A
Zombie Novel
Ace
Antonio Hall
Publisher: Montag Press, April 2013
Genre: YA Horror
Book Description:
THE LOVE OF HER LIFE BECOMES THE
DEATH OF THEIR LOVE
Sylva Fleischer is a teenager who
works as a necromancer for a living. Wanting to get away from raising the dead
for police investigations and demanding grieving families for a while, she goes
on a cruise for spring break. Her vacation from the dead is short-lived when
passengers on the ship turn into flesh-eating zombies. These are not the same
simple-minded harmless zombies she raises and can control, so Sylva and her
friends are trapped on the Pacific Ocean. Their only escape comes from a guy
Sylva thought was dead: Brandon. It just so happens to also be the anniversary
of his death, and she's still hurting from his loss!
Why didn't he call to say he's
alive? All those tears … for nothing.
Sylva doesn't normally hold
grudges, but when someone plays with her heart they have to pay. However, with
the fate of the human race on the line, Brandon convinces Sylva to join him in
a secret mission, yet she can't shake the feeling that he's hiding something.
It didn't take long for her
suspicions to hold true when it's revealed that Brandon has been romantically
involved with the very enemy he now wants her to destroy. To top that brutal
betrayal, the villainous female would rather kill Brandon than let Sylva have a
chance to patch things up between them. Sylva is not the kind of girl to walk
away from love without a fight, but with a strange virus threatening extinction
of human life, she shoves her own feelings in her back pocket to face her
greatest nightmare, and that nightmare starts with something that is eerily
growing right inside of her own mind and body.
When The Heart Bleeds, Sometimes
Your Friends Are All You've Got
Available at Amazon
Praise for Ace Antonio Hall and
Confessions of Sylva Slasher
“A
treat for Buffy fans—but 100% Ace Antonio Hall's own twisted vision. Breathes
new life into the living dead; run, don't shamble to get a copy.”
—Robert
J. Sawyer, Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author of the WWW trilogy
“In
a vast sea of zombie tales, Hall's tale is more than a cut above. He brings the
entire genre to heel and treats us to one Hell of a ride.”
—Art
Holcomb, writer of Professor Xavier & the X-Men vs. The Avengers, Marvel
Comics
Excerpt
Chapters 1 & 2
PART ONE SILVER KISSES
For since death came through a
man,
the resurrection of the dead
comes also through a man.— I
Corinthians 15:21
Chapter
1
YEAH, THE WHOLE
STINKING PLANET WANTED ME DEAD, and they got their wish. I tried to move but
couldn’t. Not with a broken back. Breathing slow, uneven, I stared into the
undead woman’s eyes that dripped an ominous glare down onto my helpless body.
Maybe if I
hadn’t gotten dreamy eyes for this really cute guy (I mean jerk), the weight of
the human race wouldn’t be sitting on my shoulders. I would’ve easily given my
life so my best friend, Emily, wouldn’t die. Too late.
The full moon
draped around the undead woman’s shadow that climbed up my broken body like
ghosts of death. The island soil, thirsty for moisture, welcomed my blood.
Terror wrestled me into a stone cold chokehold—I forgot how to scream. The
scent of rotten corpses gripped my nostrils. A horde of the walking dead moaned
and hovered over me like starved coyotes as the undead woman crept forward on
all fours to kill me, again.
Chapter 2
Several hours
prior:
I HATED THAT I
COULDN’T TELL REALITY FROM MY NIGHTMARES. Maybe, just maybe I spent one too
many nights raising the dead. My parents named me Sylva Fleischer, but most
people knew me as Sylva Slasher (I’ll get to why later). I made a pretty cool
living as a necromancer for The Silver Kisses Aerial Ash Scattering Company. We
raised zombies for mourners to say their last goodbyes. A lot of times we did
it for police investigations, occasionally for corporate disputes, and then we
cremated the deadheads and scattered the remains over Hawaii’s beautiful
waters. As a matter-of-fact, some guy from the military base in Honolulu kept
leaving messages on my cell phone that he wanted me to raise some dead soldier
for a case they were investigating. But I had other plans. Look, I just turned
eighteen, so if I wanted to ditch some lame colonel for something way more
hella-fun, I would. What? Can’t a girl have priorities?
