PD Allen – Blood Moon

Title: Blood Moon; Tales of da Yoopernatural, Vol. 1

Author: PD Allen

ISBN: 1449956904

Page count: 96

Genre: Horror, Dark Fantasy

Price: $7.98 ($0.99 for the kindle)

Author Bio:

PD Allen lives in a cabin in a remote section of the Porcupine Mountains in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. His cabin is equipped with a hand pump to draw water. Electricity is provided by a bicycle hooked to a small generator.

He spends his days hunting, fishing and foraging. He travels around the UP a great deal, gathering folklore and exploring various mysteries. He also practices shamanism, and can sometimes be seen traveling through the wilderness, flying from treetop to treetop under the influence of Amanita Muscaria. Occasionally he assumes the form of a large red fox.

On clear nights when there is a full moon, locals say you can hear him playing his fiddle high up on the mountaintops. The Indians say he plays for the little Manitou, which come out to dance and caper.

Tell us about your book:

Connie Hillman must come to grips with what happened in the remote Huron Mountains, where she survived an encounter with ghosts, giants and cannibalistic Weendigo. Connie reflects on horrific events in the ancient and remote Huron Mountains, located in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Her former lover (and PhD advisor) Phil Waverly stumbles upon an ancient ceremonial site, which he believes will prove his theory of a Pre-Columbian Bronze Age civilization in the Great Lakes region. Can Connie stop Phil from opening a portal between worlds? This volume also includes The Buck of Mulligan Plains. Henry Kincaid is hunting the biggest buck he has ever seen. A renowned outdoorsman, Henry always sought to be at one with the northern wilderness. Yet he never dreamed of attaining his goal in quite this manner. Meanwhile his lover, Lilith Gordon, fears she will lose him forever.

How long did it take to write the book?

Including editing & polishing, about 3 months.

What inspired you to write the book?

My love of the region, and the desire to write stories evocative of evenings spent telling spooky stories around a campfire, but with modern sensibilities.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

I write for three hours every morning, and two hours at lunch. I write all my fiction in longhand on tablets of lined paper. After I’ve finished a story, I type it up on the computer. Then I print it out to proofread, making changes and additions on the back of the printed copy.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

So far as the Yoopernatural series is concerned, I hope they enjoy their read and carry the story with them. Some of my other stories and novels have deeper meanings and purposes, but not so much this series.

Where can we go to buy your book?

Amazon. Smashword. An ebook version is now available at the Barnes & Noble website.

Any other links or info you’d like to share?

There’s my website, http://www.mountainsentinel.com. My blog (lots of free fiction there), http://allenpd.blogspot.com/ And my writer’s page at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B0030WFKWI

You can reach me through facebook (PD Allen) http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=1493710015

Excerpt:

Great Grandfather paused to draw on his pipe, exhaling a cloud of aromatic tobacco. “I was tooling along in my old Ford, enjoying da colors. Ah, dat was a car, eh. It could hardly do over thirty tops, and you had to be careful cranking it up it didn’t kick back and yank your arm outta socket, you betcha. But dat car had personality, about like a horse. Not like dese fancy cars nowadays, no sir.”

Great Grandfather lost himself in his memories for a moment. “Nobody was in a hurry back den. Dere was nothing to hurry to. Back den we knew all da pleasure was getting dere.

“Anyway, I was tooling along, enjoying da fall colors, when I come to dis steep hill. I shifted into low gear and I was slowly chugging up dis hill. Da road was bad. It’d rained a couple days before and da waters washed down dat road, cutting ruts and building silt in a few spots. Dat old Ford was having a hard time, and I thought I might have to back down da hill and walk da rest a da way, eh. I had a good ten miles to go yet. On foot I wouldn’t a made it before dark. I’d a had to bed down dere for da night and walk back in da morning. And I’d a heap rather slept in my own bed with Millie next to me.

“Da Ford caught a rut and da tires began to spin. I knew it was over den, but it’d be a job backing down without crashing off da road. Dere was only a little ways left to da top a da hill. So’s I hopped out and started to push while steering with one hand. I almost got it outta dat rut, but I just couldn’t do it myself, eh. I was about to give up when da car lurched and started climbing. I’d a fallen flat on my face if I didn’t have a hold a da steering wheel. I rushed to keep up and leapt into da driver’s seat. I looked back behind me and dere was da biggest guy I ever did see.

“I knew some big lumberjacks, but dis fella towered above any a dem. He was a hairy gentleman, with thick hair on his arms and hands. At first I thought he was wearing a fur coat, eh. Whoever he was, he pushed me up da rest a dat hill with no trouble at all, eh.

“As I topped da hill, dis giant stepped round da side a da car, eh. He stepped right over da passenger door and sat aside me. I was crowded to one side to make room for him. Da carriage a dat Ford groaned and dipped down to his side. I’d picked up many a hitchhiker in my day, but never da like a dis fella.

“Wedged in close beside him, I wondered if he was even human, eh. He had a head big as a country ham, with a massive jaw and wide flared nostrils. He had an eyebrow ridge dat jutted out from his tall forehead. His ears were tufted and dey moved round like an animal, eh. And he had a barnyard smell — not unpleasant. Kind a like a wet horse.

“He was dressed in a leather jerkin dat come down halfway to his knees, and he carried a staff, must a been eight foot long. It was twined in copper filaments with some sort a writing etched into da wood. And da top had a large crystal set into it. I had a hard time taking my eye off dat crystal. It was like I got lost in it, eh.”

At this point, it was a tradition for me to ask, “Weren’t you scared a him, Granpa?”

“Naw; it takes all sorts to make dis world. For all his size and looks, dis stranger had a gentle air about him. His eyes held an intelligent warmth, and he wore a large smile full a good humor. After he helped me outta dat tight spot, da least I could do was give him a ride, eh.”

Great Grandfather was an easy going and accepting person. It was his policy to treat his fellow men with open friendship, respect and courtesy. He turned this same amiable face to his new riding companion.

“‘Thank you for helping me up dat hill,’ I says to him. ‘Where you going dis day, my friend Goliath?’

“He didn’t say nuttin. Just smiled at me all da larger. Dat was fine by me. I was never one to disturb da peace when I got nuttin to say, eh. We drove in silence, enjoying da day. We traveled like dat for about an hour. We was nearing da Martineau spread when Goliath stepped outta da car.

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