Imagen del autor

C. Dean Andersson

Autor de I Am Dracula

13+ Obras 163 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: By Christopher Fulbright - Christopher Fulbright took this photograph at FenCon in Dallas, Texas, in September 2012, of me signing my books at the autograph table. Christopher Fulbright then later gave me this photograph to use as I wished., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=24275880

Obras de C. Dean Andersson

I Am Dracula (1981) 72 copias
I Am Frankenstein (1996) 18 copias
Buried Screams (1992) 15 copias
Fiend (1994) 15 copias
Raw Pain Max (1988) 14 copias
Torture Tomb (1987) 12 copias
Cemetery Dance Issue 57 (2007) 6 copias
Bloodsong! - Hel X 3 (2013) 4 copias
Warrior Witch (2000) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Dark Destiny (1995) — Autor — 100 copias
Sons of Darkness: Tales of Men, Blood and Immortality (1996) — Contribuidor — 57 copias
The Book of All Flesh (2004) — Contribuidor — 55 copias
Dark Seductions (1993) — Contribuidor — 36 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male
Organizaciones
Horror Writers Association

Miembros

Reseñas

A trio of sexual sadists, one of them a mob boss, tortures women to death in a hidden bunker in an agonizingly drawn-out manner. But the latest victim's sister is psychically linked to her situation and a boyfriend connects with a coven of modern witches who work to track down the girl and release her. There is a separate paranormal element that lethally interferes with the witches but you're pulling for them because if those three sadists don't get their just desserts by the end of the story, you're going to rip the book into shreds and burn it in the barbecue. The torture sequences are detailed and depressing, although admittedly consistent for this type of criminal. I'll remember this book for a long time. I don't know if that is an endorsement or not. I'll give you this...it holds your attention.… (más)
 
Denunciada
NickHowes | Aug 23, 2015 |
An entertaining gateway to Hell, and toward darker fiction

This review covers the trilogy, printed in 1986 but released in an eBook omnibus in 2013 called Bloodsong! — Hel X 3 by C. Dean Andersson

History and Style: The three books combined in Bloodsong! — Hel X 3 were written within ~1.5 yrs (1985-86). C. Dean Andersson (aka Asa Drake) was motivated to make a fun horror on quick timing. The result was easily digestible horror / fantasy, all rooted in Viking lore. The trilogy includes: 1) Warrior Witch of Hell; 2) Death Riders of Hell; and 3) Werebeasts of Hel.

The concepts and setting really carry the story: a reanimated mother is out to save her unborn daughter from the Goddess Hel. This more than compensates for the dialogue which relies heavily on characters broadcasting their intentions. Its simplistic tone and fast pace is appropriate for young-adult novels, but its abundance of mature scenes makes it more suitable for adults (there are many heroines who continually find themselves stripped naked, chained, and tortured) . This is highly recommended for epic/high fantasy readers looking for darker fiction. It would work well as a "gateway drug" for those introduced to fantasy via Tolkien, but are now looking for gritty fare.

Bloodsong and Freedom: The conflict centers on the female warrior Bloodsong who is pitted against Hel Queen of Darkness, Death Goddess. It begins with Bloodsong coming back from Hel's domain, resurrected and sworn to serve the Goddess. Hel is holding Bloodsong's daughter, hostage (she had died in Bloodsong's womb, but was raised in Helheim). The conflict over freedom/domination is persistent and explicitly echoed in the protagonist's war cry & call to action "Bloodsong and Freedom!" The subsequent books fill in many details about Bloodsong's husband and her son, who had died during the same raid as she; they are, of course, plagued past their natural deaths.

Fun Horror: The variety and abundance of undead creatures makes this most fun, and their titles speak to their coolness: Flesh Demons (skeletons who steal skin), Skull Slaves (humans possessed by ghosts), Death Riders (undead warriors mounted on skeletal Hel-Horses who ride the wind), Corpse Beasts (humanoids who eat their kill), Hel-Witch (sorceress who draw upon Her powers), etc. There are of course Viking inspired monsters (i.e. Frost Giants, Invisible Dwarves), but the series is really about Hel's incarnations, as the three titles communicate, so expect lots of necromancy.

