Avast, Ye Airships!

AvastYeCover

Continuing from the theme of last week, this week we take to the air with the pirates again and begin a discussion of Avast, Ye Airships. 🙂

In 2015, Mocha Memoirs and I wanted to publish a Steampunk anthology. As you might have guessed, I really like airship pirates–in fact, the book came out a year before the album and was actually one of the potential Kickstarter rewards for Pirates Vs. Dragons.

We will be going over the stories for the next few weeks like we did with Dark Divinations, RieTales, and Bruce and Roxanne from Start to Finnish over on the RieWriter website. Because we aren’t doing daily posts on each blog, we will be going over more than one story per post.

To begin, here is the table of contents (Author links where available):

Come and Be a Pirate — Rie Sheridan Rose
Beneath the Brass — Stephen Blake
Maiden Voyage — Jeffrey Cook and Katherine Perkins
Colonel Gurthwait & the Black Hydra — Robert McGough
Captain Wexford’s Dilemma — Ogarita
Her Majesty’s Service– Lauren Marrero
A Wind Will Rise — Andrew Knighton
Hooked — Rie Sheridan Rose
Go Green — Ross Baxter
Lost Sky — Amy Braun
Miss Warlyss Meets the Black Buzzard — Diana Parparita
Plunder in the Valley — Libby Smith
The Clockwork Dragon — Steve Cook
Adventures of a Would-Be Gentleman of the Skies — Jim Reader
A Clouded Affair — Steven Southard
The Climbers – D. Chang
The Steampunk Garden — Wynelda Ann Deaver
Lotus of Albion — Steve Ruskin
And a Bottle of Rum — K.C. Shaw

 

The anthology opens with the lyrics to one of the songs from Pirates Vs. Dragons because it was too perfect not to use it, and Marc said: “Go for it.”

The first story is Stephan Blake’s “Beneath the Brass.” Written as a series of diary entries, it tells the tale of a young woman who was committed to a mental asylum only to be “rescued” by a cyborg and taken aboard a piratical airship. Her adventures with the pirates make for exciting reading.

“Maiden Voyage,” tells of a dancer and her companion who foil a pirate invasion of a luxury airship on its first voyage. It is a rousing tale of derring-do proving women should never be underestimated. 😉

In “Colonel Gurthwait & the Black Hydra,” two old hunters try to play a practical joke on a third who desperately desires to be included in their club. The results are not at all what they expected.

The premise of “Captain Wexford’s Dilemma” is that an airship has accidentally gotten itself possessed, and now the crew must figure out what to do with their unwanted guests.

“Her Majesty’s Service,” is an interesting tale of a “Spider” aboard a royal airship. These crewmen flit about the ship tied to the rigging like spiders on silken strings. It’s a hard job, but bears its own rewards, as Nandi discovers in the course of the tale.

Next week, we will continue the walkthrough of the Avast, Ye Airships anthology.

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GUEST POST: Crymsyn Hart — Forest of Bones

Today, we have a guest post from author Crymsyn Hart about some of the influences behind her novel Forest of Bones. Having edited this book, I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

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Forest of Bones Inspiration

I love vampires in all shapes and forms. I’ve written a lot of vampires over the years and lost count on how many books I’ve read about the undead. I know how hard it is to create a vampire that is just a little bit different than the norm.

My vampires live in a world of magic. However, if they were human and turned into a vampire, they lose their magical ability. Sun and silver still hurt them, but they are different in the way they were created. Forest of Bones is a story about stopping the overall bad guy from destroying the world, but it’s also an origin story. Vampires are different in how the species were created. Let’s just say it involves a little bit of magic, a spell gone wrong, and the secret ingredient–which you have to find by reading the book. LOL.

Forest of Bones was born out of a couple of things. I had this dream about the main character, Kaya, while she was sitting in a tree overlooking this camp. They were the enemy and she was getting intel on them. I wrote that scene and I wanted to make her different. The vampire aspect of the book was more of a “Hey, what would happen if I threw vampires into the mix?” idea.

