PRO CONNECT
Tracy Fobes: writer, screenplays and books. Loves blood and guts. Looking to buy a café racer. Way too many shoes in closet. Still listens to vinyl on a record player.
Screenplays:
With several screenplays written, more underway and ideas lined up behind those, she’s working to create a psychological and existential universe that feels so hostile, and threatens to reveal so much of the true nature of life, that viewers will feel scared, soul-sick and educated against their will. In other words: a horror classic.
Books:
She started reading romance and horror novels as a kid, and hasn’t stopped since. Now she writes them, too, combining the two genres together in as many different ways as she can think of.
As Tracy Fobes, she’s published eight award-winning paranormal romances about love complicated by grimalkins, witches, druids, mermaids, and even mad scientists. Her publishers include Simon & Schuster and Leisure LoveSpell.
As Georgina Sand, she goes in a different direction and pens hot erotic romances that often have a paranormal twist, too.
Clyde Edwards is her horror alter ego...he’s the guy who writes blood and guts, and is determined to raise a few goosebumps on your arms.
“'[Clyde] Edwards crafts a well-written, imaginative and quick-moving horror tale that’s plenty enjoyable. Demonic possession may be a tried-and-true horror staple, but by placing the maritime tale in the early 1800s, Edwards imbues the old theme with new life.'”
– Kirkus Reviews
In Edwards’ debut horror novel, a ship’s captain discovers a mysterious orb that gradually infuses him with a malevolent personality.
In Boston of 1808, young Kit Cabot toils away as a clerk for his family’s shipping company while dreaming of adventure on the high seas. His uncle John, a ship’s captain, has returned from a long voyage with a mysterious golden orb that he jealously guards. John’s appearance and demeanor begin to change from handsome and benevolent to gaunt and harsh, and Kit suspects the orb is to blame. To find the truth, he stows away on John’s ship just before it sets sail. By the time John lands at his destination, he barely resembles a man, and Kit, with the aid of several shipmates and a West Indian mystic, tries to rid his uncle of the orb. However, what the group hadn’t counted on is the evil entity in the orb’s having its own agenda and destination, which it will stop at nothing to achieve. Kit suddenly realizes that it’s not just his uncle he must save—but he himself. Edwards crafts a well-written, imaginative and quick-moving horror tale that’s plenty enjoyable. Demonic possession may be a tried-and-true horror staple, but by placing the maritime tale in the early 1800s, Edwards imbues the old theme with new life. With a character roster that’s small and distinctive, the book’s unique setting and situations help keep interest alive when the horror aspect flags. Although Kit is the main character, uncle John—being slowly destroyed by an evil force he can neither understand nor control—is more memorable. The story moves along rapidly, avoiding any detours or extraneous subplots that could distract from the novel’s energy and stall the forward momentum. What stops the book from being a must-read, however, is its somewhat far-fetched resolution, but readers will likely forgive the hokum.
A debut horror novel about demonic possession that breathes new life into an old theme.
Pub Date: July 13, 2014
Page count: 135pp
Publisher: Baudrons Books, Inc.
Review Posted Online: July 29, 2014
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