Twilight peeked
over my shoulders as I looked for my friends while aboard the Sea Queen a.k.a.
The Ship of a Thousand Corpses—the best freaking zombie-themed cruise in
America. Imagine being in one of those magnificent hotels in Las Vegas during
spring break; the golden elevators, escalators, walkover bridges, restaurants,
and stores, filled with tons of thrill-seeking college kids and adults. You
could call the Sea Queen one of the world’s best luxury hotels but on water.
A woman hired me
to do a raising on the ship. Emily, and her boyfriend, Beckham, or Flip as he
liked to be called (Hawaiian-born and Japanese-descended like Em), were going
to help me. After I finally got dressed, I saw Emily’s wacky picture that she
posted on Facebook and her bitchy complaint that she and Flip were waiting on
me (I’m always fashionably late) in the bar on the Nightwalker Deck.
Unfortunately, I didn’t have a clue where to go. The captain was escorting me
up, but some kind of urgent call came in and he dashed out of the elevator
speaking radio codes into his walkie-talkie.
One of my
all-time fave videos, Sweet Dreams, played on the inside of the elevator doors
via a hi-tech projector system. I loved it that I could watch a music video
(albeit, one I’ve seen a kazillion times) inside of the elevator. A volume
control knob sat beneath the red emergency button. Marilyn Manson crawled out
of the rundown fireplace wearing black boots, a dirty tutu, and a torn bodice
that showed off his skeletal bare chest. Alright, that’s enough. I turned the
sound down so I could briefly gather my thoughts for the raising.
The elevator doors
eased open. I stepped out, immediately folding my arms and shivering. I wore a
black mid-riff tee shirt, tight leather pants, and some five-and-a-half inch
knee-high Gothic boots. I sighed, berating myself for not wearing a warmer top.
The ship’s fake fog blanketed the air so I could barely see anything. Already
late, I didn’t want to waste any more time so I stopped to ask a person dressed
like a zombie nun for directions. She sat on the bench in front of the ship’s
THEATRE UNDER THE STARS, rocking back and forth. A broken dog leash dangled in
her hand. The closer I got, the more I realized her hunched feeble posture.
“Lady, are you
okay?” I asked.
She didn’t
answer but kept rocking. Her abrupt movements made her wimple flap around her
neck and chin. I glanced up at the speaker mounted on the wall above us,
creeped out by the spooky organ music streaming out into the foggy air.
The lady made a
gurgling sound.
“Miss, hey? Are
you okay?”
Her head lifted
slowly. The yellow rays from the moon crept into the shadows under her
headdress. I stepped forward slowly, swallowing unease.
A name spilled
out of my mouth, slow, whispered. “Malena?”
I remembered
admiring the blind woman’s seeing eye dog when we embarked the ship. I couldn’t
resist petting her wolfdog. Emily and Flip were so occupied looking for their
tickets that they didn’t even see Malena and her dog.
She made another
gurgling sound. I took a step back, peering into her cloudy-white eyes.
“Um, okay, I get
it,” I said. “You were hired by the ship to scare people. Right?”
I swayed a
little to the left as the ship went over choppy waters. The blind woman stared
past me with a vacant stare, and then her head rolled over to her right
shoulder.
“Hey—hey—hey.
You’re not okay,” I said, extending my arm, ready to catch her if she fell off
of the bench.
Was she having a
seizure?
Malena muttered
something. Saliva ran down her mouth and dripped down her chalky white face.
“Are you having
a allergic reaction?” I glanced to my right, then left. “Maybe I should get the
ship’s doctor.”
Her body started
to convulse and she dropped the dog’s leash on the deck’s floor. She moaned,
curling up into a ball on the bench.
“Okay—okay—okay,
I’m going to get help,” I said, taking a quick step toward the stairs. “But,
uh, shoot, I don’t want to leave you alone.”
A sign directly
above her read nightwalker deck maze; another, near the elevator lifts, pointed
to the bathrooms. Someone had to be coming by, any second. Another gurgling
noise came from the blind woman. She coughed and blood spurted out of her
mouth. I shielded my eyes with the back of my hand and something wet splattered
on my forearm.
“Oh, my God,
Malena! You’re, you’re hemorrhaging.”
