Gold Medal, Greylock achieved  the prestigious Best Book Award Finalist in 2017 by American Book Fest, and, garnered the Chanticleer Book Award in 2015.

 

 

 

Book awards play an important role in an author’s life and in readers’ lives. The recognition of a book’s quality and its merits encourages reading, which grows the imagination and the thinking process. And, of course, reading feeds the success of the literary industry. Ralph Waldo Emerson said “If we encounter a man of rare intellect, we should ask him what books he reads.”

I thank all my readers and The Global Book Awards for honoring Greylock. As my writing career progresses (I am working on a fourth novel and more short stories) in fiction, I feel so blessed with the loyalty of my readers.

My other two novels have enjoyed book awards as well. The Bronze Medal from Readers’ Favorite International Awards for The Dazzling Darkness. The coveted Eric Hoffer Book Award, and, the Silver Medal from Global Book Awards for Night Sea Journey, A Tale of the Supernatural.

Bronze, Silver, Gold. My muse has been hard at work. She is my clever friend and my passion. And sometimes she is my ghost. I think I see her dancing right at this moment.

 

 

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GREYLOCK Wins Best Book Award, American Book Fest, 2017

I am very happy to announce …
GREYLOCK wins Best Book Award by American Book Fest 2017. 14th Annual Book Awards: Winners and finalists traverse the publishing landscape: Wiley, McGraw-Hill, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, St. Martin’s Press, Penguin Random House, Hachette Book Group, Rowman & Littlefield, New American Library, Forge/Tor Books, John Hopkins University Press, MIT Press and hundreds of independent houses. Jeffrey Keen, President and CEO of American Book Fest said this year’s contest yielded over 2,000 entries from mainstream and independent publishers, which were then narrowed down to over 400 winners and finalists.
“In Greylock, Paula Cappa has written a smart, entertaining supernatural thriller, in which a composer with a damning secret battles a ballerina scorned, while an embittered messenger from the Otherworld demands to be heard. Think Stephen King meets Raymond Chandler with a score by Tchaikovsky. The author’s passion for both the arts and the natural world shines through on every page, while a mysterious composition from old Russia, combined with the majestic songs of the Beluga whale, form the thematic backdrop of the story. Briskly paced and yet lovingly detailed, this novel was a genuine pleasure to read.” —David Corbett, award-winning and best-selling author of The Mercy of the Night.

5 Comments

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Greylock in the Berkshires

On  Saturday, June 24, 2017 at Herman Melville’s Arrowhead, Berkshire Historical Society, in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, I had the privilege to present my supernatural mystery Greylock to local residents and readers.

Arrowhead lies at the foot of Mt. Greylock. Because my novel takes place on Mt. Greylock and is about the supernatural powers of music … of whales … and much more … Arrowhead was an ideal location for this book reading event and signing.

[Courtesy Berkshire County Historical Society.]

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The Russian beluga whales in the novel Greylock are nothing near the size of Melville’s Moby Dick, and Melville didn’t write much about his singing whale, but in Greylock, the songs of the beluga whales are a driving entity for the character Alexei Georg, a classical pianist. Murder, music, mystery on Mt. Greylock is haunted suspense where music itself is a character.

Arrowhead is a place of inspiration. There is such a thing as ‘power of place’ in that Melville sought solitude for his imagination. Arrowhead provided that reach for Melville’s true creative powers to soar. Many thanks to Peter Bergman of the Berkshire Historical Society for his invitation to bring my novel Greylock to  Arrowhead. Arrowhead opens a new exhibit this June. This month marks the 61st anniversary of the 1956 film Moby Dick. The exhibit is movie memorabilia and props used in the film.

Greylock in the Berkshires!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Supernatural Power of Music

As part of my presentation of  the story and characters in Greylock, I discussed the supernatural power of music. The account of violinist Giuseppe Tartini’s sonata “The Devil’s Trill” is a perfect example. Alexei’s cousin, Josef, knows all about this sonata and explains what powers lie in music.

So, I asked my audience …

“Do You Believe in Music Phantoms?”

 [2-minute video] If you don’t believe in music phantoms, this is the story that will test your resolve.

 

A Chanticleer Book Award Winner 2015

Best Book Award Finalist 2017 from American Book Fest

Greylock in the Berkshires!

Here are some quick images of my spectacular weekend in the Berkshires at Arrowhead. We stayed at Hotel On North in Pittsfield. Five-star accommodations. Their restaurant, raw bar, and quality service made the weekend spectacular. Highly recommended if you are visiting the Berkshires.

Cozy lounge for a champagne toast.

 

Naturally, the gift shop at Arrowhead carries Greylock, as well as the Red Lion Inn in Stockbridge, and, on the summit of Mt. Greylock at the Bascom Lodge. Local area libraries and bookshops too.

