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Memories From Childhood Summers

Tuula Pere Author Interview

The Ghost of the Deserted House follows two friends who sneak into an abandoned house on a summer night, where they encounter an unexpected visitor and wonder if the house is haunted. What was the inspiration for your story?

My Active Kids Series currently includes four books: The Ghost of the Deserted House, Luke’s Sailing Adventure, A Museum Robbery, and The Leading Role. Already, the series’ name and the books’ titles suggest that the heroes are a group of children who encounter surprising, interesting, and sometimes even exciting situations. These stories are based on my own childhood games and the friends and siblings who joined in.

This particular book takes place during the summer and tells the story of a visit to a friend’s family’s summer cottage. I had similar visits as a child, and they always felt like an adventure. Spending the night with a strange family can be tough for a kid. It might be an unfamiliar place to sleep, and the family might eat something different from what you’re used to at home.

And how well do your skills hold up in unfamiliar environments? A beach can feel strange and unsettling. Is it deep? Is the bottom muddy, or are there nasty, slimy aquatic plants growing in the water? What about those dark, enticing yet scary attics or abandoned houses? I still get chills thinking about how exciting a nature walk at dusk is!

What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?

The main focus of this book is actually summer nature. At least Finnish children have the chance to experience it in many ways. I want to take my readers to an environment filled with summer scents, trees, plants, and birdsong. It was also the rural environment of my childhood, by the beautiful lakes of Eastern Finland.

I’ve drawn many memories from childhood summers throughout my adult life. I can still close my eyes and return to those landscapes in my mind. Nature is the greatest teacher. It allows us to see and experience things from small to large, helping us reflect on life as a whole. And children feel connected to the vastness of nature, even when they’re just playing a simple game with stones and squatting on the ground.

I also remember how inspiring it was to constantly learn new things. I believe a child is a kind of explorer, whom we adults should give a rich environment to explore and challenges to face. Ideally, children should explore and learn early with their friends. In this story, two young friends share the same experience, and supporting each other becomes essential when things get too exciting. – They say shared joy is double the joy, and I believe that, too!

What scene in the book did you have the most fun writing?

The adult me was, of course, captivated while writing a nostalgic journey through my childhood and its experiences in nature. But the most fun and inspiring part was writing the sections where the children set out on their own adventure in the abandoned house.

After all, the attic scene is the most exciting part of the story. There, the children display independence and a bit of daring. Such activities are usually the most fascinating for young readers.

I wanted to take my readers on an experience they might not have in real life. It’s always fun when an adult in a story does something funny or even gets caught up in a prank or trick. I think the father snoring in a hammock is quite endearing, especially when the kids attack this “ghost” in the dark attic.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

In our small family business, I get involved in various parts of our publishing process. It’s rewarding to have direct contact with the people who create illustrations, edit, and lay out the work. As usual, I have numerous book projects at different stages. Some are still in the illustration phase on the artist’s desk, while others have just returned from editing.

I just published my 80th English children’s book in my writing career—there are even more in Finnish. The book The Hermit’s Hut is the fourth installment in my Lyrics of Life Series. This time, the story was inspired by John Lennon’s song Imagine. I believe the next sequel to this series will likely be published sometime next year.

Before that, I plan to publish two slightly longer novels for young readers. Those are really fun to write now and then. You get to create a longer adventure with a more complex plot, which allows more focus on the characters. These upcoming children’s novels include the exciting time travel adventure Professor Dreistein and the Captured Lightning and The Singing Ghost of Troll Village, which centers on a talent competition in a troll village. We can expect these new novels to be released later this year.

Until then, we at Wickwick need to focus on promoting our Bilingual Books Series—there are many titles featuring various language pairs! I hope these books help children worldwide master situations where they need to immerse themselves in two languages. It’s definitely more enjoyable with a good story and beautiful illustrations.

Creating new books is truly wonderful, but it’s also rewarding to share them with international publishers, such as at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair or the Frankfurt Book Fair. I was especially excited this spring when the Finnish version of one of my stories, “Carried by Wings,” was nominated for a prize in a Finnish competition. Wish me luck!

Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Warm Values | Facebook | LinkedIn | Amazon

A holiday at his family’s summer cottage is the best thing Oliver knows. This time his friend Liam comes along and shares the adventures with him.

Something strange happens when the boys decide to escape the heat and mosquitoes and go to the attic of the deserted house next door.

Do ghosts suffer from the heat too?

A Fairly Straight-forward Haunting

Thomas A. Bradley
Thomas A. Bradley Author Interview

The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow follows a group of teens that go into the Wickersham house and awaken a malevolence that has lain dormant for centuries. What was the inspiration for the setup to your thrilling story?

Wickersham Hollow actually started under the name Witch Hill and was intended originally to be a fairly straight-forward haunting. But as the characters developed, so did the story. The further I went, the more I realized it had to be told in both the past and present…each leading in circles to the other.