I hadn’t written a total fantasy novel with vampires so I wanted to figure out how that could work. From there, I thought it would be interesting to make Kaya the only hybrid of her kind. Of course, I had to discover how vampires and Kaya being a hybrid worked into the story. Throwing vampires into a world of magic, I learned there had to be consequences to how the magic worked on the vampires and the environment.

Forest of Bones is a great world I’d love to find more stories in. It’s not just about Kaya and her story. What happens after? Or what happens before her story? The vampire race is thousands of years old, so what other creatures or tragedies happened? I’ll guess I’ll have to find out.

Crymsyn Bio:

Crymsyn Hart is a multi-genre author of Horror, Urban Fantasy, and Romance. Her years of experience at Boston’s oldest psychic salon doing readings and her encounters with the supernatural have inspired many novels. She’s a lover of all things dark and goth. Vampires, grim reapers, and other paranormal creatures tend to end up in her books no matter how hard she tries to keep them away.

She currently resides in Charlotte, NC with her hubby and their two dogs. By day she is conquering the world of Commercial Insurance, but by night she listens to the voices in her head telling her which rabbit hole to go down to find the perfect plot bunny.

Find out more about Crymsyn:

Website http://crymsynhart.com,

Twitter: @Crymsynhart

Facebook https://facebook.com/crymsynhart

Amazon http://amazon.com/Crymsyn-Hart/e/B002BMJ1Z0.

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/crymsynhart

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crymsyn_hart/

Bookbub:https://www.bookbub.com/authors/crymsyn-hart

 

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Writing Tip: Found Object Poetry

When I was in the theater, I ran across a unit for creating characters by taking found objects and listing characteristics of the object to build aspects of your character. For example:

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This fern might be characterized as

  1. vulnerable
  2. delicate
  3. circular
  4. green
  5. united

Taking those characterizations, one might get a picture of an innocent young girl without a lot of experience encircled by family. Or a twisted creature with an envious streak but not much physical strength. Quite different results from the same words.

Then, when I was teaching English, I had a folder called “Thousand Word Pictures” collected to use as prompts for getting kids to write stories. Greeting card pictures, postcards, magazine photos, and such.

For example, each of these could be used as a writing prompt:

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When I was looking for ideas to use in a poetry workshop, I realized that all of these things could be combined to write poetry.

“Found Object” poetry is poetry where you take a random object or image, list some impressions of that prompt, and then use those impressions to write a poem.

Here is an example of a “found object” poem from start to finish.

The prompt:

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The impressions:

  1. age
  2. celebration
  3. sepia
  4. dress
  5. wreath

 

The poem:

The Wedding Dress

Memories fade
as fabric yellows…
The bright laughter
and high hopes
symbolized in lace
and flowers
fallen into sepia
as time softens
the edges
and brings
an end to dreams.

 

When you are stuck for something to write about, this technique can get the wheels turning again. It’s a lot of fun–especially as a group exercise, for a writers group, perhaps.

Here’s a set of objects to play with. Give the concept a try. If anyone does come up with a poem, please share it in the comments. 🙂

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Another Monday…Let’s Get After It!

First of all, the review of what we’ve gotten done so far:

The desk is still neat, underneath still uncluttered to the part I’ve finished, but today I am going to take a break from sitting on the floor because it hurts my back if I do it too long. And there are other parts of the house that could use a cleaning too.

Before I get started though, a quick anecdote. I went to Home Depot today looking for WD40 and canned air because my front door has been screeching and my portable air conditioner coils are full of dust. Well, they didn’t have the air, but when I brought home the WD40 and told my husband what I planned to do with it he said: “You know that’s not a lubricant, right?” I blinked and showed him the back of the can where it said “lubricates.” It felt kind of good to know something he didn’t, but I was a bit shocked. How do you get through life without the miracle of WD40? BTW, the front door is whisper silent now. 😉 I found the remnants of a can of air, but it really didn’t work on the coils, so I am still contemplating what to do there.

Anyway…time to clean, right? Today my goal is to restore the upstairs bathroom to the Asian-influenced beauty it had before we started using it every day and letting things pile up. It is currently a mess:

 

I am not going to lie. It’s really filthy. So I didn’t want to take closer pictures, but that’s a cop-out, so I probably will…but for detail shots. I think you can get the idea from these.

