Run, Simon, Run!!

The lovely and talented author, Mr. Simon Wood, is donating his time and sneaker tread for a great cause, The Relay for Life, an overnight team event to benefit the important lifesaving work of the American Cancer Society.

Take a minute to check-out his Team Page, and click-on SIMON WOOD at the bottom of the list, and help him surpass his modest goal that directly and indirectly will help us all. Remember, even a few dollars can make a BIG difference when we all chip in. So make Simon's donation of time and tread worth the effort...

CLICK HERE and Share the Love!

From the Relay for Life website:

"Relay For Life® is a fun-filled overnight event designed to celebrate survivorship and raise money to help the American Cancer Society save lives, help those who have been touched by cancer, and empower individuals to fight back against this disease. During the event, teams of people gather at schools, fairgrounds, or parks and take turns walking or running laps. Each team keeps at least one team member on the track at all times.

"Relay is much more than a walk around a track. It is a time to remember those lost to cancer and celebrate those who have survived. It is a night for people who have shared the same experience to comfort and console one another. --Relay for Life

Wickedly Yours,
Fran Friel

Get Your ELEMENTAL Relief!!


























ALL of the publisher's and authors' profits for this book will be donated to the Save the Children Tsunami Relief Fund.

Some great colleagues of mine have put together an AMAZING book of stories for the benefit of people they've never met, but whom they deeply care for. Spend a few dollars, get a fantastic book and continue the much needed aide to those that suffered in the Tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia in 2005!

From the ELEMENTAL website:

"In the winter of 2005, after the horrifying natural disaster of the tsunami in Southeast Asia, Steven Savile and Alethea Kontis joined forces to raise money to help the distressed survivors and have created Elemental. They solicited SF and fantasy stories, all new and never published elsewhere, from many of the top writers in the genres today, and received immediate responses in the form of the excellent stories here in this book. They created in Elemental one of the most important genre anthologies of the year, but more than that: in giving real value for the purchase price, everyone who sells this book can be proud, and everyone who buys it will be richly rewarded for supporting the tsunami relief effort."


The Illustrious List of Generous Contributors:

Brian ALDISS
Jacqueline CAREY
Arthur C. CLARKE
William C. DIETZ
David DRAKE
Lynn FLEWELLING
Esther M. FRIESNER
David GERROLD
Joe HALDEMAN
Brian HERBERT
& Kevin J. ANDERSON
Nina Kiriki HOFFMAN
Tim LEBBON
Kinley MacGREGOR
(Sherrilyn KENYON)
Juliet MARILLIER
Syne MITCHELL
Larry NIVEN
Eric NYLUND
Stel PAVLOU
Adam ROBERTS
Steven SAVILE
Sharon SHINN
Michael Marshall SMITH
Martha WELLS
Sean WILLIAMS & Shane DIX
Janny WURTS

Elemental is available at your local bookstore and these fine websites:

Amazon.com: hardcover paperback
Amazon.co.uk: hardcover paperback
Clarkesworld Books: hardcover paperback
Barnes & Noble.com: hardcover paperback
Powells: hardcover paperback
Books-a-Million.com: hardcover paperback














The talent represented in this book is HUGE. Under any circumstances ELEMENTAL should be on your reading list, but knowing that your money will be well spent makes it even more compelling. Get ELEMENTAL Relief...don't miss your chance for some great reading and a great cause!

Wickedly Yours,
Fran Friel

Who Done It? Cover Fascination...























WHO DONE IT?

Since the HL announced its new horror anthology, The Horror Library, Volume 1, there have been A LOT of comments about the amazing cover art. This incredible piece of work is the first thing bringing attention to the anthology so I thought it was high time to introduce you to the talented artists who created the HL anthology's cover art.

GROUNDFROST (from their MySpace bio):

"Groundfrost Illustration and Design is the combination of the artistic talents of Antti Isosomppi (anatheme) and Shelley Bergen (nebu). Long time friends on opposite sides of the planet, they share the same love of art and its creation. Both bring a great deal of dedication, talent and experience to Groundfrost. Since its launch in October 2004 they have been working almost non-stop on commissioned projects. Some of their clients to date include The Killers, The Higher, Kayne West, God Forbid, Black Eyed Peas, Symbiontic and Telos Publishing. Groundfrost specializes in cd cover art and inserts, posters, t-shirt designs and also offer full website solutions for your band. Groundfrost will take your band's visual style to a new level. " --Groundfrost

The original piece of artwork that inspired the cover for The Horror Library, Volume 1, is Mouthfull of Sorrow which, seen to the right, can be viewed in a larger format at The Horror Library Gallery page. The image is near the bottom of the Gallery page - just click on it for a better view. In addition to Groundfrost's fine work, in the gallery you'll find a smorgasbord of amazing dark art by many fine artists from around the world. Be sure to feast your eyes on these images and then have a taste of some free fiction in the Fresh Meat section and The Vault.

You'll even find a sampling of free Friel fiction on the shelves of The Horror Library.

You can visit Groundfrost at MySpace and see more of their amazing work at Groundfrost.com.

Wickedly Yours,
Fran Friel

The Horror Library Anthology...It LIVES!






















The Horror Library - Volume I,
An Anthology of Terror

It is my pleasure to announce the birth of the first anthology created by the dark authors of The Horror Library. Count 'em - Thirty wicked stories waiting to test your nerve and tickle your spine.

The Horror Library - Volume I, is available for Pre-Order from Shocklines.com, and will ship in May.

My tale, Wings with Hot Sauce, lays in wait for you between the stories of many rising new stars of the horror genre.

Support the Horror - Pre-Order a copy today! Free-shipping at Shocklines!

Wickedly Yours,
Fran Friel

Heart of Gold by Craig Terlson












My friend and author/illustrator, CRAIG TERLSON, wrote the following review of the new Neil Young movie, Heart of Gold. I liked it so much, I asked if I could re-puplish it here to share with you. Not only is Craig amazingly talented, he's also a wonderful person and a fantastic friend, so of course he said yes, so here it is:

Neil Young, Heart of Gold
by Craig Terlson

n Heart of Gold, director Jonathan Demme creates an intimacy that I have never experienced before in a concert movie or even a concert. Cameras and sound equipment are not visible and there are no swooping shots of the audience or fast edits. The only time you see the crowd is at the end, perhaps to remind you that this was a concert, and that you were not somehow sitting in Neil Young's living room. It would have to be a pretty big room to house the bass player, two drummers, too many guitar players to mention, two trios of back-up singers, including Pegi Young his wife, a string section, horn section and a jubilee gospel choir – oh… and to squeeze in the immortal, but heavily Botoxed, Emmylou Harris.

Demme captures Young over two nights at the Ryman Theater in Nashville, original site of the Grand Ole Opry. The Ryman, a venue built entirely of wood, is prized for its warm acoustics. "It's like a big guitar," Young says. The wood, the choir, and the stain glass windows all give a feeling of reverence and suggest that Mr. Young might just be up there witnessing.

This is a concert movie, not a documentary, yet the depth of relationship exposed in this film rivals most dramas I have seen lately. Demme chooses vantage points that show us both the music and somehow the behind the scenes at the same time.

The first half of the film covers Young's latest Juno award winning album, Prairie Wind. It is not hard to imagine where Neil is coming from after surviving brain surgery for a near fatal aneurysm and the recent death of his father, Scott Young, who suffered dementia the last years of his life. Neil has returned to the Canadian prairie of his childhood; I wondered what the Nashville audience thought of the painted backdrop behind the band, a gorgeous expanse of field, sky and grain elevators. Had they even heard of the Trans-Canada highway, Cypress River or Falcon Lake?

The last half of the film centers on Young's two pivotal albums, Harvest (1972) and Harvest Moon (1992). As he goes through his classic backlist, it is not the young hippy graduate from Kelvin High that you are watching, but you can see him in there. You will swear that Neil actually sheds years as the concert progresses.

There is a deep irony in hearing Neil Young sing, "Old man take a look at my life, I'm a lot like you were." When he introduces a new love song, he looks back at his wife and remarks, "I used to write these songs about girls my own age" and how this is what he calls an "empty nest song". The song is a gorgeous ballad, which I'll admit had me pretty wet around the eyes as I think about my kids leaving the Ethelbert nest. That's when I realized that Neil is not only telling his story, he's telling mine. Like other great songwriters he captures universal truths about the human condition: we were young, we get older, we love our families, friends, and we think about where we came from. We think back to times when we searched for a heart of gold, when we were "twenty-four and there's so much more" and lately how we say that "one of these days, I'm going to sit down and write a long letter to all the good friends I have known."

Heart of Gold is much more than a concert film, I would suggest multiple viewings because there is so much to see and hear. An undercurrent of emotion run throughout, there are flashes of poetry, stunning musicianship, and warm humour (Neil sings about his dog King that jumped off the truck in high gear while he power chords on a Banjo… yes, I said power chords.) At the end, it is just Neil with his old guitar, his hat balanced on his case, playing to the now empty hall, and he is telling his story. Listen up. -- C. T.


Craig's interview gave me chills. Before I read it, I wanted to see Heart of Gold but now I won't miss it! If you experience this movie, let me know what you think. By the way, Craig plays a mean guitar! Yup, he's one multi-talented guy.

Wickedly Yours,
Fran Friel

note: the photo with Neil in red in by Craig Abaya