I wiped her
blood off my arms, onto the side of my top and pulled out my iPhone to call
911. No reception.
“Somebody, help.
Call 911!”
I heard someone
giggling and saw shadows approaching me through the fog. Two Asian girls, maybe
in their late teens, dressed in shredded jeans and pink tee shirts passed
behind me.
I gestured to
them. “Can I use either one of your phones to call 911? This lady is totally
sick!”
“Nice try,” one
of them said, revealing the braces on her teeth. “But you only try to scare
us.”
“No, please,
really. Are you getting reception out here? I’m not getting reception.”
They laughed and
pointed at the bench. “Maybe she pull your leg,” the same girl said.
I turned around
and glared at an empty bench.
Where did she
go?
The girls
giggled and walked toward the bathroom, shaking their heads.
“What a moron,”
the other one said.
“Miss? Miss,
where are you?” I called out, a little irritated by those stupid girls who
didn’t believe me. I looked toward the bridge then back at the girls. “Where
did she go?” They ignored me and went into the bathroom. Seriously?
“Maybe I am a
moron,” I said, under my breath. There were a few droplets of blood on the
bench, but I couldn’t find a trail showing me which way she went. She could’ve
only gone but so many places—the elevator lift, the stairs, across the bridge
(which she didn’t because I would have seen her), overboard, or into the
Nightwalker Deck Maze.
If that old,
blind lady thought I was going to play her game and follow her into the maze,
she had another thing coming. Whatever. Time to do this raising and then try to
have some fun for a change.
I took one step
and the thought of Malena sent a chill creeping down the nape of my neck. Where
did she go? Aw, Who cares? I shook it off, folded my arms, again, and walked
toward a bridge that led to the highest deck on the ship.
Someone
screamed. I turned quickly, and blew out a long breath as a wolf man in
tattered clothes chased a screaming girl across the bridge and through a door.
Music blared from out of the place and I knew that Emily and Flip would be in
there. That must be the bar, Lipstick Zombies.
I walked over
the bridge, glancing back every few seconds for Malena. The instant I crossed
halfway over, I heard the music thumping behind the bar’s door. When I saw the
neon sign, I got a little excited. Maybe with a little partying, I thought, I’d
feel better and forget about everything that sucked in my life—for a while.
CAN'T WAIT FOR THE SEQUEL? HERE'S
A PREVIEW TO
SKATEBOARD XOMBIES, SEARCH FOR
THE CRYSTAL COFFIN:
On a normal school day in Lunyon
Canyon, California, teenage necromancer, Sylva Fleischer, bickers with her
teacher in class over an unfairly graded paper. But when the principal
announces that all teachers should lock their door and not let any students
leave class, the entire school is trapped in a world of terrifying zombies that
not only bite with their teeth, they bite with their minds.
Since all life on Earth faces
extinction at the hands of the perilous undead, a guardian of a secret society
of vampire monks saves Sylva, her friend, Half-Pipe and her family, and lead
them to an alternate world. And that's when the real terror begins ... on a
planet full of every imaginable type of undead creature that ever lived ...
Including those telekinetic zombies!
Ace Antonio Hall is an actor,
former music producer, and ‘retired’ educator with accolades as a Director of
Education for the Sylvan Learning Center and nearly fifteen years experience as
an award-winning NYC English teacher. He has a BFA degree with a concentration
in screenwriting and has published poetry, short stories and fiction in
magazines, anthologies, newspapers and novels.
Inspired by his father, Chris
Acemandese Hall, who penned the lyrics to the Miles Davis jazz classic, “So
What”, sung by Eddie Jefferson, and his sister, Carol Lynn Brown, who guest
starred in the 1970’s film, “Velvet Smooth”, Ace spawned his creativity into
developing the beloved but flawed teen character, Sylva Slasher.
Ace was the Vice President of the
Greater Los Angeles Writers Society (2009-2011), and continues to head the
Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror (ScHoFan) Critique Group as Co-Director
of critique groups within the society. He is also a member of LASFS and the
International Thriller Writers.
On April 14, 2013, Montag Press
published his YA zombie novel Confessions of Sylva Slasher. His next release,
Skateboard Xombies, is coming out later this year, and he has already begun
working on Skateboard Xamurai for the third installment in his Sylva Slasher series.
