Horror Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
By the Light of Dead Stars
Group Reads: Guest Author Invite
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July 2024 Group Read #1 with Guest Author, Andrew Van Wey
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If you like supernatural & cosmic horror in the vein of "It" and "Stranger Things" I think you'll enjoy visiting the town of Greywood Bay. Just be careful when you look up, something might start looking back. ✨🐙👻
Throughout the read I'll stop by with some behind the scenes tidbits, inspiration, and more. Maybe even a giveaway or two if that's allowed? If you have any questions along the way please don't hesitate to let me know.
Thanks for spending your time with my words and visiting the Lost Coast.

Only about 50 pages in but I like the little hints of something creepy about to happen, something not quite right.
And I like the way the first page of each chapter is drawn. Adds to the overall feel of something not right.
And I like the way the first page of each chapter is drawn. Adds to the overall feel of something not right.

Thanks Zoë! I believe we've chatted a fair bit on BoH. I spend too much time (and money) there 😬 but it's a great group.

Cheers Pisces51. Thanks for you spending your time with my words, and welcome to Greywood bay. ✨🐙👻

And I like the way the first page of each chapter is drawn. Adds to the overall fe..."
Thank you WendyB. I do my best to ensure the print editions are gorgeous and on par with anything else found on the bookstore shelves (or even nicer). It takes a while, but I think most readers enjoy it.
I'm curious about the sound of crickets being played through a speaker. Is this a nod to Crouch's Wayward Pines? A coincidence maybe? Or maybe I just need to keep reading and the answer is in the story? :)

Great catch! Yes, it's definitely a nod to Crouch. He's one of my favorites and I wanted Raven's Valley to evoke a sense of the uncanny.
It's also a real "feature" in a modern planned condo community I once toured, although it wasn't crickets but frogs and recorded music that played at different times of day. They also did community announcements through it. It was one of those "nice modern ambiance features" that creeped me out and stuck in my head.

I am looking forward to it and do plan to join in the discussions.The novel sounds like it is right up our alley. The Group Read Author Invites are my favorite feature of the club.

Growing up reading "It" and loving shows like "Stranger Things" I've long wanted to write a "kids on bicycles" book. I've also long been obsessed with a region of California known as the "Lost Coast". In fact, my first novel, Forsaken, visited a fictional small town in that region called Greywood Bay, where a certain blind psychic painted an impossible image that haunted a family. So, that town has been percolating in my mind for years. What evil has been lurking there along the Lost Coast, at the western edge of the continent... and at the edge of our world. I knew that it was cosmic and terrible and had come by many names. I knew that the fabric of reality had frayed, and this entity had long coveted our world. Here was its gateway to worm its way back in and feast on suffering. Like many ideas, it percolated through my subconscious.
The second ingredient was a drive along highway 50 in California. It’s a beautiful (and scary) drive, and I saw an image of a young, 13-year-old girl waking up in overturned car. She struggled to get out and help her parents, but the rocky embankment collapsed. She watched them slide down into the canyon. I knew this young woman would have many scars. She skateboarded into my life that day, and I saw her an image of her standing on a sea cliff looking out into the Pacific sunset where the sky split open, and a thousand dark eyes stared back from a fissure, covetous and seething. This young girl, who was in many ways so terribly broken, she was—impossibly—standing up to this ancient horror. Zelda Ruiz arrived pretty much fully formed, skateboard and all.
The third ingredient was her Uncle Mark, who I met one night in Madrid. My wife and I were there attending a writing conference, and as I sat on the balcony of our AirBnb, I saw a man walking back at midnight, a happy glow about him. He stopped at the door to his apartment, looked up at me, and I saw Mark Fitzsimmons—Zelda’s uncle. I knew him at once. He was coming home from another night out, a man in his 40s enjoying a cozy life of bachelorhood, and when he arrived in his apartment he would see something that shouldn’t be there: his sister, smoldering, sitting in the ashy waters of his bathtub. She would say something and then descend under the water. The tub would drain to nothing. The phone would ring: a number from the United States, and in that instant Mark knew that something terrible had happened to his sister and his life would be changed forever.
It’s rare that characters walk into my life, but both Mark and Zelda did just that. I’ve been less a writer than a documentarian with these books, and it has been an absolute joy. So, we’ve got the town, the characters, and the evil. From there, I knew it would be both intimate and episodic. We’d be watching characters go about their life, doing the “boring stuff” that makes us human as well as battling cosmic evil. I wanted to see the toll this would take on their everyday lives. This grief-stricken girl who’s starting to understand she can see *more* than the superficial layers of our reality, how would she balance this with just being a teenager? How would Uncle Mark—who uprooted his cozy life in Spain because of his dead sister’s warning—balance being a parental figure with his own flaws and demons?
I didn’t know all the answers, but I just sensed to trust them and let the story show me. It's worked out so far. It brought these people I care about together and sent them to the haunted town of Greywood Bay. And there, it put them all on a collision course. I’ve been listening to them ever since.


2️⃣ Highway 50, where Zelda's life was changed forever.

3️⃣ Madrid, Spain. Where Mark became the guardian he never intended to be.

4️⃣ Greywood Bay. A clash of old and new, where this bucolic community holds terrible evil within the very soil and the sky.


Thanks Lori! It might look like inspiration in hindsight, but I promise it's chaos in the thick of it.

Growing up reading "It" and loving shows like "Stranger Things" I've long wanted to write a "kids o..."
I love to hear this fleshed-out version of the way Greywood Bay, Zelda, and Mark showed up for you! This makes me want to go to The Lost Coast on vacation and hang out with the big trees and see the water!
Loved it. Great characters that felt like real people. Enjoyed how the little bits of horror slowly became bigger and bigger until all hell broke loose.
Thanks for a great read, Andrew. I'll be reading the next book.
Thanks for a great read, Andrew. I'll be reading the next book.


Thanks for a great read, Andrew. I'll be r..."
Cheers WendyB. Thank you for spending your time with my words and visiting Greywood Bay. I'm delighted you enjoyed your stay.
✨🐙👻

Thanks Pisces51! I appreciate you spending your time with my words and visiting the Lost Coast. "Come together" is a good way to put it, I think, since I tend to write multi-POV books that usually have a big final act. Maybe it was all the horror doorstoppers I read as a kid, but I just enjoy a story where you see the pieces moving, follow a few separate threads, get to know the characters in their "normal" world, but by the end you get a batshit insane convergence where it does "come together."
I know for some modern readers that can be a challenge, but hey, I'm delighted you enjoyed it. Thanks for visiting Greywood Bay.
🐙✨👻

Happy hauntings!
My husband is currently reading this and is enjoying it. He likes the characters and thinks they're very believable.
Thanks for being here with us this summer, Andrew. I hope we'll see you here again.
Thanks for being here with us this summer, Andrew. I hope we'll see you here again.
Books mentioned in this topic
By the Light of Dead Stars (other topics)By the Light of Dead Stars (other topics)
https://www.amazon.com/Light-Dead-Sta...