Saturday 23 February 2019

BLOG TOUR







That Which Grows Wild
by Eric J. Guignard
Genre: Dark Fantasy, Short Stories



That Which Grows Wild collects sixteen dark and masterful short stories by award-winning author Eric J. Guignard. Equal parts whimsy and weird, horror and heartbreak, this debut collection traverses the darker side of the fantastic through vibrant and harrowing tales that depict monsters and regrets, hope and atonement, and the oddly changing reflection that turns back at you in the mirror.



Discover why Eric J. Guignard has earned praise from masters of the craft such as Ramsey Campbell (“Guignard gives voice to paranoid vision that’s all too believable.”), Rick Hautala (“No other young horror author is better, I think, than Eric J. Guignard.”), and Nancy Holder ( “The defining new voice of horror has arrived, and I stand in awe.”)



Stories include:

• “A Case Study in Natural Selection and How It Applies to Love” - a teen experiences romance, while the world slowly dies from rising temperatures and increasing cases of spontaneous combustion.

• “Dreams of a Little Suicide” - a down-on-his-luck actor unexpectedly finds his dreams and love in Hollywood playing a munchkin during filming of The Wizard of Oz, but soon those dreams begin to darken.

• “The Inveterate Establishment of Daddano & Co.” - an aged undertaker tells the true story behind the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, and of the grime that accumulates beneath our floors.

• “A Journey of Great Waves” - a Japanese girl encounters, years later, the ocean-borne debris of her tsunami-ravaged homeland, and the ghosts that come with it.

• “The House of the Rising Sun, Forever” - a tragic voice gives dire warning against the cycle of opium addiction from which, even after death, there is no escape.

• “Last Days of the Gunslinger, John Amos” - a gunfighter keeps a decimated town’s surviving children safe on a mountaintop from the incursion of ferocious creatures… until a flash flood strikes.

Explore within, and discover a wild range upon which grows the dark, the strange, and the profound.

Excerpt from A Case Study in Natural Selection and How It Applies to Love:


YESTERDAY I SAW JAMIE GOODWIN BURST into flame.
He was just sitting on one of those cheap aluminum-back chairs we all have, eyes closed in the shade
of Hester’s old RV, trying to get some relief from the heat, same as everyone else. I was checking the
stock of coolers, seeing if any held even a bit of water left to siphon out, when Jamie let out a tiny gasp
like he woke from a bad dream. If it was a bad dream he had, he woke to something worse, ’cause little
glints of light popped and fizzed off him like the sparklers we used to wave around on Fourth of July.
Smoke or steam or something else rose up, then Jamie’s eyes went cartoon big and he turned into a
fireball.
Jamie’s the fourth person to spontaneously combust this month. Two women burned last Wednesday,
and old Tom Puddingpaw blazed the week prior. Before that, we averaged onlyone or two fireballs a
month, but now it’s getting worse. And after Jamie burned, Ms. Crankshaw didn’t even cancel lessons
like she normally did, as if coming to terms that folks fireballing was the new natural order of things.
“That’s another lesson in evolution. One day we’re apes, then we’re humans, now we’re fireballs.”
She didn’t really say that, but she might as well have.
At least Loud John and Rudy were there when Jamie burned, and they contained his cinders so it didn’t
spread like when Quiet John caught flame. But I still saw the whole thing, and it still scared me, even
if others pretend to somehow be getting used to it.
“I watched him die,” I tell my friends. “Jamie didn’t scream. I think he tried, since his mouth opened
wide, but nothing came out except flames.”
“Why is this happening for no reason?” Ogre asks, though that question is rhetorical because he doesn’t
expect an answer. His voice hitches and he overcompensates for it by yelling, “When’s it going
to stop?
That’s rhetorical too.



Excerpt from Last Night :


LAST NIGHT, THE MOON TURNED FULL.

Last night, the world stopped turning.