Let’s get started.

Time Passing

(We remember what that picture means, right? Time passed…)

 

Well, it probably won’t get completely finished today, and the linen closet is a day by itself. I have a real tendency to over-estimate my stamina for the day…still, I think you will be pleased to see the difference. I know we are.

 

One end of the counter was worse than the other. (And I forgot to take a picture of the mess behind the sink before I started cleaning it up.)

Now, the clutter is gone and it looks like it is supposed to…:

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May still be a bit cluttered for some, but SOOOOO much better. The tablet is running my Steam Powered Giraffe playlist. This is even better for housecleaning than the Guardians of the Galaxy Soundtrack from last week.

I still have more work to do in the tub. I’ve found that Scrubbing Bubbles work great, even on our textured surface, but it takes a couple of applications when it’s gotten as bad as it had.

I did like the results from the Tile Plus Mold and Mildew Remover, but wish I had read the cautions before using it because it says open windows and/or turn on fans. Well, this is obviously a windowless bath, and I didn’t turn on the overhead fan until I’d already sprayed it. Don’t do that. I think I am still tasting bleach…yuck! Stay safe out there!

Anyway, here are the results so far:

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Like I said, not finished, but much better.

I also cleaned up the toilet some and put in 2000 Flushes. Taking a break for lunch. I may or may not get back to it today. It sucks getting old…

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RIEVIEW: Odd Thomas

   Like a pair of looms, using sunshine and their own
silhouettes, two enormous California live oaks wove
veils of gold and purple, which they flung across the
driveway.
   Penny appeared to shimmer and to darkle  as  she 
passed through this intricate lace of light and shade.

–Dean Koontz, Odd Thomas

 

Now, that is someone who has a way with words.

I have read Odd Thomas at least twice and embarked on a third reading before starting this review. It is a book that stays with you, popping up in your head now and then. The language, as mentioned above, is lyrical in places, and yet grounded and down-to-earth in the storyline. I am not going to go into too much detail of the plot, because–if you haven’t read it–I don’t want to spoil it. Here’s what I can say:

Odd Thomas is a 20-year-old short-order cook in a small California town. He has a beautiful soul mate, Stormy Llewellyn; an eccentric landlady, Rosalia Sanchez; a friend in the police chief, Wyatt Porter; and the ability to see ghosts.

He can also see bodachs, evil creatures that gravitate to violent deaths. He is the only one who sees these, which sometimes lets him help avoid tragedy–and sometimes not.

The story is part mystery, part horror, part fantasy–which is why I chose this blog to review it on. It doesn’t fit any mold well. Odd is living up to his name and carving a niche all his own.

This is an incredible book, and I think all authors should be required to read it just to see what a well-written book looks like. Of course, there are other well-written books…but I don’t know of many more compelling. Dean Koontz has a way of creating characters that stick with you for decades. Besides Odd Thomas (who has a series of seven titles devoted to his adventures) my favorites are the adventures of Christopher Snow in Moonlight Bay. (Though Amazon bills it as a trilogy and there are only two books I know of…where’s the third book, Dean?)

I think Odd and Christopher would be good friends if they met.

Odd Thomas was originally released in 2003. In 2013, it was made into a movie starring Anton Yelchin. He was perfectly cast. Anton brought to Odd the humor, the pathos, and the brave spirit embodied in the book. Tragically, he died in 2016, so there could never be a sequel without recasting the part. So, we’ll be content with one.

The movie translated the book to the screen brilliantly. There were a few characters that made me go “huh?” with their casting, but it didn’t diminish my enjoyment of the film. A lot of the dialogue is taken word for word from the text of the novel, and the cinematography brought to life the world of Pico Mundo in loving detail.

This is an excellent book, a wonderful series, and a grand film. I highly recommend all three.

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Collaborating with Pirates…

Several years ago now, I received an email from my good friend Marc Gunn asking if I wanted to do another collaborative album after Don’t Go Drinking with Hobbits. This time, it would be a collection of songs about airship pirates hunting dragons. The song above was one of the resulting tracks.