The Most Inspiring Mountain in Massachusetts

Mt. Greylock is inspiring for many writers, Thoreau and Hawthorne to name a few. J.K. Rowlings, author of the Harry Potter series, has claimed Mt. Greylock for her fiction too. Her new story (Fantastic Beasts) has Ilvermorny founded by an Irish witch who started a school for wizards at the top of Mount Greylock.

 

 

Here’s something Herman Melville wrote about reading:  “…the books that prove most agreeable, grateful, and companionable, are those books we pick up by chance here and there …”

 

 

Greylock has over 60 reviews at AMAZON.COM

“Greylock is a smart, entertaining supernatural thriller. Think Stephen King meets Raymond Chandler with a score by Tchaikovsky. The author’s passion for both the arts and the natural world shines through on every page. Briskly paced and yet lovingly detailed, this novel was a genuine pleasure to read.” —David Corbett, best-selling and award-winning author of The Mercy of the Night.

U.S. Review of Books: “Cappa’s latest is nothing less than a mind-boggling mystery … always keeping an elusive edge to her characters’ personas—a plot replete with all the wonderful trappings of a romance-laced mystery with unexpected twists and turns.”

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Music To Die For

The Cremona Violin  by E.T.A. Hoffmann (1818)

Tuesday’s Tale of Terror  June 6, 2017

 

Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann popularly known as E.T.A. Hoffmann, was a Romantic author of Gothic, weird and fantasy fiction. He believed that music could ‘bring us into unknown kingdoms.’ He would, of course, think this since he was a composer of music. But more to the point this writer loved the supernatural, sinister characters, and the grotesque elements in human nature. His fiction is astonishing with wild leaps of imagination paralleled with psychology and spectres of the macabre.

 

I began reading Hoffmann’s fiction while researching my novel Greylock. Because Greylock deals with the power of supernatural music in the life of my character Alexei Georg, a composer, I wanted to know more about Hoffmann’s creative fiction, and how he built his characters and stories around musical themes. And his stories did not disappoint.

 

 

Hoffmann’s short story The Cremona Violin features a violinist named Councillor Krespel, who decides to build a rather unconventional house with misplaced windows and doors. By trade, Krespel obsessively rebuilds antique violins and searches the world for the violins of the old master violinists. Living with Krespel is a young woman, Antonia, a singer who has the beauty and voice of an angel. Our story’s narrator, a lawyer, describes Antonia as “impossible to tear myself away from her blue eyes, her sweet rosy lips, her uncommonly graceful, lovely form…”  Krespel is obsessed with Antonia and compulsively forbids her to sing.  Here the mystery gets thick with the bizarre.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read The Cremona Violin at Ebooks.Adelaide.edu.

Listen to the audio by Librivox.org/weird-tales

Hoffmann’s novels are The Devil’s Elixirs, the King’s Bride, The Nutcracker. Short stories The Sandman, The Entail, The Deserted House, and others.

 

Don’t forget to view the INDEX above of more free Tales of Terror. This is a compendium of 200 short stories by over 100 famous storytellers of mystery, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, and horror. Join me in reading two short stories every month.

Comments are welcome.

 

 Other Reading Web Sites to Visit

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such    Bibliophilica    Lovecraft Ezine   Parlor of Horror

HorrorNews.net   Fangoria.com   

Slattery’s Art of Horror Magazine   Chuck Windig’s Terrible Minds

HorrorAddicts.net     Horror Novel Reviews    HorrorSociety.com     

Monster Librarian      HorrorTalk.com 

 Rob Around Books      The Story Reading Ape Blog

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

EZindiepublishing

Thriller Author Mark Dawson http://markjdawson.com/

Dawson’s Book Marketing site: http://www.selfpublishingformula.com/

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Chanticleer Books Reviews Greylock – 5 STARS

 

 

5 STAR review at Chanticleer Book Reviews

Greylock by Paula Cappa – Mystery/Thriller/Paranormal

Rating:
Title: Greylock
Author(s): Paula Cappa
Genre(s): Fiction, Ghosts, Literary Fiction, Mystery, Mystery, Occult, Paranormal Romanticism, Supernatural, Thriller/Suspense, Thriller/Suspense
Publisher: Crispin Books (2016)
Please help promote the author by liking the review at:

What’s in the music we create? When we say it lives – when we say it breathes – when, for one fleeting moment it seems to bridge the gap between one soul and another – what kind of existence does it assume? What does it feel? What does it think? What does it want? Such questions may reside in theory for most, but not for piano virtuoso Alexei Georg in Paula Cappa’s Greylock.

Hot off the release of what will surely be his magnum opus, October, Alexei has achieved the level of success found only in his wildest dreams. Hailing from a Russian family steeped in musical artistry, he has transcended all those before him and become something they never could: a legend. And that’s all thanks to October.

There’s only one problem: he didn’t compose it.

