Wednesday, July 22, 2015

“Killer Klowns” and Haunts for History

Who doesn’t love killer clowns, especially if they are chasing you? 

This Saturday, July 25, come experience the Evil Circus Horror Vortex presented by Insane Women Productions! The clowns are waiting for you in the trails, and they are hungry for human flesh. Are you brave enough to experience Halloween in July? For only a small fee-- $3 per person or $5 for two-- you can join the Evil Circus Horror Vortex! And moreover, all of the money goes to support the Peoria State Hospital Museum!

The haunt entrance is located off of Enterprise Drive in Bartonville, and the vortex opens at dusk.

For more information, visit Insane Women Productions on Facebook, and like their page while you’re there!

On the opposite side of the trail, you can also catch the cult horror classic Killer Klowns from Outer Space to benefit the Limestone JFL. Experience the horror of the evil circus, and IF you survive, then you can relax and watch as alien clowns invade Earth to feast on human blood. 

The movie entrance is on South Becker Drive and also starts at dusk. Bring your own lawn chair or blankets. Concessions will be provided by the Limestone JFL.

This is a one-night only event. Don’t miss out!

Haven’t seen Killer Klowns from Outer Space? RottenTomatoes.com critic’s score gives it a 71% fresh rating, saying “Killer Klowns from Outer Space's title promises darkly goofy fun -- and more often than not, the movie delivers.” The movie lives up to its title, as alien clowns come to Earth to eat humans. It’s an absolutely delightful treat for horror fans, and there would be no better way to enjoy it then by first experiencing the Evil Circus Horror Vortex!



If you missed my previous blog post on Insane Women Productions and the Haunted Infirmary- Bartonville Asylum, check out this article!

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Cat Moon by Jennifer Gadd, a Must-Read!

Cat Moon, the first book in The Were Children series by Jennifer Gadd, releases this Friday, July 24 through Distinguished Press. I was fortunate to have read an advanced copy, and I cannot recommend this book enough! Get it here, now!

Gadd builds her characters so that they become a part of the reader’s life. The children in the story could be one’s own (or one's best friends), and although the book is written for a middle school to young adult audience, this thirty-six year old man absolutely fell in love with the story. I cheered along with the characters’ victories, and I cursed at the villains. There are multiple mysteries, and you’ll find yourself thinking of dozens of possibilities. In the end, Gadd gives readers an incredibly rewarding conclusion while simultaneously building a ravenous hunger for the next book in the series.  

More than a thrilling story, Gadd tackles themes of acceptance and chasing one's dreams in uniquely powerful ways. It's a great read for all audiences. 


Check out this synopsis of Cat Moon:

Emma has big problems. She has no family and no home. She wanders the streets of The Warren, scavenging for her next meal and trying to keep warm. Haunted by the memory of a mother she barely recalls, Emma dreams of being a part of a real family. She is helped in her search for belonging by an assortment of eccentric characters: a friendly shopkeeper and his cranky uncle, the nice woman who runs the local mission, a ditzy cat lady, and a good-natured prostitute with a drinking problem. 

Her biggest obstacle, however, is that every full moon, she turns into a feral cat! Emma is one of the Were. She and those like her are ruthlessly hunted by the captain of the Were-Guard, whose religious zealotry makes him especially dangerous. When the sinister Bram Fitzwilliam enters the picture to assist the Guard, Emma is in more danger than ever. Before she finds what she’s looking for, Emma must find a strength and courage she never knew she had. Her journey will teach her that dreams don’t always come true the way you want them to, that people aren’t always what they seem, and that real families can be chosen. 

At the time of this post, you can get it for just $0.99 on Amazon!



Give Jennifer's Facebook page a like! She has some exciting giveaways and news related to the release of Cat Moon. Be sure to check it out!

Gadd made a terrific book trailer for Cat Moon. Check it out below!



Excerpt from the beginning of Cat Moon

She’d had no idea what was happening to her when the first shift came. She remembered screaming, and she remembered watching in terror as the bones in her arms and legs began to change shape under her stretched skin, as chocolate-brown fur itched its way out of her very pores. She remembered the burning in her eyes as her pupils opened and became vertical slits. She remembered how her vision had sharpened in the moonlight. She even remembered the prickling on her face as the sensitive whiskers sprouted and the intense pain in her lower back where the tailbones had started growing. She had never in her whole life experienced such excruciating pain before, but she certainly would again — again and again and again.  