Collaborating with another artist in any realm is difficult. Collaborating with another artist who lives in another state when you are trying to write songs and can’t play a lick on music except for a song or two on the recorder is nearly impossible! But we managed, and I think came up with a very successful album.

Pirates Vs. Dragons covers a wide range of topics, from joining an airship crew for the first voyage to the dragon’s side of the conflicts to the difficulties of being a girl on a ship full of pirates.

In fact, The Ballad of Jenny Malloy has proved rather controversial. On the one hand, it won a $50 prize in a poetry reading contest…but on the other, it has gotten some bad receptions when Marc sings it because people feel the ending is in poor taste. Honestly, I saw it as a story of a girl who winds up getting exactly what she wants…but apparently, it comes across as her being exploited by her crewmates. It’s probably not politically correct, but it wasn’t intended to be misogynistic either.

One of the other things about this project that was a lot of fun was the “journal” that goes along with it. Originally broadcast as podcasts leading up to the release, it was collected into this Kindle short story:

 

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The premise was that Marc had been kidnapped by these Steampunk pirates and was being forced to write an album of songs before they would release him. The journal adds insight into the songs while telling a story of derring-do all its own.

This collaboration was a lot of fun and gave me a chance to explore a Steampunk world other than that of the Chronicles.

For a chance to win a copy of the album as well as the journal, leave a comment below and include a way to get in touch with you. I will choose a winner on Saturday, July 18, 2020 to give people a chance to play. 🙂

 

EDIT: No players, no winners…

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Things that Go Bump in the Night…

Phone Download 8-28-19 815 - Copy

 

Everyone is afraid of something…whether it is walking alone down a dark street at midnight or losing one’s job. These fears are real and tangible. They are depressing and often out of our control.

Perhaps this is why we gravitate to horror so readily. The monsters in a novel or movie aren’t usually real. Pennywise is not going to pop out of the sewer. Dracula is not going to swoop into your bedroom window. But the thought of these iconic creatures in our lives gives us a scare we can control–we can put It down, or pause Dracula if it gets to be too much. Campfire stories fade with the light of dawn.

When I was a kid, I would rush home for Dark Shadows. I was so in love with Barnabas Collins. Of course, fifteen years later when I watched it again in reruns, it was so cheesy and badly filmed I just laughed, but it was one of my first introductions to the horror genre. (And I still think Jonathan Frid was amazing–though Barnabas was almost his only role.) Did the camp of the series impress itself in my head even then? Is that why I like to write humorous horror most of all? Maybe.

Dracula Has Risen from the Grave was the first time I remember feeling all tingly over a vampire. He was so sexy and masculine…to the ten-year-old watching it on the couch at a friend’s house. There is just something so alluring about a cape…

So, horror can affect us in many ways. It isn’t always terrifying. It can be compelling, or attractive as well. And, while vampires and werewolves might be things of legend, I find some of the scariest horror deals with people who could live next door.

For example, Stephen King’s Mr. Mercedes trilogy. Especially the first book. This story could happen tomorrow down the road. Similar stories have happened. And the only monster here is just an evil man.

This flavor of horror is almost too real. We can dismiss the supernatural as unlikely to interfere with our lives. We can’t dismiss the evil that men do so easily…

What scares you? Do you like monsters better or the wickedness of the world? What do you recommend watching or reading if someone likes to be scared in a way they can control?

Phone Download 8-28-19 1976

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Writing Tip: What’s Your Word Count?

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Staring at at a blank page can be daunting, but remember…you don’t have to set out to write a novel every time you begin to write. There are almost as many flavors of fiction as there were of original Baskin Robbins ice cream. Well, maybe not quite–especially since they have expanded that number a LOT!

The point is, you don’t have to start out with a 100,000 word novel. Start slowly and build up, if you want.

Wikipedia has a nice little chart of the main word counts according to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, or SFWA. But you can see from the rest of that paragraph that numbers vary widely for novels.

