|

Xena
BtVS
Angel
DS9
Voyager

Action & Adventure
Children's Tales
Comedy, Parody & Satire
Historical Drama
Love & Romance
Mystery & Thriller
Myth, Legend & Fantasy
Poetry & Songs
Modern & Miscellaneous
Sci Fi & the Future
Click to subscribe to BLURB Updates
|
|
Mystery, Thriller & Horror - Master Author List
A|
B|
C|
D|
E|
F|
G|
H|
I|
J|
K|
L|
M|
N|
O|
P|
Q|
R|
S|
T|
U|
V|
W|
X|
Y|
Z
A
^
B
^
C
^
D
^
Fractured Tapestry by Kiera Dellacroix
Recommended by: JLynn - 06.09.02
Classification: Mystery/Thriller
Sex/Violence Content: Alt/NC-17 (violence/language/sexual content)
Length: Novel, 257 pages - Complete
Maddie Ledoux is an angry, nasty, opinionated, selfish, egotistical messed up customer, but trust me; you’re gonna love her anyway. Fractured Tapestry is Maddie’s story, told with the wonderfully gritty immediacy that the first person perspective can create, and it begins with the brutal murder of her beloved uncle, the man responsible for raising her and whom she considers her father. As a private detective, Maddie talks her way into taking on the murder case herself, determined to find his killer no matter how long it takes.
The road of Maddie’s investigation is filled with twists and turns, and Kiera takes us along into a dark mystery that forces Maddie to discover aspects of herself that she would most likely prefer not to know even as she searches for the killer. The story is as much a love story as it is a thriller, and Fractured provides deep emotion as well as wry humour, both with sufficient intensity to move you to tears or laughter.
This robust mystery is full of character and colour, delightfully constructed and paced to keep your interest riveted to the page until the very final moment. Go now, read quickly, email her with praise and beg her for more. You won’t be disappointed.
http://www.merwolf.com/academy/fanfic/k/kiera_tapestry1.html
Icehole by Kiera Dellacroix
Recommended by: Taleweaver - 02.23.03
Classification: Mystery Thriller
Sex/Violence Content: Alt, NC-17 (for sex and violence)
Length: Complete
I wasn't prepared to read this story for most of the evening. I thought I might just curl up with a short piece while I munched on a sandwich. From the very beginning, I was riveted to my seat. I laughed, I rolled my eyes, I gasped and feared right alongside the characters all the way through. I can't tell you how many pages this Uber is. The story has been encrypted in a sad, but necessary grip on ownership. But the misery of copyright protection aside, I want to tell you all the reasons why you should read this story. One of the main characters is a sarcastic, no-bullshit, honest, aggravating, caustic, crude, funny, beautiful, resourceful and brave woman. Upon re-assignment to the frozen hell of Earth, Antarctica, she immeadiately makes an enemy in the small doctor that is her foil. The doctor is appalled by the Commander and her gruff, crude ways. The doctor hates her on sight. The two must overcome their difficulties if they're going to live in close quarters beneath the ice for eight months. A scientific team, guarded by a select military team are digging out an alien ship embedded a mile in the frozen continent. All too soon we realize this is no fluffy love story. There is danger, a sense of the spooky paranormal, horrifying terror and a creature that defies all compassion. They must all work together to survive, or they will die one by one in a top-secret base under the ice. Just one word of warning...If worms tweak you out...go look for that fluffy love story.
http://www.merwolf.com/academy/halloween/kiera_icehole1.html
E
^
F
^
Three Sisters: Littermates - Acacia By Fannie Feazel
Recommended by: Kamouraskan - 04.27.02
Classification: Horror/Fantasy
Sex/Violence Content: Alt/PG-13
Length: Incomplete
One of the advantages of writing for Blurb is that I get to tell people about the stories that I am excited about. In this case two stories, or is it one? And that’s the least of the problems in trying to define it. It has elements of horror, realistic drama, humour, romance, detective mystery and fantasy; and yet somehow it all jells into one of the best stories you’ll find on line.
So my problem is, how do I describe it without confusing you? Well the prequel, for lack of a better word, is Littermates. What starts out as the childhood of a young female out of Cat People becomes a realistic and harrowing tale of abuse as the child loses the father who could have told her of her heritage, and is instead taken by her human mother into the custody of a child molester. In defence, the child develops multiple personalities. By crossing genres, the author makes what could have been a depressing story of a victim, and makes it one of survival and accomplishment. By mixing fantasy with domestic terror, she transcends both. The separate personalities are each appealing, and completely individual as they are forced to make their way in the world alone. Sort of. And none of this encapsulates the magic of the writing and the creation of the author.
‘Acacia’ is the sisters, years later when they have, wait for it, founded a detective agency. I know, it seems ludicrous, but honestly, it works. Certain of the sisters have a desire for human blood, and their method of culling the human pack is sometimes humorous, sometimes terrifying. So, even as you try to tell yourself that this is ridiculous, that you can’t really be engrossed in a mystery being unravelled by a multiple personality lesbian/straight vampire cat, you cannot stop reading. Or caring about each of the sisters. That’s because the story is well written, the characters and situations expertly drawn, and the plotline somehow marvellously clean and straight forward despite the twist and kinks. It manages to stay routed in reality, all while you know that you are reading something that defies any genre, and is unlike anything you’ve read before.
How should you read them? Both can be read independently, though each reflects upon the other just as any human’s adulthood is found within childhood. Possibly, they are best enjoyed by slipping back and forth between the books. Which is appropriate. A story like none you’ve ever come across should probably be read differently from any other as well.
http://wordscapefiction.tripod.com/Scribe/acacia1.htm
http://wordscapefiction.tripod.com/Scribe/litter1.htm
G
^
H
^
I
^
J
^
K
^
L
^
M
^
N
^
O
^
P
^
Q
^
R
^
S
^
T
^
U
^
V
^
W
^
X
^
Y
^
Z
^
Return to Top
|