She remembered something else, too. As she’d started screaming, someone had grabbed her, covered her mouth with a rough, hairy hand, and dragged her down into an alley and deep into the Warren. A voice had growled in her ear, “Shut up, you stupid girl, or they’ll find you!” The growling intensified, then there was an injured whimper, and Emma had been thrown aside. She’d landed on soft paws with a hiss that was a shock to her new fur-lined ears. Then the animal mind took over. The next thing she knew, it was morning, she hurt all over, and she had a suspicious taste coating her tongue that she desperately hoped wasn’t rat.  

Join Jennifer, me, the Distinguished Press team, and several guest authors this Saturday, July 25 for an online celebration here of Cat Moon. We'll be playing games and giving away prizes!

Quotes from Cat Moon

There was nothing between her and the pavement, and if the banister were to collapse, she would surely plummet to her death. It would be the simplest way to solve a lot of problems. 
________  

She stopped abruptly as she surveyed the scene. “Mother, is there a problem?” she asked.  
“Yes, Margaret. There is indeed a very grave problem. These . . . these—”  
“Children, Mother?” 
________  

If her mind later blurred many of the images unrecognizable, what Margaret remembered most clearly were the sounds: bones cracking like kindling, sinews snapping like whips and wrapping themselves around the new structure with a hiss, skin tearing and raw, and Emma’s hideous and helpless screams.” 
________ 

The old man sat up, challenging. “Tell her what, Giles?” he said flatly. “Tell her that I killed her mother?” 
________  

As she walked out of the sitting room, she turned back to see if he was still watching her. The fire reflecting in his hard eyes glowed red and demonic. He never even blinked. 

Author Bio: 

Jennifer L. Gadd is a life-long reader and writer who holds a deep interest in writing quality literature for children and young adults. She writes mostly science fiction and fantasy, as well as hi-lo books for struggling readers. Her favorite authors are Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Jane Austen, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Agatha Christie, Candace M. Robb, Ellis Peters, and Anne Perry. She has lived in Texas, Illinois, and Alaska, and currently resides in Kansas City, Kansas, where she is a reading interventionist at an urban middle school.  

Be sure to like her Facebook page here, and you can visit her author webpage here



Five Facts about this Book, by Jennifer Gadd:

1. I got the idea for the book when all the vampire books exploded onto YA fiction, and I wanted to do something different. 
2. I finished the rough draft at a Borders in Overland Park, Kansas. I hope that’s not the reason they went bankrupt. 
3. The story was initially vetted by my younger daughter and her best friend, and after they read it, they created a role play game based on it. 
4. All of the herbal medicine lore in the first book is researched and accurate (but not intended to take the place of advice from your medical practitioner.) 
5. My own daughters’ names are Rachel and Margaret. 

Five Things About Emma 

1. She isn’t sure, but she thinks she’s about twelve years old. 
2. She learned to read a very early age. She can’t really remember not ever knowing how to read. 
3. The shift back and forth from human to animal mind causes sporadic memory losses, so she doesn’t know if her memories are real or imagined. 
4. She has a deep moral conscience, but homelessness has made her do things of which she is ashamed. 
5. For all her street smarts, she is essentially naïve and innocent. 

Five Things About Margaret Spencer 

1. She misses her sister terribly. 
2. She has always felt she was second-best in her mother’s heart. 
3. She deeply and truly loves Stephen Devlin and tries to see only the best in him and his actions. 
4. She chafes against the religious faith in which she was brought up. 
5. She is a terrible cook. 

Five Things About Stephen Devlin 

1. He has a terrible temper and has a compulsive need to be in control. 
2. His actions are the result of deeply-held religious beliefs. 
3. He is an expert archer. 
4. He feels as if he had always been a failure in the eyes of his deceased father. 
5. He deeply and genuinely loves his sister and brother.



Thursday, July 9, 2015

Three 'Insane' Women Dish Out History and Haunts

Meet three women who are changing the horror industry and putting Bartonville, IL on a national map.

Christina Morris, Jackie McDowell, and Salina Porter run Insane Women Productions, an organization that promotes the true history of the old Peoria State Hospital, commonly known as the Bartonville Insane Asylum. They also work for the Haunted Infirmary at Bartonville Insane Asylum, where they host scary movie nights and spooky attractions year-round to preserve the historical integrity of the old hospital.

Jackie McDowell, Salina Porter, & Christina Morris at the Firehouse.
And they have a great mission: to not only save and teach the authentic history of the hospital but also to change horror and haunted attractions for fright enthusiasts. “History will not save the Hilltop. Haunt money will save it,” says Christina Morris, owner at Insane Women Productions. The true history of the old asylum is mostly innocuous—there was no torture of patients, for example. Of course, there were bad people hospitalized there, such as a rapists and all sorts of convicts. Although Insane Women Productions provides historical tours of the old hospital, it’s the haunted attractions that bring in the money to save it. 

