Graphic Novels received 6/21/11

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Like a Sniper Lining Up His Shot
Adapted by Jacques Tardi
From the novel by Jean-Patrick Manchette

Promo copy:

The Tardi/Manchette team of West Coast Blues reunites for another brutal neo-noir classic.

Like many of the greatest noir thrillers, Like a Sniper Lining Up His Shot begins with a classic, even clichéd set-up: Martin Terrier, the hired killer, needs just one more big job so that he can turn in his guns, return to his native village to find and marry his childhood sweetheart, and retire.

But nothing goes as expected, his “last job” turns out to be a set-up that results in a bloody shoot-out from which Terrier barely escapes with his life, and soon he’s on the run from not only the authorities and his treacherous ex-bosses but also the members of a crime syndicate still seeking revenge for an earlier hit on one of theirs. (We won’t even mention what they do to his cat.)

With Like a Sniper Lining Up His Shot, Tardi, at the top of his form, once again puts his lushly efficient neo-clear-line style in the service of Manchette’s gleefully brisk prose for a spectacularly dark, violent and fast-paced crime thriller that will delight fans of their previous collaboration, West Coast Blues.

(NOTE: Manchette’s original 1981 novel, La Position du tireur couché, was released in English under the title The Prone Gunman by City Lights in 2001.)

Ever since Fantagraphics began reprinting Tardi’s works, I’ve become a HUGE fan! I devoted an entire “Nexus Graphica” to the extraordinary artist and reviewed his first collaboration with Manchette, West Coast Blues.

Quote:
From the opening panel until the final words, Tardi’s adaptation of Manchette’s crime novel Le Petit bleu de la côte ouest sizzles with a dazzling graphic intensity. Salesman George Gerfaut unknowingly becomes embroiled in conspiracy and murder when he stops to aid the victim of a car accident. Much like the 50s American crime novels they emulate, Tardi and Manchette offer a impressive display of destructive violence, wanton love, and disregard for life. Showcasing Tardi’s singular artistic talents, the brilliant West Coast Blues emerges as one of the best crime graphic novels ever produced.

Blood Work
by Kim Harrison
Art by Pedro Maia and Gemma Magno

Promo copy:

When Ivy met Rachel, the result wasn’t exactly love at first sight. Sparks flew as the living vampire and the stubborn witch learned what it meant to be partners. Now Kim Harrison, the acclaimed author of Pale Demon and Black Magic Sanction, turns back the clock to tell the tale—in an original full-color graphic novel.

Hot-as-hell, tough-as-nails detective Ivy Tamwood has been demoted from homicide down to lowly street-crime detail. As if rousting trolls and policing pixies instead of catching killers wasn’t bad enough, she’s also been saddled with a newbie partner who’s an earth witch. It’s enough to make any living vampire bare her fangs. But when a coven of murderous witches begins preying on werewolves, Rachel Morgan quickly proves she’s a good witch who knows how to be a badass.

Together, Ivy and Rachel hit the mean streets to deal swift justice to the evil element among Cincinnati’s supernatural set. But there’s more to their partnership than they realize—and more blood and black magic in their future than they bargained for.

Krazy Kat & the Art of George Herriman: A Celebration
Edited and designed by Craig Yoe

Promo copy:

Krazy Kat & the Art of George Herriman is a tribute to one of the most influential and innovative comic strips and creators of all time. This unique collection of rare art, essays, memorabilia, and biography highlights the career of the first genius of comics, George Herriman, and his iconic creations, Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse.

During its 31-year run, Krazy Kat was enormously popular with the public, as well as influential writers, artists, and intellectuals of the time. This book includes original essays by Jay Cantor, Douglas Wolk, Harry Katz, Richard Thompson, Dee Cox (Herriman’s granddaughter), Craig McCracken, Bill Watterson, and authorized reprints of two seminal essays on Herriman by Gilbert Seldes and E. E. Cummings, alongside newly discovered vintage essays by TAD, Summerfield Baldwin, and Toots Herriman. With Krazy Kat & the Art of George Herriman, Craig Yoe reveals this influential artist and writer for a whole new generation.

