Horror Guide to Massachusetts is a map to geographical locations, real and fictional, utilized in horror tales set in New England. It is hard to say which is more disquieting, terror amidst staid Yankees in a familiar setting or horror in obscure, forgotten corners of the Commonwealth. Both have their uses as weapons in the battle to scare you out of your wits. ADVANCED PRAISE FOR Horror Guide to Massachusetts "This is a unique and ingenious way of highlighting Massachusetts towns referenced in horror books, stories, TV and movies. Want to know if your town or region is featured in a published novel or television show? Check out this reference book out by the Brothers Goudsward. With a quick description of settings and their context in each story, this no-frills reference is packed with hundreds of scenes from all aspects of the genre, with indices that allow the reader to zero-in on any locale. I've never heard of any other work that has so completely done this, nor have I heard of many of the works mentioned inside. Without this guide, I never would have. Highly recommend it." Daniel G. Keohane, Bram Stoker Award nominated author ofSolomon's Grave and Margaret's Ark "We need more eccentric guides like this from the Goudsward Brothers! Give them a turn at the steering wheel and you won't be disappointed. From horror flick locations to the horrific Dover Demon's stomping ground, join them on a creepy journey around the Bay State!" Loren Coleman, Director of the International Cryptozoology Museum, and author of Monsters of Massachusetts and 30 other books "Horror Guide to Massachusetts is intensely awesome, especially for an antique Lovecraftian such as myself. As edifying as it is entertaining, this wonderful book is not only a guide to those spectral spots, historical or mythical, in Massachusetts, but serves also as a guide to a multitude of horror films, weird fiction, &c. As one who has been haunted by these places of dark hoary history, this book inspires eerie dreams and fond enchanting memories." W. H. Pugmire, critically acclaimed prose poet and author "A well-crafted book full of marvelous details! It's an insightful compilation that's both accurate and entertaining. I'm thrilled to see two of my Massachusetts horror films included here." Brinke Stevens, actress, director, producer, writer, legendary Scream Queen "A ghoulishly delightful tour through the darkest haunted corners of Massachusetts. You'll learn a lot - and find some great new reads in the process! Don't miss it." Nate Kenyon, award-winning author of Sparrow Rock, Diablo: The Order, and Day One
For a brief time at the start of the 20th century, Florida was poised to be the film making Mecca of North America. Jacksonville had suffered a devastating fire and the rebuilt community enjoyed a wealth of architectural styles that allowed films set in exotic locations such as Egypt, Italy or Polynesia - all for the cost of shipping the cast and equipment on the train from wintery New York. But racial tensions, religious concerns and epidemics drove the blossoming film industry into the open arms of Hollywood, California. Florida became the second unit place you filmed if you needed jungles for Tarzan or a more accessible stand-in for an Amazonian Black Lagoon. In the 1960s and into the 1970s, if you made films designed for general release, you filmed in Hollywood. If you made grindhouse films, nudie cuties, exploitation extravaganzas or straight to drive-in obscurities, you filmed in Florida. Films shot in Florida range from Blood Feast, the landmark film by Herschell Gordon Lewis that paved the visceral way for Friday the 13th and Texas Chainsaw Massacre, to the less influential but memorable (for all the wrong reasons) Blood Freak with its pro-Christian, anti-drug message starring a mutant turkey vampire motorcyclist. Switching from film to print, the Floridian horror story reflects an intrinsic Floridian compulsion to bulldoze the past beneath a new shiny future. But beneath that overpriced faade of new construction is the Florida of old, the one the mouse-bound tourists conveniently overlook, a hellish landscape of swamps that range from brackish to ftid, flora and fauna that range from deadly to carnivorous and locals that range from surly to anthropophagous. So be careful about which star you wish upon, and phrase that wish very carefully. You never know if a were-turkey biker, a giant leech or a mutant gator will answer it. "Tourists think of Florida as beaches, sun and fun. Few know that blood, guts and monsters prospered during the Grindhouse days of Florida film making. Shadows Over Florida vividly captures the history of these films and credits a lot of my crazy friends that gave birth to independent film making. After making over a dozen films in Florida since the late 1950's, I thought I knew film history. After reading Dave and Scott's book, I feel like a novice. I highly recommend Shadows Over Florida." -- William Grefe, Writer/Director/Producer "A Florida gardener, his finger pricked by an aggressive hedge, once told me, "down here, dammit, everything bites!" Here's proof that he was right. He might also have added, everything spooks...and lingers." --Jack Ketchum, author of The Girl Next Door and Off Season "Whether you read it from beginning to end or skip around through the fascinating entries, Shadows Over Florida is a wildly entertaining look at horror in the most insane state in the union! Even if you're scared to visit Florida itself, this book is highly recommended!" -- Jeff Strand, author of Pressure and Benjamin's Parasite
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