Most people I know consider a story of 1000 words or less to be Flash Fiction, which itself has many varieties–from the popular Six-Word Stories (the most famous of these being FOR SALE: BABY SHOES. NEVER WORN often attributed to Ernest Hemmingway–to the 100 word “Drabbles“–to 750 word “Sudden Fiction.” These stories are the bite-size entertainment that go with our commuter lifestyles and short attention spans. 😉

If you want to try some of these out for yourself, you can find several places to submit these, like Six-Word Memoirs or Narrative Magazine, which pays well for six-words, but charges a fee for submissions, so that is a personal choice to make.

Drabbles can be submitted to The Dribble Drabble Review (no fee/no pay) or The Drabble (also no fee/no pay from what I can tell.) Some people say you should never publish anything unless you get paid for it, but I think sites like these are a good way to hone your craft…

To get some idea of Sudden Fiction, there are several book published with examples, like Sudden Fiction: American Short-Short Stories or Sudden Fiction International: 60 Short-Short Stories.

This article includes a great list of markets for Flash Fiction in general.

When you have gotten comfortable with Flash Fiction, you will have honed a great skill, the ability to tell a cohesive story with limited words. If you can do that, it is likely that you will be able to start upping your word count with confidence.

Many of my acquaintances who come from a journalistic background have told me how much writing newspaper copy helped them learn to write lean and to the point. Read as many articles as you can and begin to recognize this trait.

Check the maximum word counts for a short story market you are interested in (for example, the imprint I edit for Horrified Press, Thirteen O’Clock, has an upper limit of 5000 words.) Don’t go over that limit–or under a minimum. It is unprofessional and wastes the editor’s time, which can have repercussions down the line.

When you are ready to up your game again, I personally suggest National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo, in November. With a minimum word count to “win” of 50,000 words in thirty days, it is a great way to get a first draft down on paper (or computer file.) Most of the novels I have written started out as NaNoWriMo books, and if you read down that Wikipedia article, I am apparently in great company!

Nobody says you CAN’T start out to write a 100,000 word epic fantasy or science fiction masterpiece and do fantastically well–but it isn’t the norm. Just remember…baby steps come before you run. And have fun! Good luck out there.

Here are some other great references dealing with the different “sizes” of stories:

The Rose Metal Press Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction: Tips from Editors, Teachers, and Writers in the Field

The Art of the Short Story

Save the Cat! Writes a Novel: The Last Book On Novel Writing You’ll Ever Need

 

As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts. What word count works best for you? Have you tried them all? Drop me a line in the comments. Let’s discuss. 🙂

 

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It’s Monday! That Means Cleaning!

First of all, I am extremely proud that after a week, my desk still looks like this:

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(Which may still look cluttered to some, but remember where we started last week…)

Now, to tackle the Down Below:

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Would you believe I hauled out several bags of trash yesterday? Yeah…neither would I. But I did!

I still haven’t gotten back to the principles of Marie Kondo yet, but I just need a bit of a refresher. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up really did open my eyes to a lot of things. The problem was that I quit in the middle. I believe in her methods enough that I immediately bought Spark Joy when I finished the first one–maybe even before I finished the first one–and pre-ordered Joy at Work as soon as it was available. (Now I just have to make time to read it!)

Of course, if I followed her steps in order, I would still be working in the library right now, and that is not the area I need to focus on at the moment, so I am going to try and apply the principles to the chaos under my desk but not the structure. We’ll see if it works.

I need something to help me focus. Last week it was American Horror Story as I was gearing up for the RIEVIEW last Friday. Now I need something new. Sure enough, YouTube came through–with several Cleaning Marathon lists like this one. Or here’s another I think  I may like better.

Yeah, that one was better…but this is more my style…though it starts a bit slow for cleaning. It’s cool for sorting through trash though. I may have to buy the CDs after payday…splurged a little TOO much for my birthday on games.

 

Time Passing

(time passed…)

 

Well, I ALMOST made it through the whole soundtrack. And it was from both movies…so I feel good about it. I had to remind myself that I can’t sit on the floor or kneel under the desk as long as I used to before I got old.

Two and a half bags of trash later, this is what I’ve got so far–and the things that found temporary homes on my desk during the sorting didn’t stay there. So, win-win…if tiny.