The story is told from the viewpoint of different interesting characters. Who was your favorite character to write for?

I think my favorite character to write and develop was Mother Cassandra. Getting the reader to hear her Jamaican dialect as they read, without pulling them out of the story by having to struggle with it, was a challenge – one I hope to (and have seemed to, so far) met.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

I think the most important theme was relationships. It’s the ties between people, be they best friends or relatives, that drive any meaning into the telling of a story. Without relationships, without connections, characters become flat and one dimensional. I think that’s pretty true in life as well.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I’m nearing completion on the first book of a new series. The title of the book is The Bones of Sarah Golescue. The series is based around two characters from a previous novel, Blood Tracks. I see it as a kind of “Supernatural” meets The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

If all goes well, I plan to have it up for pre-sale by the end of March (2021)

Author Links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

On a Halloween night…
300 years ago…
…an evil was born of lust.
Now it’s awake … and hungers.
When seven teenagers go into the old Wickersham place in search of a Halloween thrill, they get more than they bargained for when they awaken a malevolence that has lain dormant for centuries.  Barely escaping with their lives, they learn that the past never dies.
For … in a house that hungers…
…no soul is safe.
When a young couple set about restoring the old place, the evil resurfaces.  And those who faced it once before just might be the couples’ only hope.
Will they find the courage to reunite…
…and face a terror they’ve tried to forget?
And if so…
Will anyone survive?
You’ll love this old school horror tale, because some things that go bump in the night are real.  Don’t forget your night light.
Get it now. 

The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow

The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow: An Occult Horor Thriller by [Thomas A. Bradley]

In Wickersham Hollow stands a mansion, once splendid and vast, now rotting to the core. Newlyweds Brian and Annabelle purchased the property hoping to fix it up, but no amount of varnish and paint dissolves stains of the past. Decades ago Annabelle’s grandfather, Henry, along with six close friends, breached the threshold of that same mansion stirring up ghosts that demanded retribution then; and refuse to rest even now. As teens, the old house left them with nothing but nightmares. As adults, an undeniable connection between their thoughts and hearts persists no matter how many walls there are between one another. Living beside the old house all these years, Old Joachim Walcott enlists his right-hand man Ralph Strunk to see to his affairs. Aged but wiry, Walcott knows a lot more about the teens that broke into the Wickersham mansion that night than he’d ever let on. Renovations stall at the old mansion, and the group of friends that had broken in all those years ago are forced into a reluctant reunion in The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow by Thomas A. Bradley.

As the cover art for the book depicts, the 320-year-old mansion that takes up so much real estate within the story is wondrous and haunting. Its very walls appear to shift; very fitting for a house that we learn has a history of dark magic. From the abandoned well used to breach its foundations, to the heavy slamming doors and waterlogged stonework, there are torturous devices and demonic mirages at every corner. Set in the rural idyl of Pennsylvania the story does spend most of the time inside various homes or the sprawling mansion itself. While there are many characters, the story is written well in that we remain within the point of view of each character for fair amounts of time. Learning their backstories and how they connect, let alone their particular turns of phrase and attitudes, becomes part of the fun while the mystery unravels. Tina, Henry, Matt, Janet, Amy, Lucy, and Tommy are who make up the titular covenant. Emma, Brian, Annabel, old Joachim Walcott, and his confidant Ralph Strunk play heavily in this story and the cast thus far does not include ghosts, demons, and other entities at play. This populous cast has a singular plot in mind, however, which keeps the story flowing despite so many perspectives.

Those who enjoy a complex and overlapping storyline that keeps the reader busy from scene to scene between groups of characters will enjoy this novel. While there are quite a few names involved, the characterization really helps keep separation when the action moves from scene to scene. Each chapter takes place in a different location, so while jumping back and forth, tension remains high. Some chapters are further split into present and past. This is done clearly and it is enjoyable to see how the storytelling blends from the present to the past seamlessly with a unique style. Characters are often mid-sentence when their imagination takes over, pulling the reader into their memories. It is a fun tactic Bradly uses to great effect.

Along with the mystery and layered delivery, The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow is rooted deeply in horror. Injury, violence, madness, and possession are woven throughout and crescendo with a moment of profane ravishing coupled with demonic lust. Jargon and misspellings to reflect different dialects are used heavily throughout this novel and it is consistent so it’s easy to gather what the speaker means as it would be face to face. Whether you are a fan of using punctuation and spelling to portray jargon and dialect is purely subjective, but is used well here. While there are one or two points where an omniscient point of view nearly supersedes the character and appears to run contrary to them, there are very few instances of this, so it never takes us out of the story.

In the tradition of Ghost Story and Bag of Bones comes a haunting journey of a group of people bound by secrets forged in youth. Easily five stars for those who enjoy a fantastical ride through a malignant mansion and tainted history of a small village. There are some deviously dark notes heard in the music of The Covenant of Wickersham Hollow.

Pages: 354 | ASIN: B019EIBO1M

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