Last night, the cosmos froze, like the slow-moving cogs of an ancient clock that finally grind down.
Perhaps the great horologist of the universe simply forgot to rewind the mechanism of its gears. Perhaps
he will appear at any moment to lift the stop lever and turn back its counter wheel. Perhaps he has
decided the clock is broken and not worth his patience to tinker with any longer.

The earth hangs motionless now, peering to the sun from one face which, presumably, must begin to
burn. Is the other side of the planet in flames or is it simply cooking like a slow-roast oven? I cower in
North Vancouver, across the Burrard Inlet and, here, it is only night. My own watch has outlasted the
mechanism of the universe and ticks away, telling me it’s three in the afternoon. The sky shows
otherwise, black and interrupted by a soft moon which rests high above like a pool of cream.
The temperature had fortunately been warm, golden months of Canadian summer that were just
beginning to fade into autumn’s auburn embrace. But I feel it cooling already. The red mercury on my
thermometer outdoors drops steadily—forty-eight degrees and slowly sinking. The electricity is still
on to generate heat but, once that goes out, there will remain nothing to warm this part of land relegated
to nocturnal shadows. Lest that great horologist return, I can only image the arctic wasteland all of
Vancouver will soon become.

If the sinking cold were not grim enough, the howl of werewolves chills me even more.

It’s true they exist, but they’ve been of little consequence. One night a month, they transformed and
ran wild through the piney wilderness above Lion’s Bay. Their victims were homeless vagrants found
sleeping in ravines or drunken hunters, piss-proud they killed a rabbit with a shotgun. Poetic justice, if
you ask me, and their deaths unmourned. We all knew of the creatures and simply stayed home those
nights with doors locked and shutters bolted.
The werewolves were people of the town, members of families with long-standing roots to the
indigenous men and women who first settled this country. When the time of month came, they did
their business elsewhere, and we let them be.

Now, however, the moon does not fall. It no longer cycles the earth, while the earth no longer cycles
the sun. That beguiling orb in the sky has petrified and casts its strange call permanently over mortals
who would transform into howling beasts: those mortals who will never be mortal again. As the
cosmos are stuck in their current alignment, so too are the creatures stuck in their transformation. The
moon may stay full on this part of land for the remainder of eternity, and the wolf-men will run wild.


LAST WEEK, the moon turned full.

Last week, the world stopped turning.

Last week, time fell meaningless as calculations based on the rotation of the planet ceased. My watch
ticks onward, the quartz crystal in its center vibrating at a steady frequency to tell me the hours, the
days that have passed. It matters not for, outside, it is still midnight . . . always midnight.
I look out the window and see the dark ocean far away, its surface illuminated by the moon’s reflection.
Burrard Inlet is motionless, flat as a sheet of glass. There are no tides to pull the waves in or out,
motions I once let myself be hypnotized by, dreaming upon their quiet, steady roar. Little moves
outside, except for glimpses of fleeting shadows that dart across the hills—shadows that quickly melt
into darkness and, once they are gone, cause me to wonder if they were ever there to begin with.
The werewolves have grown bold. In the past they relegated themselves to the wilderness, but now
they roam the city. Their number is multiplying. I hear howling often, and screams too, but can never
tell where the sound comes from as it echoes in the cold, still night air.

I have gone outside my house only twice since the world stopped moving.










Eric J. Guignard is a writer and editor of dark and speculative fiction, operating from the shadowy outskirts of Los Angeles. He's won the Bram Stoker Award, been a finalist for the International Thriller Writers Award, and a multi-nominee of the Pushcart Prize. His stories and non-fiction have appeared in over one hundred genre and literary publications such as "Nightmare Magazine," "Black Static," "Shock Totem," "Buzzy Magazine," and "Dark Discoveries Magazine." Outside the glamorous and jet-setting world of indie fiction, Eric's a technical writer and college professor, and he stumbles home each day to a wife, children, cats, and a terrarium filled with mischievous beetles.




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