Graphic Novels received 6/21/11 was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest

[ Happy Mood: Happy ]
[ Currently: Editing the Podcast ]
I have not been reading as much lately, as I have been collapsing into bed at night and working on my report cards. But I have managed to burn through the Millenium trilogy recently. Now I have to find the movies.

Things are not going very well for Lisbeth Salander, the heroine of the author Stieg Larsson’s Millenium series. She is recovering from her horrific injuries in hospital. Her father, and one of the men who nearly killed her, is down the hall. Her other assailant, her brother is on the loose. As soon as she gets better, she will be shipped to jail and put on trial for a series of crimes. The conspiracy against her has deepened, as a secret part of SAPO moves to neutralize her and the threat she poses to their secrets.

Luckily for Salander, a small, but dedicated group of followers are working not only to free Salander, but also to have her declared a competent adult. Headed by Mikael Bloomkvist, the group uses every means necessary, legal and not, to achieve its goals. And as the Sections plot against Salander deepens, and even spreads to Bloomkvist, her supporters widen out their group to include police and SAPO itself.

The last of Larsson’s exciting Millenium trilogy comes to a heart racing, exciting ending. Like with any mystery thriller, there is a bit of deus ex machina and suspension of disbelief required, but that doesn’t spoil the fun of this book.

I really think Lisbeth Salander is going to go down as one of the most interesting female protagonists. Ever. She is a kick but, intelligent woman who takes no prisoners. She’s on my zombie fighting team as of right now.

Books received 6/18/11 Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

The Sacred Band
by David Anthony Durham

Promo copy:

With the first two books in the Acacia Trilogy, Acacia and The Other Lands, David Anthony Durham has created a vast and engrossing canvas of a world in turmoil, where the surviving children of a royal dynasty are on a quest to realize their fates—and perhaps right ancient wrongs once and for all. As The Sacred Band begins, one of them, Queen Corinn, bestrides the world as a result of her mastery of spells found in the ancient Book of Elenet. Her younger brother, Dariel, has been sent on a perilous mis­sion to the Other Lands, while her sister, Mena, travels to the far north to confront an invasion of the feared race of the Auldek. Their separate trajectories will converge in a series of world-shaping, earth-shattering battles, all ren­dered with vividly imagined detail and in heroic scale.

David Anthony Durham concludes his tale of kingdoms in collision in an exciting fashion. His fictional world is at once realistic and fantastic, informed with an eloquent and dis­tinctively Shakespearean sensibility.

I interviewed Durham when Volume 1 came out. RevSF’s resident book goddess Peggy Hailey called Acacia “a huge, sprawling epic that manages to weave together history, politics, intrigue and thunderous action scenes without ever losing track of the multitudes of finely-drawn characters.”

Shadow’s Lure
by Jon Sprunk
Cover by Michael Komarck

Promo copy:

The unforgiving Northlands …

In Othir, he was at the top of the food chain—an assassin beyond compare, a dark shadow in the night. But Caim left that life behind when he helped an empress claim her throne. And now his past has come calling again.

Searching for the truth behind the murder and disappearance of his parents, Caim discovers a land in thrall to the Shadow. Haunted by temptations from the Other Side, he becomes mired in a war he does not want to fight.

But there are some things a son of the Shadow cannot ignore, and some fights from which he can’t run. In this battle, all of Caim’s strength and skill won’t be enough.

For none can resist the Shadow’s Lure.

Blood Secrets (Alexandra Sabian, Book 2)
by Jeannie Holmes
Cover by Kris Keller

Promo copy:

WHEN ALEXANDRA SABIAN SINKS HER TEETH INTO AN INVESTIGATION, SHE DOESN’T LET GO.

Alex allowed a case involving murdered vamps to get personal and is suspended from the Federal Bureau of Preternatural Investigation. Now she’s facing an official inquiry but has a chance to redeem herself. The catch: She must once again work with Varik Baudelaire, her former mentor and ex-fiancé, as he spearheads a search for a missing college student. But Varik has been keeping secrets from Alex, and his mysterious past is on a collision course with his present.

When Alex and Varik discover a carefully handcrafted doll at a crime scene, neither of them can see how close the danger really is or that a killer known as the Dollmaker has made Alex the object of his horrific desire. Now the only way out of the Dollmaker’s lair is through the twilight realm of the Shadowlands, where all secrets—for better or worse—will be revealed.