Interview
“When you get some free time, write. When you get some lazy time, plan. When you get down time, world build. When your time comes, shine.”
–Ace Antonio Hall
Where are you from?
I was born in an Elmhurst hospital when my family was living at the Bushwick projects. Recently, my mother told me that it was during a time that she had to apply to get in that building because they were great places to live. That was a long, long time ago. When I was four, I moved to Jacksonville, Florida. My Nana took me in, and raised me until I moved back to NY to go to college.
Tell us your latest news?
One of the gnarliest skateboard companies, The Diamond Supply Company, is interested in turning my next novel, Skateboard Xombies, into a film! That would be a dream-come-true because it would help my novel become a NY Times Bestseller. Fingers crossed I can pull a rabbit out of that hat!
When and why did you begin writing?
I started out when I was about four, drawing stick figures and telling stories. After I saw my first Godzilla movie, I started making comics about Godzilla and monster island. In my tweens, I made super hero comic books, and in high school started learning how to write and tell stories with a better structure. A friend of mine, David Gerrold, told me that it was all practice until I wrote a million words. I'm a little over 800,000, now. I'll have a million done by the end of next year!
When did you first consider yourself a writer?
The day I considered myself an author was when I received my first monies from book sales. That was somewhere during my first book tour in the San Francisco area in 2013.
What inspired you to write your first book?
Believe it or not, my first book started out being a story about a woman surviving breast cancer, and turned out to be about a kickass female heroine fighting monsters.
Do you have a specific writing style?
I love writing in first-person narrative, and I employ a style of visual storytelling. I guess it's my background in film that inspires me to write that way.
How did you come up with the title, Confessions of Sylva Slasher?
I wanted the title to suggest that my character does not feel good about her actions therefore, it's like she's confessing her sins to the world. The fact that she has to die before learning how to live is synonymous with the symbolism motif of cocoon and butterflies in my storytelling.
Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
Never, ever give up, even when all hope is lost. Like I infer in the previous answer, your old self may have to die before finding out what your true purpose in life is, but once you are reborn, you will be more powerful, more beautiful, like a Monarch butterfly.
How much of the book is realistic?
A zombie book about an eighteen-year-old girl with the task of saving the world from an apocalypse? None.
Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?
Ah, woman. She is an enigma. An anomaly of perfection and irony. She can taint angels by luring them into her arms and give birth to a nation of ideologies. The experiences in my book are based on the exposure to the many empowered, yet vulnerable women that have touched my life; the sixty-plus beautiful gray-haired wig-wearing women who taught me respect and love for women, the girlfriends who taught me hurt and sensitivity, the sisters who taught me how sexism and abuse are their living nightmares and the young daughters of mothers who taught me that a child's laughter comes from the very soul of angels.
What books have most influenced your life most?
The Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler, The Stand by Stephen King, Guilty Pleasures by Laurell K. Hamilton, Escape to Witch Mountain by Alexander Key, Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu, The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, and The Holy Bible.
If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?
I would eat, sleep, study, read and write at Tabitha and Stephen's home for umpteen summers if I had a chance of a lifetime.
What book are you reading now?
Bag of Bones by Stephen King.
Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?
Robin Reed (Mama), Leslie Ann Moore (The Griffin's Daughter Trilogy), Catherine Cruzan (Elfkind), and not-so-new, Myra McEntire (Hourglass).
What are your current projects?
I'm finishing up a short story, The [sic] Whisperer featuring a new powerful heroine I'm developing for a medical-procedure TV series, Aspen Harp, and I'm continuously working on my Skateboard Xombies series featuring Sylva Slasher.
What would you like my readers to know?
… That the day I become a New York Times Bestseller, I will run ten miles shouting hallelujah and then run home to eat an entire bag of Snicker chocolate candy bars. That is all.
Tour
Giveaway
3 $10 Amazon Gift Card
So interesting with the living dead, zombies my daughter would love it too.
ReplyDeleteLove reading these types of books.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the giveaway. Amazon is great.
ReplyDeletesavewish@yahoo.com
Sherry Compton
Happy 2015!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the interview. May all your followers enjoy their copy of my book! Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I really enjoyed reading the excerpts and the interview!
ReplyDelete