Wednesday 28 August 2024

Twenty Thrilling Titles

When The Black Beacon Book of Ghosts is published in October, we'll have twenty titles available to the reading public. For an independent publishing project, that's quite a milestone, and one we hope you'll celebrate with us. How? Well, that's up to you, but here are a handful of simple ways to get excited and spread that excitement. 

1. Read our books. They're very affordable.
2. Leave a rating and review on Amazon and Goodreads.
3. Download and share the promotional image below.
4. Join us (and invite others to join us) on social media.

Thank you. Let the party begin!    


 

Monday 26 August 2024

A Glimpse of the Ghostly: Robert Allen Lupton

The Black Beacon Book of Ghosts will send shivers up your spine this Halloween. The Kindle version is already available for pre-order at just $1.99 instead of $3.99 and you can add the anthology to your Goodreads "want to read" list today. The anthology will be officially released on the 11th of October 2024. To get you in the mood and give you a little insight into the workings of their minds, our contributing authors are sharing their own haunting experiences with you. Read on, if you're not fainthearted!

The Legend of La Llorona

My story takes place in the Sandia Mountains, which rise to 10,000 feet above Albuquerque, New Mexico. Rain and snowmelt rush down the western face of the mountains and across the metropolitan area in arroyos, what people call ditches in other parts of the United States. The arroyos are haunted by the ditch witch, La Llorona.

The story has it that once upon a time there was a beautiful young girl named Maria who was married to an older nobleman when she was just a teenager. When Maria heard that her husband was going to leave her for a younger woman from a better family, she went mad with jealousy and took her two kids down to the river to drown them. After she threw them into the rushing water, they cried out to her as they were drowning and she had second thoughts. She tried to reach out to save them, but it was too late. They were swept away by the current, never to be seen again.

It is said that to this day Maria still roams the arroyos and riverbeds, as an old witch, looking for her children and crying out for them, and will snatch up any children who are alone or careless. People have claimed to have actually seen La Llorona, which continues to reinforce the legend.


Monday 19 August 2024

A Glimpse of the Ghostly: C. M. Saunders

The Black Beacon Book of Ghosts will send shivers up your spine this Halloween. The Kindle version is already available for pre-order at just $1.99 instead of $3.99 and you can add the anthology to your Goodreads "want to read" list today. The anthology will be officially released on the 11th of October 2024. To get you in the mood and give you a little insight into the workings of their minds, our contributing authors are sharing their own haunting experiences with you. Read on, if you're not fainthearted!

The Locked Cabinet - C. M. Saunders

People often ask me why this is. Of all the things I could write about, why choose to write about zombies, ghouls, mysteries, and things that go bump in the night? I think a lot of horror writers struggle to give a satisfactory answer, but for me it’s very simple. It’s because I grew up with a poltergeist.

I was born in a small ex-mining village in the south Wales coalfields called New Tredegar. It is perhaps most famous for being the site of a pit disaster in 1875 that killed 22 people, and after the pit closed a century or so later, fell into a state of decline. We lived in the same terraced house all my life and I was lucky enough to have a reasonably happy and normal childhood. My mother collected little china figurines, and by the time I was nine or ten years, she had amassed hundreds of them, which she kept in glass-fronted cabinets. One day, she asked my sister and me which one of us had been playing with them, patiently explaining that some of the figurines were very old and delicate and were not to be treated like toys. This confused my sister and me, because she was in her mid-teens by then and more into boys and rock music, while I had never been one for playing with dolls. We brushed it off, and each blamed the other was responsible. This happened regularly, until eventually our mother put locks on some of the cabinets.

That should’ve been the end of the matter, but it wasn’t. Because the figures kept moving. Even with the cabinet doors locked.

One of them completely disappeared, only to turn up on the floor later.

This was just the tip of the iceberg. Things would go missing and turn up somewhere else, or household items would be moved around. The kitchen cupboards would often be found hanging open, and several times taps would be found left on. I clearly remember coming home from a family shopping trip to find an ornamental horse and cart which we kept on the mantelpiece lying on its side. There is no way this could have happened naturally because it was a big, heavy, chunky object that would need to be physically tipped over while we were out.