Part II

Books received 6/18/11 Part I was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Books received 6/18/11 Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Low Town
by Daniel Polansky

Promo copy

Drug dealers, hustlers, brothels, dirty politics, corrupt cops … and sorcery. Welcome to Low Town.

In the forgotten back alleys and flophouses that lie in the shadows of Rigus, the finest city of the Thirteen Lands, you will find Low Town. It is an ugly place, and its cham­pion is an ugly man. Disgraced intelligence agent. Forgotten war hero. Independent drug dealer. After a fall from grace five years ago, a man known as the Warden leads a life of crime, addicted to cheap violence and expensive drugs. Every day is a constant hustle to find new customers and protect his turf from low-life competition like Tancred the Harelip and Ling Chi, the enigmatic crime lord of the heathens.

The Warden’s life of drugged iniquity is shaken by his dis­covery of a murdered child down a dead-end street … set­ting him on a collision course with the life he left behind. As a former agent with Black House—the secret police—he knows better than anyone that murder in Low Town is an everyday thing, the kind of crime that doesn’t get investi­gated. To protect his home, he will take part in a dangerous game of deception between underworld bosses and the psy­chotic head of Black House, but the truth is far darker than he imagines. In Low Town, no one can be trusted.

Daniel Polansky has crafted a thrilling novel steeped in noir sensibilities and relentless action, and set in an original world of stunning imagination, leading to a gut-wrenching, unforeseeable conclusion. Low Town is an attention-grabbing debut that will leave readers riveted … and hun­gry for more.

Taken by Fire
by Sydney Croft
Cover by Jae Song

Promo copy:

HIS MISSION WAS TO DESTROY HER.
BUT DESIRE GOT IN THE WAY.

A product of genetic manipulation, Melanie Milan shares a body with her malevolent sister, Phoebe. A sleek, blond predator with a heart of pure darkness, Phoebe puts their body through the wicked underbelly of sex for thrills—when she’s not igniting her pyrokinetic skills for an evil organization bent on taking over the world. Melanie rarely gets out to play—much less fall in love. But that changes when rival ACRO agent Stryker Wills shows up, with a mission to terminate the woman who torched his partner.

An operative with rare abilities, Stryker soon realizes that the woman he’s about to kill isn’t the murderous fire starter he’s been hunting. But he does want her. Melanie, with the power to ice anything in her path, is heating things up in ways that are setting fire to his blood. As long as Melanie stays in control, she is his best ally to bring down her sister and stop hellish havoc from being unleashed. Walking a tightrope of longing and hate, Stryker and Melanie begin to understand that true power lies in sweet surrender to each other, to the flames between them, to the erotic adventure that’s joined their hearts and abilities to become their salvation—and perhaps the world’s.

ACK!

The Shadow Men
by Christopher Golden and Tim Lebbon

Promo copy:

From Beacon Hill to Southie, historic Boston is a town of vibrant neighborhoods knit into a seamless whole. But as Jim Banks and Trix Newcomb learn in a terrifying instant, it is also a city divided—split into three separate versions of itself by a mad magician once tasked with its protection.

Jim is happily married to Jenny, with whom he has a young daughter, Holly. Trix is Jenny’s best friend, practically a member of the family—although she has secretly been in love with Jenny for years. Then Jenny and Holly inexplicably disappear—and leave behind a Boston in which they never existed. Only Jim and Trix remember them. Only Jim and Trix can bring them back.

With the help of Boston’s Oracle, an elderly woman with magical powers, Jim and Trix travel between the fractured cities, for that is where Jenny and Holly have gone. But more is at stake than one family’s happiness. If Jim and Trix should fail, the spell holding the separate Bostons apart will fail too, and the cities will reintegrate in a cataclysmic implosion. Someone, it seems, wants just that. Someone with deadly shadow men at their disposal.

Part III

Books received 6/18/11 Part II was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Books received 6/18/11 Part III

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe
by Charles Yu

Promo copy:

From a 5 Under 35 winner, comes a razor-sharp, hilarious, and touching story of a son searching for his father … through quantum space-time.