New vs. Old: The 2013 Helx3 eBook release has a lengthened first book (in the omnibus, the first book "Warrior Witch from Hel" has 24 chapters versus the original 18). The remaining books have the same number of chapters, but their content is altered to accommodate some character development , mostly regarding the secondary character Jalna. The additions are fine, but the paperback originals are just as enjoyable.

Coverart:The illustrations for the paperbacks and eBook are from Boris Vallejo. They are incredible and accurately portray the characters and books' tone.

More Bloodsong Adventures:

2014...: A new novel, The Valkyries of Hel, is in progress now.

1996: Eternal Champion cross-over: In the Pawn of Chaos: Tales of the Eternal Champion anthology, Bloodsong interacts with Michael Moorcock's eternal champion (the Urlik Skarsol incarnation) in the short story: "The Warskull of Hel" (which was the original title for the first book in the trilogy according to the author). This continues the saga in a solid way, even if a short story.

2006: R.E.Howard and Texas: For the World Fantasy Convention in Austin, Texas, there was a R. E. Howard centenary tribute anthology called Cross Plains Universe - Texans Celebrate Robert E. Howard. Therein there is a fun, Bloodsong short "Slim and Swede and the Damned Dead Horse."
… (más)
 
Denunciada
SELindberg | Jan 18, 2014 |
A bottomless shaft appears in a cemetery in Stoneridge, Kansas. Townspeople are attacked by things that look like their friends and pets and neighbors ... but aren't.

I'm an indiscriminate watcher of horror films, and I keep thinking that should translate into a love of horror literature as well. But most horror books just haven't worked for me. There are enough exceptions (Lovecraft, James, Matheson, and some King, Barker, and Koontz) that I keep trying to find more. This wasn't one.

So my comments should be prefaced by acknowledging that I am probably not the book's intended audience.

That out of the way, I admit that some of the monster-attack scenes have a certain Body-Snatchers creepiness. But there are too many of those scenes, all of the same format, and they quickly get repetitive.

Our heroes are mostly oblivious to what's going on around them, carrying on wooden conversations on random subjects, with every "Okay," "I see," and "Go on" tediously recorded.

(SPOILER maybe)
Andersson also can't seem to decide what kind of menace he's writing about, extraterrestrial terror or angry Scandinavian deity, so the monster turns out to be an incoherent mix of the two.

Still I think the story, mess though it was, could have worked for me on film. So if this sort of book is your sort of thing, maybe the book works too. But for casual readers of horror, it's not recommended.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
swynn | Dec 16, 2011 |
Well, here's a new take on poor Vlad Tepes who came to be known as Count Dracula. Seems that poor Vlad was destined from birth to become a member of the undead and the king of the world, Satan's front man on earth. He finds all this out as a little boy, when he has a vision of a woman who tells him she is a witch and destined to be his mate and Queen, as all has been decided in the prophecies of Satan. So Vlad has to sit idly by and wait for all of this to happen. And then when it does, Vlad makes an astonishing discovery, but I won't tell you what it is in case you want to read it. Suffice it to say that there are more powers at work and life is not as cut and dried as our conception of good vs. evil.

I've noticed throughout this month that even though they're dead, vampires really like to have sex. Especially in this book, there is rarely a chapter that goes by where, well, let's just say they didn't call him Vlad the Impaler for nothing. Hahahahahaha!!!

The basic story was okay...nothing to write home about, but it was a fresh take on the old vampire story. I might recommend it just for that reason, but it doesn't stick out as one of the better books about vampires for me.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
bcquinnsmom | May 10, 2006 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
13
También por
5
Miembros
163
Popularidad
#129,735
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
10

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