“We give the people what they always thought the hospital was. We create something spooky to save what is really good,” Morris says.

Morris, McDowell, and Porter are part of a team that is changing haunted attractions, and they have a contagious passion that will spread—like a zombie plague, perhaps—and inspire fright-lovers nationwide. People have driven from hours away to see their haunts, and some travelers come from all parts of the country. Insane Women hopes to have monthly haunts throughout the year, not just during the month of October, and they’ve got some incredibly unique ideas. They host movie nights at dusk outside of the Pollock Hospital. On a giant blow-up screen, anyone can watch a horror film in an exceptionally eerie atmosphere, but there’s more to it than a movie! They create a special haunted attraction, unique to each film, for the audience to experience. This month, the movie is The Army of Darkness, and then the crowd can enjoy their Horror Vortex, a haunt inspired by Ash and The Evil Dead!


Insane Women Productions rents a building near the hospital for their work. They operate out of the old Firehouse, which is actually the oldest building on the grounds. The Firehouse is one of the 13 original structures out of 63. The first floor of their home is a museum, the second floor is pure insanity, and you don’t want to go in the attic! They use the second floor to create and store all of their horror props, which are all original. They don’t want to purchase products from Wal-Mart that anyone would recognize, and they frown upon universal animatronic props used by chain haunts that take over other horror-themed attractions. Everything they create is original, and each haunt is a story. It’s about an experience, as if the guest were the lead character in a movie living out his or her ultimate fears. (Note: the author got a private tour of the attic, and . . . so many bodies! That’s all he’ll say about that.)

IWP hosts more than haunts. They also have great historical events!

Each has a terrific story about her love of horror. McDowell, partner at Insane Women Productions, has fond memories of watching scary movies with her dad and attending haunted attractions ever since she was a young girl. Porter, Insane Women Productions’ marketing director, grew up watching every horror film one can imagine and devouring Stephen King books. Ironically, Porter never was a fan of haunted attractions as a child because of a frightening experience at Six Flags where an axe got a little too close for comfort, but she got involved here for the movie nights. Now you can find her clutching a baby still attached by his umbilical cord with bite marks on his face as Porter walks the haunted attractions. It’s great fun.

Most people who grew up in central Illinois know of the Bartonville Insane Asylum. As kids, many would explore the dilapidated halls and spine-chilling rooms late at night, even if it was illegal. Morris always had a desire to preserve the building. She’s been studying the hospital’s history for twenty-five years. When she was a little girl, she used to visit it with her grandfather because they had family there. Her grandfather called them “special people,” and Morris thought he must have meant giants because the place is so big. She’s always felt a special energy from the place and a desire to protect it. As a teen, she’d hide in the empty building to scare away other people who were only there to vandalize or harm the facility. And now as an adult, she’s still scaring people who visit!

The three also team up with others, too, for their haunted attractions, including some men and other women, about 30 other staff, and over 200 volunteers! It’s obvious that the other staff and volunteers become a part of a family and, for many volunteers, it can be a place in which they fit and are welcomed. McDowell, Porter, and Morris also like to think of original haunts, not just slashers chasing after someone, but mind games to really mess with participants. If there’s an energy to the Bartonville Asylum, there’s also a terrific passion at the Firehouse where these three ambitious and creative minds spend their days working on everything from historical documentation to painting the most gruesome blood and guts on new dolls. Their ideas are limitless, and it’s exciting for any fan of haunted attractions or macabre tales to follow along. Down the road, central Illinois residents will recognize Insane Women not only for original and terrifying haunts but for helping save one of the most iconic and interesting parts of our community. And the world of haunted attractions and horror is paying attention, too. 

For everything they do, you can follow them on their Facebook page, and for just the horror and haunting information, you can also follow them here.

This Saturday, come check out their movie night and haunted vortex! Keep following along on this blog, as there are plenty more tales to tell and people to interview! They also told me of an upcoming adventure that absolutely NO ONE has. That will be a great story, so be sure to follow along.



Author’s Note: “The horror fan wants to be his or her favorite characters,” Morris said when I talked to her today.  I smiled wide at this comment and told all three that I couldn’t agree more. It’s that concept that inspired my own horror novel, Rabbit in Red, which releases this fall. I’ll be interviewing the men who work at the attractions, too, for other unique perspectives, as well as covering some special events and other news from Insane Women and the Haunted Infirmary. To get all the latest updates, please like my author Facebook page here! You can also subscribe to the blog and visit me at my official author webpage.