Every day in Minor Universe 31 people get into time machines and try to change the past. That’s where Charles Yu, time travel technician, steps in. He helps save people from themselves. Literally. When he’s not taking client calls, Yu visits his mother and searches for his father, who invented time travel and then vanished. The key to locating his father may be found in a book. It’s called How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, and somewhere inside it is information that will help him. It may even save his life.

Down to the Bone (Quantum Gravity, Book 5)
by Justina Robson
Cover by Larry Rostant

Promo copy:

Lila Black faces her greatest challange yet as she takes herself, her dead lover and the AI in her head into death’s realm. The Quantum Gravity series, set in a world where our reality mixes with other dimensions that are the homes to Faeries, elementals and demons, is unique in modern SF – a series that is willing to incorporate legend, myth and magic while maintaining a rigorous approach to scientific and pyschological reality. And in Lila Black Justina Robson has created an enduringly strong yet quirkily human and flawed heroine.

City of Ruin
by Mark Charan Newton
Cover by Scott Grimando

Promo copy:

In the frozen north of a far-flung world lies Villiren, a city plagued by violent gangs and monstrous human/animal hybrids, stalked by a serial killer, and targeted by an otherworldly army. Brynd Lathraea has brought his elite Night Guard to help Villiren build a fighting force against the invaders. But success will mean dealing with the half-vampyre leader of the savage Bloods gang. Meanwhile, reptilian rumel investigator Rumex Jeryd has come seeking refuge from Villjamur’s vindictive emperor—only to find a city riddled with intolerance between species, indifference to a murderer’s reign of terror, and the powerful influence of criminals. As the enemy prepares to strike, and Villiren’s defenders turn on each other, three refugees—deposed empress Jamur Rika, her sister Eir, and the scholar Randur Estevu—approach the city. And with them they bring a last, desperate hope for survival … and a shocking revelation that will change everything.

Part I

Books received 6/18/11 Part III was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

The Illustrated Moorcock

For my latest Nexus Graphica column over at SF Site, I expanded and revised my 1998 essay “Michael Moorcock and the Comics of the Multiverse” (from Michael Moorcock’s Multiverse #5). The new piece re-titled “The Illustrated Moorcock” chronicles Moorcock’s comics career to the present, delivers some 500 additional words, and allowed me to make some much needed revisions to my clunky writing.

As an added bonus, I also review League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Century: 1969 which features a Jerry Cornelius appearance.

The Illustrated Moorcock was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

One of the worst superhero movies of the 21st century

I reviewed.. well okay, more tar & feathered Green Lantern over at Moving Pictures.

Quote:
Rather than following Jordan as he uncovers the origins of the Lanterns, this unnecessarily convoluted and poorly conceived story starts with a voiceover revelation of the Green Lantern Corps, and the film throughout relies on the sloppy trope of telling rather than showing. Ideally a tale propellant, the action serves as an exciting break to one tedious explanation after another. Not surprisingly within this structure, character motivations lack clarity. The insipid dialogue further muddies things and destroys any hint of emotional resonance.

Quote:
The digital effects, savior of many a flawed picture, never rise much above the feel of a good video game — while watching scenes that take place on Oa, home of the Guardians, you might find yourself looking for your controller. The varied alien Green Lanterns successfully ape their appearances in the comic books, but the movie underutilizes them. The potentially fascinating Jordan mentors Kilowog and Tomar-Re fall prey to the same film fallacies as everything else.

Quote:
Saving the worst for last, the climatic scene appears straight out of the worst of Japanese Kaiju cinema, complete with cheesy monster effects and screaming masses. The only thing missing is the mismatched dubbing and of course the Japanese people.

And that’s just a sampling. I really went off on this one. Check it all out at Moving Pictures.

One of the worst superhero movies of the 21st century was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Promising both entertainment and quality

For the folks over at Moving Pictures, I reviewed J. J. Abrams’ new summer blockbuster.

