Our Book Club Friday guest today is Esri Allbritten, author of the
Tripping Magazine mystery series, which covers the adventures of a low-budget
travel rag that features destinations of paranormal interest. The trouble is,
there always seems to be a crime behind the supposed supernatural event, making
Tripping’s staff scramble to keep their story while they uncover the terrible
truth. Chihuahua
of the Baskervilles is now available in paperback or ebook. Book two, The
Portrait of Doreene Gray, just came out in hardback and ebook. Critter from
the Black Lagoon is in the works.
Esri likes nothing better than to have her characters visit real towns and wreak fictional havoc in them. You can read free chapters of her books and find out more at EsriAllbritten.com.
Esri is offering a copy of either of her current titles to one of our readers who posts a comment to the blog. -- AP
Esri likes nothing better than to have her characters visit real towns and wreak fictional havoc in them. You can read free chapters of her books and find out more at EsriAllbritten.com.
Esri is offering a copy of either of her current titles to one of our readers who posts a comment to the blog. -- AP
Crafting a Local Legend
A lot of us grew up with stories of a local
monster or ghost – creatures that thrilled our childhood selves and gave us a
sense of shared lore. Maybe your current city lacks this vital spark. Never
fear; you can “discover” your own questionable creature, and summer is the
perfect time to do it. All the raw materials are there: spooky noises outside a
tent, murky shadows in a sun-warmed lake, and the unspeakable sounds of mating
raccoons. Throw in a twelve-pack of beer on a muggy evening and you’ve got
yourself a receptive audience! So what are the right ingredients to make sure
generations of kids run screaming from the woods?
An unusual method of locomotion. Your average
supernatural creature does not amble through the woods like a teenager at the
mall. No, it crawls, floats, creeps, slithers, flies on scaly wings, or bounds
along the ground in twenty-foot leaps. It can also vanish suddenly, and almost
always does.
A grab bag of physical features. Excessive hair
is always in fashion. Goat horns or hooves were popular in the 1800s. Wings and
scales are fine, but they’ve kind of been done to death. I’m just spitballing
here, but I’m seeing empty eye sockets, albino skin, and tentacles. Lots of
tentacles.
Glowing eyes. You must have glowing eyes, because there are tons of things that look
like glowing eyes. Car headlights, driveway reflectors at weird angles, glints
off windows and chrome – even the actual glowing eyes of an animal
caught in the shaky beam of your flashlight.
A fondness for authority figures. If you want
your story to be believed, make sure your monster is witnessed by a police
officer, a reverend, or a “prominent businessman.” Rarely are these people
named or still alive, but if they are, so what? Are you going to call up
Officer Robert Cullough of Atlanta, Georgia and ask if he really saw a creature
that looked like “a cross between a rabbit and a seahorse”? What I heard was that he was in his patrol car
one night when he saw something hopping through the trees alongside the road.
It had the body of a giant rabbit, but with gauzy fins on its back and a scaly,
jointed tail. Sometimes it would leap up and use that tail to grab a tree branch
and swing itself forward. Also, its eyes glowed.
Cullough’s friends called it
Jumping Lizzy because Liz was the name of Cullough’s ex-girlfriend. When she
found out, she hanged herself, and if you sit under the right tree at midnight,
you can hear her crying and stomping her large, hairy feet.
The most popular monsters are shy. Yes, they’re
frightening in some way (large, toothy, made of ectoplasm) but they’re
essentially harmless. Your average bear may rip off the arms of anyone who gets
between it and a convenience-store dumpster, but Bigfoot is shy. Alligators might
be tacky enough to jump for raw chicken, but the Loch Ness monster, like Garbo,
wants to be alone. Real supernatural creatures are
sensitive in some way. Those
ghostly teens who ask for a ride to the nearest diner? They just want to do a
quick review for Yelp before going back to the spirit world. Strike up a
conversation about pie and they fade through the wall.
So there you have it, the elements of a
local legend. If you do it right and do it quick, you could win $2,000. The
blog io9
is offering a bounty for the best photo of a mystery creature. You can also tell
them a story, but they won’t pay you for that. Words are cheap.
What’s your favorite local legend? Tell us that, or anything. One lucky
commenter will win a copy of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles or The Portrait of Doreene Gray, your choice. -- AP
I'm just so lucky that My partner and I were taught camping holidays and trailer tents from a young age. Without a doubt it is better than holidaying in boring hotels!
ReplyDeleteHere is my weblog site
In our small Central Texas town, it was the goatman who lived in the pasture at the end of our road. No one ever saw him, but you could "feel" his presence. He has since gone elsewhere since the pasture is now home to our community center.
ReplyDeletePoor goatman. Bumped by yoga and kiddie crafts.
DeleteSometimes you don't have to go any further than your own family history to find a haunted house. My mother and her sisters spent summers in the Old Sauer Castle in Kansas City, Kansas, the home of their aunt. The house has its own legend that I discovered when putting together my mother's scrapbook. I was amazed.
ReplyDeleteHow cool is that? Will have to Google that place.
DeleteNYC has so many real monsters its tough to pick a legend. : ) I guess I'd have to pick the sewer alligator purported to be as large as a prehistoric reptile.
ReplyDeleteNice. Wonder if it's ever an albino alligator? Cause a giant white alligator would be AWESOME.
DeleteEsri, I LOVE your titles! I'll try to apply your advice for my next local spook!
