Archive for Bad Moon Books
Nate Kenyon’s Sparrow Rock
Posted by: | CommentsBad Moon Books has announced the first edition of a brand new novel by Nate Kenyon, Sparrow Rock. Nate Kenyon is the bestselling author of Bloodstone, The Reach, and The Bone Factory.
Description: They were just a group of high school kids looking for a place to party. They didn’t know the end of the world was coming. Now, alone and trapped below ground in a state-of-the-art bomb shelter, they are being stalked—and the creatures that come for them through the dirt and ash are like nothing anyone has ever seen before.
There is a new ruling life form on earth, and these six humans are the only remaining prey.
Welcome to your worst nightmare. Welcome to Sparrow Rock…
Publisher Roy Robbins says, “I was fortunate enough to read this manuscript and can honestly say that it is one of the best novels I have read in a long time. A chilling vision of post-apocalyptic life (or death).”
Only 100 hardcover copies are being produced. Zach McCain has done the cover and the black and white section headers.
You can pre-order here: Sparrow Rock
Gene O’Neill’s Jade
Posted by: | CommentsBad Moon Books has announced the upcoming publication of Gene O’Neill’s Jade.
Description: Jade, with her beautiful eyes is a wasteland defective, a quasimodo.
An advocate for other Cal Wild defectives, she soon runs afoul of the mysterious and ominous Aryan Colonists.
Soon after she experiences the high of first love and the low of gruesome death, eventually spiritually soaring above the sleaze, bigotry, and violence of the San D Ruins.
Introduction by Michael McBride.
Author: Gene O’Neill
Publisher: Bad Moon Books
Edition: Signed Limited Softcover
Page Count: 130
Print Run: 150
Artist: Steve Gilberts
Price: $19.95
You can pre-order the book from Horror Mall here: Jade
51 Fiendish Ways to Leave Your Lover
Posted by: | CommentsBad Moon Books has announced the publication of the trade paperback edition of Lisa Mannetti’s 51 Fiendish Ways to Leave Your Lover.
Description: “Revenge is a dish best served cold.”
Yeah? Sez who?
If you prefer your vengeance served scalding hot with a side order of steaming gore, 51 Fiendish Ways to Leave Your Lover is the how-to guide you’ve been waiting for. Come on now. Vengeance has fueled some of the greatest plots in classic literature. Why should reality be any different?
Why hold back? Let’s face it – the world is full of ex-lovers, current lovers and soon-to-be-ex-lovers who soooo have it coming to them. Now you can spice your life up with a generous helping of venom, and forget all that “living well is the best revenge” malarkey. Revenge is the best revenge.
Bram Stoker Award-winning author Lisa Mannetti’s hilarious guidebook (replete with helpful illustrations by the celebrated artist Glen Chadbourne) will walk you – step by step – through the ghoulishly delicious process of getting over, getting on and getting even.
To learn more and/or order: 51 Fiendish Ways
Bad Moon Books & Horror Mall Team Up
Posted by: | CommentsIn an effort to further bolster the horror genre, Bad Moon Books has teamed up with the fine folks at Horror Mall. They hope to soon be the source for all things horror (books) at the Mall, which will carry all of the Bad Moon Books titles. Horror Mall also carries most other publishers with the exception of a few who will have their own store (CCP, BLP, Delirium, Thunderstorm, and Sideshow). So, shop at the Horror Mall for all books horror and continue to frequent the Bad Moon Books website for all your SF, fantasy, modern firsts, and mystery needs!
Check them out at the Horror Mall today: Bad Moon Books
Bad Moon Books Announcements
Posted by: | CommentsBad Moon Books has announced two new titles, one which is the first of their new Halloween line.
The Watching by Paul Melniczek is about a young girl who witnesses something horrific from her bedroom window, a scene which snatches away her childhood innocence and replaces it with terror. Her life becomes a routine of desperation filled with shadows and darkness, void of any hope. Her home becomes her prison, her life an unending cycle of despair. And her nightmares are of the worst kind, ones which are not separated by the barrier between dream and reality.
Limited to 150 signed/numbered chapbooks. Art by Jill Bauman. 116 pages of spooky terror. $19.95. To find out more and/or order: The Watching
The second new title from Bad Moon is The Day Before. John Skipp and Cody Goodfellow team up to create this apocalyptic nightmare of a novella. A massive nuclear attack has destroyed the major cities. Untold millions are dead. The survivors are starving savages. But where others see tragedy, one man sees opportunity. It’s the last Hollywood film crew, making the last Hollywood movie, spreading hope the only way Hollywood knows how, through total bullshit.
Limited to 300 unsigned trade paperbacks. To debut at the 2009 World Fantasy Convention in San Jose. 140 pages of “end of world” fun! $17.95. To find out more and/or order: The Day Before
Bad Moon Books will be attending World Fantasy Con in San Jose from October 29th to November 1st, where they’ll be officially releasing The Day Before.
Bad Moon Books Sale
Posted by: | CommentsBad Moon Books is having a Back to School sale. From now through September 15th you take 25% off any in stock titles from their website and receive free Media Mail shipping. Just enter code BK2SCL- to receive your discount.
Choose from 15 Serial Killers by Harold Jaffe, 5 Strokes to Midnight, A Hallowe’en Anthology by Lisa Morton, Afterlife by Douglas Clegg, Alarms by Richard Laymon SGD/LTD, and many many more titles.
It’s all happening at: Bad Moon Books
Necropolis – Book Review
Posted by: | CommentsNecropolis
John Urbancik
Bad Moon Books
Limited Perfect Bound Trade/$17.95
Review by Nickolas Cook
Some readers may find John Urbancik’s newest release from Bad Moon Books, Necropolis, to be a diffuse and surreal nightmare, brought to life through poetic phrasing and images. But if close attention is paid, its pages will also reveal an erudite and literate homage to Poe, the master of the macabre. The careful reader will pick out Poe’s titles and phrases scattered throughout the narrative.
When five people find themselves trapped in an ancient ‘city of the dead’ after dark, they encounter strange beings – including Nyx, the Greek primordial goddess of the night – lurking within the vast cemetery’s benighted stones and crawling vines, and must make life and death decisions that seal their fates.
Besides the above mentioned Poe love, the lynchpin to this short tale is Urbancik’s lyrical style of writing; some passages could even be considered musically when read them aloud. No one can dispute his ability to make a sentence stand attention. That, coupled with his cemetery photos, truly helps create a sense of ominous mythology in Necropolis. In fact, it reads as if he intends his cemetery setting to be an existential playground through which his characters must traverse.
That being said, there are issues that may leave some readers … well, feeling a little dead inside about Necropolis.
For one, his characters suffer because of the brevity of space allowed to unfold the story: they feel vague and underdeveloped. One wishes he’d been able to create a bit more empathy for Kevin, Jill, Kelli, Anna and Darren. Unfortunately none exists.
And that fact doesn’t much help the narrative, which in itself already suffers from too much twining. The whole reads in a very disjointed manner, which may have been Urbancik’s intention, and admittedly may be only a matter of personal taste.
Unfortunately I found myself having to go back to re-read passages to make sure I was still with one or other of the characters. This abstract quality may risk alienating some readers by its obscurity.
So is Necropolis worth the cover price?
Undoubtedly.
Even if it were only for Urbancik’s excellent photos alone.
But it is also recommended because, despite the diffuse, and sometimes confusing, nature of the narrative, it is a well written story, with some real touches of Gothic beauty. Urbancik is a time tested craftsman that can always give his readers an interesting story, if not always told in the traditional manner.

