And that would have been fine for him, taking credit for pages found in an antique chest belonging to one of his ancestors, if it weren’t for the demons it conjured every time he plays those chords. If it weren’t for the shadowy figure haunting him, punishing him, coming for him. October may have surfaced through the Georg bloodline, but there is something far more sinister and mysterious hidden in each note that is threatening to break free from Alexei’s control.

Alexei wants nothing more than to move on, but the past will not let him. Add to his troubles the threat of fraud exposure from those he’s closest to and a string of grisly murders within the Boston music community that brings the police knocking on his door, he can only come to realize just how much October is at the center of it all. He’ll have to confront three generations worth of Georg family demons to overcome this evil before it claims everything he has and hopes to achieve.

Using music as a central motif and life force to drive the narrative, Paula Cappa defies the limitations of the written word and adds a new dimension in storytelling through the personification of music. The descriptions being so richly layered and animated, one might just imagine these nightmares dwelling in the punctuation, awaiting their chance to come alive themselves.

With just enough integral characters in place to create conflict, Cappa creates a compelling mystery that allows the reader to virtually hear the machinations of the plot grind away before they inevitably crank up to a satisfying crescendo.

By Tim MacAusland
March 2017

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Greylock, Review at Berkshire Eagle, Pittsfield, Massachusetts

‘Greylock’: Thriller With Local Ties

For my Massachusetts fans, in case you missed this in the Berkshire Eagle. I just discovered this review this week. I’m planning a trip to Pittsfield, MA for a book reading and signing in June 2017.  This review by Colin Harrington, The Bookstore in Lenox, Mass.

 

berkshire-eagle

‘Greylock’: Thriller with local ties perfect for Halloween reading

By Colin Harrington, Special to The Eagle, October 2016.

Suspense, romance, classical music, and the supernatural all converge at the summit of Mount Greylock in Paula Cappa’s thrilling new novel of murder and the occult, “Greylock.”

In 2007, Alexei Georg as sonar technician aboard the USS Los Angeles submarine, pinged beluga whales in the White Sea off Russia and was transported in time and space through their whale song from half a world away. Returning to Boston and his life as a concert pianist, he receives a mysterious newspaper clipping about the same whales gathering and singing seven years earlier on the same date, Sept. 9.

It becomes the perfect, even destined theme for writing a symphony, a whale symphony. His career had already risen to notice when he performed his October sonata, a piece he claimed to have written, when in fact he had discovered it, albeit unsigned, in the sea chest of his Russian father, Aleksandr Georg.

The story had always been hazy but the music of the October sonata was sensational and he was frequently asked to perform it at major venues. Encouraged by his mentor, Dr. Leed Mensah of Wheatley College, Alexei becomes a candidate for a prestigious and lucrative Essex Institute Endowment award to write his whale symphony at the Greylock Music Hall at the top of Mount Greylock. Alexei manages to get back to the White Sea by Sept. 9, 2014, to commune again with his whales from aboard the Belyy Ved’ma with the shadowy but intuitive captain Gleb and the powerful shaman/translator Shemiossa. Alexei has his most intense telepathic encounter with the Beluga whales this time and is more determined than ever to write his symphony on Greylock. Trouble brews however, when his wife, Carole Ann, whom he has just left because she does not support his composing dreams, is murdered, and he becomes the prime suspect for her murder and three other related “slasher” murders. He soon realizes too that the October sonata is cursed and he finds that he cannot rid himself of the Russian river demon, Varlok, who demands a terrible payment for ownership of the music.

Pursued relentlessly by Boston Homicide’s Detective Violet Rufft, Alexei is by turns supported and betrayed by his friends and his cousin, Josef, with whom he grew up in Plymouth, and with whom he has a bitter rivalry in the concert hall.

Strengthened by his love for TV meteorologist Lia Marrs, and wizened to the soul-shattering seductions of great music, Alexei confronts Varlok in mortal combat on Mount Greylock after a visitation from Shemiossa on the trails that lead him to musical triumph. When he believes he is freed of evil, Alexei composes the greatest music of his life, by his own talent.

This novel is terrific and a perfect book to curl up with on Halloween.

Colin Harrington is the Events Manager at The Bookstore* and Get Lit Wine Bar in Lenox, Mass. 

 

Read the review at the Berkshire Eagle News, Pittsfield, Massachusetts

 

Greylock_thumbnail3PaulaCappa

 

Chanticleer Book Award Winner, 2015

 
 “I’ve not seen anything like it since Hitchcock and duMaurier

gave us The Birds. Greylock is a stunning masterpiece.”

Five Stars from Veteran Book Reviewer Don Sloan.

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Print editions available at the following:

Bascom Lodge, Summit of Mt. Greylock, Lanesboro, MA

The Bookstore,* Lenox, MA

Red Lion Inn Gift Shop, Stockbridge, MA

The BookLoft, Great Barrington, MA

Ebook and trade paperback:  Amazon.com    Barnes&Noble.com  itunes.apple.com

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