I may do more later, but I also have a lot of editing to do, so we will see…

Here’s the clean:

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For now, at least. Maybe I’ll do some more after lunch…and some Tylenol. 😉

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RIEVIEW: American Horror Story

AHS Title

Welcome to the first of the Friday RieViews. Today, I am going to talk about one of my favorite fascinations, American Horror Story. For those of you who haven’t stepped into the world of AHS, it is an anthology horror series that has been running for nine seasons and shows no sign of stopping…at least for now. IMDB has placeholders through 2022.

Starting from the top, here is the list of seasons as aired:

Murder House set in a haunted house (retroactively given a name to match the others).
Asylum — run by nuns with pasts to overcome filled with patients who don’t belong.
Coven — a group of young witches learning to harness their powers in New Orleans.
Freak Show — a group of carnival freaks dealing with the world’s perceptions of them.
HotelCalifornia hotel patterned after the Murder Castle whose owner has a secret.
Roanokereality show about the goings-on at an old house filled with restless spirits.
Cult — dealing with reactions to the 2016 election and its aftermath.
Apocalypseit’s the end of the world as we know it.
1984Summer camp shenanigans with serial killers.

I’ll give you my opinion of them from best to worst at the end of the review.

This series is fascinating for a lot of reasons. For one, it harks back to the early days of television when there were stables of stars in anthology series. It’s kind of cool to watch familiar faces in new roles from one year to the next. It’s given a lot of those stars a chance to show their chops. And given some of them mental exhaustion along the way.

Let’s list some pros and cons to the series.

PROS:

  1. The aforementioned stable of characters. I love seeing the same actors year after year. I keep waiting for them to show up in the season. It was disappointing not to see Evan Peters or Sarah Paulson this year, but after the time they’d put in, I can see needing a break. Evan has a new series coming up, and, then there’s the X-Men… Sarah is also doing a new series. I do hope we may see them pop in here and there in the future. And I have to mention that Denis O’Hare’s Liz Taylor was one of my favorite characters of all time. Plus, it is worth noting that Hotel gave Lady Gaga the acting creds that helped land  A Star is Born. The cast is full of brilliance–Kathy Bates; Emma Roberts; Billie Lourd; Jessica Lange; Joan Collins; Zachary Quinto…and many more–too many to list them all.
  2. The pop-culture references. I love the Easter-eggs–like in Apocalypse when one of the witches tells BD Wong he might have seen her on a police procedural…
  3. The self-references. Several seasons have featured locations or characters from previous seasons. It adds a sense of continuity to the whole story arc.
  4. The costuming is usually period-appropriate and fun.
  5. It has some of the best music ever.

CONS:

  1. Sometimes they seem to be struggling for a season’s plot hook. Not all of them are successful in my opinion.
  2. The trend of the last few seasons to split the story and have more than one arc going on. It waters things down a bit in my opinion. Especially when it jumps back and forth in time.
  3. The way they deal with ghosts. Both that the spirits are locked into one location and not allowed to move on and that they interact with human beings like they aren’t dead. It’s cool when they don’t know they are dead, but when they do and still act like they aren’t, it can get old.

Those are just my thoughts, of course. Yours may differ, and that’s cool.

Now, I promised I’d tell you how I rank the seasons–again, this is all my opinion, and yours can be quite different. From best to worst, having just watched them all again, I would list them like this:

BEST:

Freak Show  — I love the way the characters are dealt with. Respectful and thoughtful.
Hotel — Lots of intriguing characters and interesting concepts in this one.
Murder House — Cool characters, nice dynamics.
1984 — Starts with a fun send-up of slasher films…but splits off to silliness.
Apocalypse — Nice tie-backs to previous seasons.
Asylum — Despite Joseph Fiennes and Zachary Quinto, it falls a bit flat to me.
Coven — The witches aren’t treated with as much respect as I would have liked.
Cult — This one edges toward ridiculous. Yes, there were people upset in 2016, but…
Roanoke — Definite least favorite. Premise dumb. Split between TV show’s seasons awful.

WORST

 

What do you like about the show? Or hate about it? Let’s discuss it in the comments. 🙂

That’s it for this week’s RieView.

And don’t forget–Overheard in Hell is free till Sunday, July 12. 2020.

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