Quote:
While presenting nothing particularly original, “Super 8,” conceived by Abrams and executive producer Steven Spielberg, offers delicious insight into the American preteen reality circa 1979. The far-too-earnest efforts of burgeoning filmmaker Charles, the awkward exchanges between Joe and Alice, Cary’s fascination with fire, and the rebellious, often laissez-faire attitude toward authority all play as true and serve as the film’s anchors. The magnificent acting of the junior contingent further supports this, especially Fanning, who excels in a career-making performance.

Quote:
Aping 1950s monster movies, which obviously served as some of the film’s seminal influences, Abrams smartly teases throughout with the briefest glimpses of the creature, saving the full reveal for the climax. His intelligent, if at times stereotypical, script propels the story, giving his actors much to do and fostering suspense to engage even the most jaded audience.

Quote:
Reminiscent of the best of Stephen King and Spielberg the director, Abrams creates a movie, save for the finale, devoid of sentimentality yet perfectly evocative of a particular period and type of film. “Super 8” emerges from the standard summer pablum as the all-too-rare blockbuster that promises both entertainment and quality.

Check it all out at Moving Pictures.

Promising both entertainment and quality was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Stuff received 6/5/11 Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Smithereens
by Steve Aylett

Promo copy:

Steve Aylett has been described as “utterly original” (SFX), “the most original voice in the literary scene” (Michael Moorcock), “an unstoppable master of space and time” (Asimov’s) and “the coolest writer alive today” (Starburst). SMITHEREENS collects 19 stories including ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’, the prophetic ‘Download Syndrome’, ‘The Burnished Adventures of Injury Mouse’, the full text of ‘Voyage of the Iguana’, the last ever Beerlight story ‘Specter’s Way’, ‘Horoscope’, and the closest thing Aylett has ever written to a traditional SF story, ‘Bossanova’ (featuring a robot and two spaceships!) There are also animal-attack-while-writing reminiscences in ‘Evernemesi’ and top-of-the-line declarative bitterness in ‘On Reading New Books’. Snails, whales and cortical drills. Aylett’s last collection.

As evident in Part I, I’m a big Aylett fan. Back when I was the RevolutionSF fiction editor, I published his short story “Infestation” and for Fantastic Metropolis in 2005, I interviewed Aylett. Anything new by the bizarrely talented Aylett is always a treat. Like donning a costume and getting candy in June!

Madeline And Her Friends

Promo copy:

Join Madeline, the smallest of 12 little girls in Miss Clavel’s class, and her best friend, her loyal dog Genevieve, as they take the fun to town with six outrageous adventures inspired by Ludwig Bemelmans’ best-selling children’s books!

    Six Adventures, Including:

      Madeline And The Soccer Star

      Madeline’s Singing Dog

      Madeline And The Missing Clown

      Madeline And The Talking Parrot

      Madeline And The Big Cheese

      Madeline’s Rescue

City of Ruins
by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Cover by Dave Seeley

Promo copy:

Boss, a loner, loved to dive derelict spacecraft adrift in the blackness of space…

But one day, she found a ship that would change everything—an ancient Dignity Vessel—and aboard the ship, the mysterious and dangerous Stealth Tech. Now, years after discovering that first ship, Boss has put together a large company that finds Dignity Vessels and finds “loose” stealth technology.

Following a hunch, Boss and her team come to investigate the city of Vaycehn, where fourteen archeologists have died exploring the endless caves below the city. Mysterious “death holes” explode into the city itself for no apparent reason, and Boss believes stealth tech is involved. As Boss searches for the answer to the mystery of the death holes, she will uncover the answer to her Dignity Vessel quest as well—and one more thing, something so important that it will change her life—and the universe—forever.

Part I

Stuff received 6/5/11 Part II was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Stuff received 6/5/11 Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Novahead
by Steve Aylett

Promo copy:

About to quit the failed experiment of civilisation, fake detective Taffy Atom is detained by one last case – a boy with a bomb in his mind. But what’s the trigger? Pursued by cops, mobsters, mercenaries and a mechanical swan, Atom carries the bomb and trigger through Beerlight City, the single holdout of creative mischief in a world overtaken by the trend-led Fadlands. By the relentless principles of gun karma Aylett’s final Beerlight book lands you in the Delayed Reaction Bar and fixes you a glass of antifreeze with everything in it. Listen to your heart. It will not stop slowly.