After we’d been living with what I now know to be poltergeist activity for a couple of years, it suddenly stopped.

But the story isn’t quite over.

My aunt lived next door with her son who was then seven or eight years old. One day, I saw her in the garden, and she looked awful—tired, drawn, haggard. I asked her what was wrong, and she told me about some of the weird things that had been happening in her house, and they sounded a lot like some of the things that had been happening in ours.






Saturday 17 August 2024

First Mystery Acceptances for 2025

Black Beacon Books is proud to announce the following acceptances from the first round of submissions for The Third Black Beacon Book of Mystery. The table of contents will be finalised in October.

Mystery writers should get their submissions in by the end of September after reading the full guidelines on our submissions page.


 

Monday 12 August 2024

A Glimpse of the Ghostly: Michael Picco

The Black Beacon Book of Ghosts will send shivers up your spine this Halloween. The Kindle version is already available for pre-order at just $1.99 instead of $3.99 and you can add the anthology to your Goodreads "want to read" list today. The anthology will be officially released on the 11th of October 2024. To get you in the mood and give you a little insight into the workings of their minds, our contributing authors are sharing their own haunting experiences with you. Read on, if you're not fainthearted!

I was living in Lakewood, Colorado when I had my first encounter with the paranormal. Not a ghost, per se, but ghost adjacent, I suppose. 

I had just turned thirty when I encountered one of the “shadow people” (albeit, referring to them as “people” seems a bit of a stretch). They are better characterized as “specters” — dark, shadow-ridden creatures, grotesquely deformed with only vaguely human characteristics.

The years have done little to scour the memory away. The overwhelming and paralyzing fear still seems uncomfortably close-at-hand — even now, some twenty-five years later. This particular “visitation” occurred on a frigid and stormy February night, when the sleet-coated aspens pawed and scratched ceaselessly at my bedroom window. 

I recall being stirred from a restless sleep by an odd sort of static discharge — some kind of peculiar crackling sound. Half asleep, my mind registered it vaguely, but what woke me completely was the odd odor that accompanied it. The scent is difficult to describe. The room stank of burnt ozone, and something not unlike rusted metal, left to scorch and radiate in the summer sun. It’s had a strange, almost palpable pall to it, like the air itself was corroding. Not wanting to disturb my wife, I peeled open one eye to survey the room. There, hovering at the foot of our bed was a specter — a shadow person — an entity I would later refer to in Scenes From The Carnival Lounge as "The Sceadu.” 

The apparition was at least eight feet tall and impossibly thin, possessing a vaguely humanoid shape, but completely bereft of any discernible features — that is, beyond two amorphous and ever-shifting reddish-purple orbs where its eyes should have been. These peered malevolently from beneath the brim of an oddly-shaped hat (like a belled top hat, but oddly disproportionate). The apparition was blacker than black — a shadow of darkness so deep and that the light around it seemed to bend and dim. A sickly purple glow outlined it against the darkness of our bedroom. I watched, utterly paralyzed, as a sickly elongated limb protracted out from its body — a dreadful and stilted sort of gesture, reminiscent of the stutter of a film spool gone off track. 

A misty skeletal hand reached out for me… and I found out then that even a hardened horror writer can know terror.

www.michaelpicco.com

www.amazon.com/author/michaelpicco

https://denverhorror.com/michael-picco/


Friday 2 August 2024

A Glimpse of the Ghostly: Sam Dawson

The Black Beacon Book of Ghosts will send shivers up your spine this Halloween. The Kindle version is already available for pre-order at just $1.99 instead of $3.99 and you can add the anthology to your Goodreads "want to read" list today. The anthology will be officially released on the 11th of October 2024. To get you in the mood and give you a little insight into the workings of their minds, our contributing authors are sharing their own haunting experiences with you. Read on, if you're not fainthearted!

Something may or may not have happened years ago. I put it into a short story, my most autobiographical ever, more or less unchanged (including that my best friend also heard the noise and we both stood in the middle of the night right where it was coming from without quite daring to reach out and put a hand in the middle of it). If there hadn’t been a witness, I would have long ago discounted the whole thing. In the story the house’s name was given as Prospect House. That wasn’t – isn’t – its true name. The illustration shows the real house as it was back then. Later owners have changed it irrevocably and removed an unforgivable amount of its historical features.

It was two o’clock in the morning and he was happily reading in bed. His was the only light in the house. Immersed in the book, he became practically oblivious to what surrounded him, automatically shutting out the sounds of a large house settling down (the first night there he’d hardly been able to believe the cacophony of creaks and groans that it made).

That was why it took so long for him to notice the breathing.

It crept up on him subliminally. When he did become aware of the sound he realised that it had actually commenced some time before, but just below the level of his consciousness. His stomach turned to chill water. For a second he entertained the childish idea of pretending that nothing was there, in the hope it would just go away.

But there was. And it wouldn’t. He had to investigate. He rose from bed, not bothering even to put on his robe or slippers, and went out onto the landing. The noise was from below. He looked down. Nothing.

For a few seconds he paused outside Margaret’s room and listened to her sleeping. It clearly wasn’t her making the noise. Her breaths were quieter, shorter, female. And right next to him. These were longer, louder and male. When he held his own breath they continued. He leaned out over the bannister. They came from right below him. The downstairs hall, where the stairs gave a 90 degree turn, creating a small parqueted square of floor. A space that was empty.

Gingerly he descended, keeping his steps quiet, even though he didn’t need to: the sound continued, irrespective.

It was localised. It was from that spot. Where there was nothing to create it. He did all the sensible things, of course: checked that all the windows and taps were closed, even though no water pipes ran anywhere near it; put his hand to the cold metal of the boiler, despite knowing the heating was off; armed himself with a poker and inspected every room for burglars; then went once more to listen to Margaret in case some weird echo was at play. But that was pointless too. The breathing was completely different from hers. And clearly coming from that specific spot on the ground floor.

In the end there was nothing to do. He went back to bed. He turned out the light and tried to sleep, but the noise was more frightening in darkness. Exhausted, he sat back up and took up his book. Somewhere around four o’clock he became aware the noise had ceased. He slept.

The following night, Adam once again found himself awake at two AM. He hadn’t expected the sound to begin again. But it did. He repeated the same pointless actions. It continued, regardless. He returned to the landing and looked down at the space that contained it. Nothing. No one. He could think of nothing to do that would make any sense. In time he returned to bed. In time, he was able to sleep.

By the third night familiarity had deprived it of its ability to scare him. There was also something inherently unthreatening about it. He tried to analyse it. The breathing seemed to be a man’s: even, not unnaturally loud, undramatic. It wasn’t the gasping of someone dying, as he had at first feared. He wasn’t, he felt, witnessing a recording of murder or terminal illness.

The next weekend Tracey and Mark came over, and stayed up so late talking that they both accepted the offer to stay the night. Not unintentionally, Adam kept the fireside reminiscences going long after their wives had retired. In the small hours, the noise began. Would Mark hear it?

He did, and his reaction was similar to Adam’s: an exploration of logical causes. And then illogical ones. The idea that that highly polished patch of floor was haunted was ridiculous. It was true that they were directly below a bannister rail from which someone could have hanged themselves, but such an event was clearly not what they were listening to. There was no known history of violence attached to Prospect House itself.

It was a paradox that couldn’t be resolved. Adam was aware that this was perhaps the one true supernatural experience he had ever witnessed, yet for him what they were hearing had become somehow safe. Almost mundane, even.

Adam never did tell Margaret. He toyed vaguely with the idea of borrowing a tape recorder from someone, though he wasn’t sure how he could get such a large device into the house undetected, and in the end did nothing. There was no need to rush. Every night, or rather every small hours, the noise was there, unchanging.

Until it wasn’t. It lasted nearly two weeks, then it stopped. It never resumed.

He rather missed it.

Photo and art provided by Sam Dawson.