ReplyDeleteThat goat man traveled to Macon, Georgia!
My novella FOREVER LOVE has a legend, a ghostly black cat which appeared just before a member of a certain family would die. Harbinger or demon of ghost?
Thanks, cool blog!
I vote for Alien Big Cat.
Deletehttp://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phantom_cat
Esri, wonderful blog! I love your sense of humor. You've gained a new reader!
ReplyDeleteOoh, Lynn, I like you. You might enjoy going over to Esriallbritten.com and reading the first couple chapters of both books, as well as a free short story with some of the characters from Chi of B. You can also find a sample of a book I self-published on Kindle, called Jokers and Fools. Don't forget kids, you can download a free Kindle app for any of your devices. I do most of my reading on my smartphone.
ReplyDeleteSince I have a ton of interests, many of them of the crafts persuasion, I'm drawn to books about the same. Local legends is something new to me, but no less interesting. I love play-on-words so book titles fascinate me and colorful covers lasso me in. I'd love to win your current contest. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteSince I have a ton of interests, many of them of the crafts persuasion, I'm drawn to books about the same. Local legends is something new to me, but no less interesting. I love play-on-words so book titles fascinate me and colorful covers lasso me in. I'd love to win your current contest. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteEvery town has a legend. If yours doesn't, start one! My town was the site of a campy William Shatner movie about spiders in the 70s. It would be fun to start a rumor that some of the spiders escaped into the mountains and are coming back to.....
ReplyDeleteKingdom of the Spiders! They're coming back to kick TJ Hooker's ass. Good luck with that.
DeleteI'm sure there must be some legends about where I live but since I did not grow up here I don't know and I don't remember of any where I did grow up. But that being said both of these books sound GREAT!!!
ReplyDeleteKingdom of the Spiders! They're coming back to kick TJ Hooker's ass. Good luck with that.
ReplyDeleteI'm in Ohio and there's a haunted restaurant called the Colombian Inn in Waterville. Another haunted restaurant is the Oliver House in Toledo. I collect ghost story books so that's why I know the local ghost stories. In Elmore there's a ghostly motorcyclist. Not sure if he's headless or not, but that would make the story spookier.
ReplyDeleteI read the first Chihuahua book, which I got from the Mystery Guild.
Portrait got picked up by the Mystery Guild, too, so you can look for it there if you don't win it here.
DeleteI like the idea of a headless motorcycle rider. Maybe he has a spectral helmet bungeed onto the back of the bike. Tsk, tsk.
You can't beat the great campfire yarn about the man with the hook who follows teenagers when they go parking near the woods.
ReplyDeleteLoved your first book and am looking forward to the second one, Esri.
Hi, Barb! The guy with the hook is a classic, which dates back to the 50s. There's a great exploration of how this scary story functions as a morality tale, on Snopes.
Deletehttp://www.snopes.com/horrors/madmen/hook.asp
Here in New Jersey we have the Jersey Devil that roams the pine barrens in south central New Jersey. There are books and there was a TV special about it too.
ReplyDeleteI LOVE the Jersey Devil. It's been around a long time, and has an almost medieval feel, what with the father maybe being the Devil, the mother maybe being a witch, the 13th child, a possible curse, etc. Not only that, but it is described in distinctly dragonlike terms.
Deletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jersey_devil
When I first starting seeing drawings of the Chupacabra, I thought maybe it was the Jersey Devil legend, somehow transported to Puerto Rico. But it turns out that the first eyewitness apparently confused the movie 'Species' with reality.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chupacabra (see subhead, "Solving the mystery of the Chupacabra."
I wouldn't be at all surprised if Species' designers took some inspiration from the Jersey Devil. There is a 2002 movie, The 13th Child, that's based on the legend.
http://www.wyrdology.com/cryptozoology/jersey-devil.html
Of course, I haven't seen any of these movies, because I'm sensitive, and can't watch anything scary.
A small little village by my hometown had the Muddy monster. This was a creature sort of like Big Foot and there were many accounts of people seeing the monster. Other than that there were your typical ghosts running around!
ReplyDeleteMuddy Monster would make an excellent band name. I'm just sayin'.
DeleteAll I've got is the Las Vegas Black Widow, but my dad used to be married to her sister. In fact, there was some speculation that my step-brother helped dump the body.... Ah, the memories of late nights with him...way back before the purported dumping. I don't communicate with that portion of the family and haven't in years, so the whole thing has an air of mystery about it.
ReplyDeleteMaybe your nth book should have a genealogist in it. It's amazing what one can find rooting around in old newspaper clippings and cemeteries.
-Lisa
WOW. Brush with creepy greatness. Now I have to Google the Vegas Black Widow.
DeleteI find those kinds of crimes the most riveting. First, because you have to overcome so many taboos to commit a cold-blooded crime within the family circle, so they have a lot of emotional content, and second, because they take place in that most accessible of arenas - the family - rather than in politicaI, corporate or even organized crime. I attended last year's Bouchercon and heard someone talk about how everyone in her family was pretty certain that her aunt had poisoned her father. The audience sat there slack-jawed. Don't ask me who it was...I have a terrible memory.
I am actually toying with a new series idea that has a little bit of genealogy in the plot.
Lisa:
DeleteP.S. You should write a book.
Iཿm not that much of a internet reader to be honest but your blogs really
ReplyDeletenice, keep it up! I'll go ahead and bookmark your site to
come back down the road. Many thanks
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