I reviewed the previous Beerlight book, Atom, for Nova Express.

Quote:
Describing Steve Aylett’s wild ride Atom is a lot like holding water in your hands. The thought stays with you for a mere moment until it just runs through your fingers. You remember the experience vividly, but are unable to accurately explain the sensation.

Three figures emerged from Atom’s brownstone. A cloaked cadaver cradling its gored face, followed by a naked Atom and the fat gent carrying a fishtank between them. In the tank’s gloom rocked a giant mouth with a tail.

Atom is Taffy Atom, private detective (or private defective as he is referred to early on). His partner is Madison “Maddy” Drowner, weapons designer (Creator of such unique weapons as the Syndication bomb, which strips the pretext out of everything.) and best friend Jed Helms, an intelligent piranha. With even stranger villains, Aylett’s world is Dick Tracy on acid. Like a runaway Maltese Falcon, the plot defies description. With only glimpses and moments of what we know and how it should be, it all somehow makes sense.

It is a testament to Aylett’s skill that he keeps the reader’s rapt attention throughout. His sense of humor is dead on, with several passages demanding to be read aloud. His timing is exemplary, and Aylett knows when to give the reader a breather. With all the excitement and laughter, I loathed for the adventure to end. Luckily for me (and other readers), the climax is oddly satisfying.

“Ladies and gentleman,” said Atom, “if you’ll indulge me. I have assigned a musical note to every grade of human lie. Here’s my rendition of the President’s inaugural address.” And he took out a clarinet.

Aylett maintains the insanity right up until the last page playing a game of psychic chicken and refusing to swerve. Atom takes you on a wild ride far afield of ordinary fiction (SF or not), and it’s a ride not soon forgotten.

Needless to say, I’m looking forward to Novahead.

Happythankyoumoreplease

Promo copy:

Josh Radnor (CBS’ Emmy-nominated ”How I Met Your Mother”) wrote, directed and stars in happythankyoumoreplease, a sharp comedy centered on a group of 20-something New Yorkers struggling to figure out themselves, their lives and their loves.

On his way to a meeting with a publisher, aspiring novelist Sam Wexler (Radnor) finds Rasheen, a young boy separated from his family on the subway. When the quiet Rasheen refuses to be left alone with social services, Sam learns the boy has already been placed in six previous foster homes and impulsively agrees to let the boy stay with him for a couple days. Dropped into Sam’s chaotic, bachelor lifestyle, Rasheen is introduced to Sam’s circle of friends; Annie (Malin Akerman) who has an unhealthy pattern of dating the wrong men, as well as an auto-immune disorder which has rendered her hairless, Mary-Catherine (Zoe Kazan) and Charlie (Pablo Schreiber) whose potential move to Los Angeles threatens their relationship, and Mississippi (Kate Mara), an aspiring singer/waitress who tests Sam’s fear of commitment. When Sam’s unexpected friendship with Rasheen develops, he realizes adulthood is not about waiting for the right answers to get the life you want, but simply stumbling ahead and figuring them out in the process.

Featuring a brilliant young cast and music from breaking indie musicians, happythankyoumoreplease deftly captures the uncertainty and angst of what it is to be young, vulnerable, and desperate to find out who you are – or perhaps more importantly, who you want to be.

Hexed: The Iron Druid Chronicles
by Kevin Hearne
Cover by Gene Mollica

Promo copy:

Atticus O’Sullivan, last of the Druids, doesn’t care much for witches. Still, he’s about to make nice with the local coven by signing a mutually beneficial nonaggression treaty—when suddenly the witch population in modern-day Tempe, Arizona, quadruples overnight. And the new girls are not just bad, they’re badasses with a dark history on the German side of World War II.

With a fallen angel feasting on local high school students, a horde of Bacchants blowing in from Vegas with their special brand of deadly decadence, and a dangerously sexy Celtic goddess of fire vying for his attention, Atticus is having trouble scheduling the witch hunt. But aided by his magical sword, his neighbor’s rocket-propelled grenade launcher, and his vampire attorney, Atticus is ready to sweep the town and show the witchy women they picked the wrong Druid to hex.

Part II

Stuff received 6/5/11 Part I was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon