Saturday, November 21, 2015

Topeka Kansas: The Blue Albino Woman or The Witch of Topeka, Kansas

 Today I venture outside of the lines of the state of Pennsylvania in which I live.

One night this passed Halloween season, I was watching Destination America and caught a few programs covering supposedly real life ghostly encounters. One legend in particular caught my attention, one that I had never heard of before until I was watching that program. And that was of a legend from Topeka, Kansas about a specter known as the Blue Albino Woman (or "Witch") haunting Rochester Cemetery, located on the northwest outskirts.

The legend tells of a disfigured woman born with bluish white skin, white hair, and whose eyes were also red, according to some reports. As a child, she was teased mercilessly by her classmates. Upon growing into adulthood, the teasing continued, mainly by the neighborhood children that feared her. During the day, she glared at them while they (the children) were on their way to school. Nightfall was when she would venture out and wander the town (due to her skin condition, going out in the sun reportedly caused her great pain, therefore resorting her to going out mainly at night). The friendless woman is said to have died in 1963 from mysterious circumstances. That was when residents began reports of seeing a glowing white female figure walking through the area after dark. The most frequent sightings seem to be along Shunganunga Creek, which flows near Rochester Cemetery where the woman was buried.

Several individuals are said to have had encounters with her, including some employees at a nearby Goodyear Tire Factory and residents that see the apparition quite often (sometimes as much as once a week). Some of those individuals were featured on the Destination America program I happened to catch. One of these individuals was a woman by the name of Jessica Streeter, who had ventured into the cemetery on her birthday for some romance and fun with her boyfriend. According to her interview on the program, she and her boyfriend were getting it on when the 'witch' came up from the ground and started chasing them. And not in an 'I'm just trying to scare you off' kind of way. According to the account, the witch seemed to be out for blood. In fact, Streeter was afraid of the possibility of the woman following them home. So much so, that she performed a sort of ritual at the door as a way of trying to fend the 'witch' off.

Another account featured on the program belonged to that of a man by the name of James George. 

Now interestingly, Mr. George himself commented on an article of the Blue Albino Woman as reported on the website Muldersworld.com. In his comment, he states that while what Destination America said on their show was based in fact, the producers did take some liberties. He then provided his own telling of his story.

One of the embellishments on Destination America's part that I immediately noticed upon reading George's recounting was when the program's report stated that the woman was captured and buried alive in the cemetery by a group of thugs (which is also re-reported by Muldersworld). However, George's telling (along with the tellings of others) states that she died under mysterious circumstances. So while the thug story could be possible, there doesn't seem to be any confirmation of that, at least as far as I could see.

Anyway, the version of George's account given by Destination America is as follows:

He was in a department store with his mother, shopping for back to school clothing. While shopping, he managed to wander into a rather dark corner of the store where a group of mannequins were being stored. As he was checking them out, one moved and turned to face him, turning out to be the blue albino woman. It was then he screamed, sending his grandmother running over to him. It was then his grandmother also saw the woman and told her that she was not welcomed there. Then she glided passed them and out the door.

Now here is an excerpt of George's story in his own words (you can read it in its entirety in his comment on the Muldersworld article or at artist-alley.net:

It was August of 1964 and I was trying on clothes in the dressing room of the children's department on the second floor of Pelletier's Department store which my Grandmother was Manager of. It was time for me to get my new school clothes. School was going to start soon and I would be entering the second grade.
Suddenly the door to the dressing room flew open and there stood a tall veiled woman dressed entirely in black. Her red eyes were visible through the dark veil as she reached out a gloved hand towards me. As the arm came closer I saw with horror the pale almost bluish flesh of the arm between her sleeve and glove. I let out a scream and she froze in her movement. Appearing behind the tall frightening figure was the small stature of my Grandmother. Summing up the situation quickly my Grandmother forcibly ordered, "Leave! You are not welcomed here!" The veiled woman slowly turned as I crouched back against the wall. I heard my Grandmother repeat, "You are not welcomed here." She then ordered, "Now leave!" The tall figure with the red eyes and bluish skin silently glided past my Grandmother and towards the stair well. I ran to my Grandmothers arms and watched, along with the employees that had come running when I screamed, the frightening figure descend the stairs and quickly disappear.
I was to learn later that this was the Albino Woman who had died the next year. I was not to learn until four years later why she had sought me out...
 


Again, you can check out the entirety of his story (and it is quite interesting) in the comments section at Muldersworld.com or at artist-alley.net (you can also see an image of his painting featuring the blue albino woman).
Other reports include drivers seeing her lurking in the Rochester Cemetery at night, prowling the interior woodlands near the cemetery and the creek. Some children have even reported waking up late at night to seeing her gazing into their windows.
So if you happen to be driving by the Rochester Cemetery in Topeka late at night, you just might catch a glimpse of the legendary Blue Albino Woman, also referred to some as the Witch of Topeka, Kansas.







Tiffany Apan is a critically acclaimed independent recording artist, a stage/film actress, author, and award-winning producer/writer. You can find more about her at her Official Website, Blog, Twitter, Facebook, and her production company website. She can also be found on IMDb and her music releases on CDBaby along with iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers. She also does freelance writing, and editing. Her own stories are available at Smashwords, Barnesand Noble NOOK, Amazon, and other retailers. Her novel series, The Birthrite Series, is also available in both ebook and paperback form. In addition, she is a contributor to Ravenous Monster Webzine.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Haunted Monongahela: The Witch of Monongahela and The Emerald Estate (Demon House)



Sometimes it's the smaller towns that have the richest history. Including haunted history.

One such town is one hidden among the steel city of Pittsburgh, PA, just among the Monongahela River. That town is Monongahela.

Now those of you that read my main blog and view my website, you likely know that I am a re-enactor of history at the Depreciation Lands Museum in AllisonPark. This passed summer, I also posted an article on this webzine about The Deacon, the museum's benevolent resident ghost.
Now every Halloween, the museum puts on their Lantern Tours each year with an ever changing theme. This year's theme is a dramatized reenacting of the witchcraft trial of real life 17th century accused 'witch', Mary Bliss Parsons in Colonial America.

And as a side note, what has two thumbs and is playing Mary Bliss Parsons in this event?
That's right.
Me.
:D

Now as I was reading over the script for the Mary Parsons witchcraft trial tour and doing research, I came across another interesting figure (also being portrayed in the lantern tours event). And that is Mary or "Moll" Derry, who was also known as the Fortune Teller of the Revolution and/or The Witch of Monongahela.
According to a brief description in a sample from Thomas White's book, Witches of Pennsylvania: Occult History and Lore (a book that is definitely on my 'to read' list), Derry was born in Germany during the year 1760. During the Revolutionary War, she moved to America with her husband, who was a Hessian soldier.
After the war ended, they moved to Fayette County in the 1790s. It is said that Derry lived in Georges Township until her death from old age in 1843 (which would have made her 83 at the time of her death).

Throughout her lifetime, Derry was said to have told fortunes, removed hexes, and cured ailments. There is even a story of how she tried to help a young woman by warning that young woman of what seemed to be an abusive fiance. Unfortunately, the young woman did not listen and she was later found dead. Derry was also said to have a vengeful side to her, and pity the fools that dared cross her. There are many stories of curses and affliction place upon those that angered Derry, from farmers having their livestock mysteriously perish to men that tormented her having their lives cut short by hanging.
Either way, her reputation as "the most well-known witch of the western side of the [Pennsylvania] state" made her a legend long before her earthly life ended.
What is even more curious is that in a time that is known to severely frown upon practices of any type of magic, Derry (and probably even others) managed to somehow slip beneath the radar of the witchhunts and trials. It is suggested that perhaps people feared crossing her just that much. It definitely makes you wonder. Then again, history really is a giant, mysterious labyrinth with many different and unexpected twists and turns.

And speaking of twists and turns, who doesn't love a haunted house? Especially one said to have a haunted tale behind it?
Well, Demon House - also know as Emerald Mansion - has a rather interesting story behind it.
Now bear in mind that I am not entirely sure of whether this is the real history behind it or if this is a fabrication that is simply part of the haunt. But either way it's a cool story, and one to maul over as you await your turn to enter into the old McCormick Mansion. I did go to Demon House during the Halloween season a couple years ago, and I will say that it does deliver. Here is a video of the experience:



And as for the story told behind it, the story goes a little something like this:
The mansion has over 138 years of haunted history and the land on which it sits was once used as a burial ground (possibly Native American but also possibly used by the Spanish to bury their torture victims). There is also a story about a mysterious woman named Carla who owned a title on the land in the mid-late 1800s. Supposedly, she was not bothered by the lands history as being burial grounds and even asked to keep some of the bones of the exhumed bodies.
She was said to be a healer and a witch by some (there seems to be a lot of that going around in this particular area), though many sought out her cures for ailments. Then in 1894, she mysteriously vanished (as had some of her patients). When the sheriff and his deputies decided to conduct a search of the house, four members of the search party entered the mansion, never to be seen again. thus the house remained empty until 2004, when it was purchase by the owners and operators of the haunted attraction, Demon House.

Now, the current owners of Demon House have stated in a couple interviews that there definitely is an energy about the area. So perhaps one of these days it would be interesting to sit down with them and see just how much of the story stems from truth.

Either way, the moral of the story is...always keep your eyes open, for sometimes the smallest towns have the most interesting history and legends.


Sample of Witches of Pennsylvania:
http://www.heraldstandard.com/entertainment/weekend_magazine/new-folklore-book-includes-fayette-county-legends/article_be86eb4c-4f67-534c-a068-37e5078168ad.html 

Demon House Legend:
http://www.demonhouse.com/1871to1934.html 

Mary Bliss Parsons:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_%28Bliss%29_Parsons





Tiffany Apan is a critically acclaimed independent recording artist, a stage/film actress, author, and award-winning producer/writer. You can find more about her at her Official Website, Blog, Twitter, Facebook, and her production company website. She can also be found on IMDb and her music releases on CDBaby along with iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers. She also does freelance writing, and editing. Her own stories are available at Smashwords, Barnesand Noble NOOK, Amazon, and other retailers. Her novel series, The Birthrite Series, is also available in both ebook and paperback form. In addition, she is a contributor to Ravenous Monster Webzine.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

COVER REVEAL! KINDRED (THE BIRTHRITE SERIES, #2)




SYNOPSIS


It is the summer of 1933 and nearly two years since that fateful Halloween night in Plains, New York.
Born and raised in Dayton, Ohio, eighteen-year-old Cletus Blake spends his days working to help his family through the massive economic recession spreading throughout the United States and many other areas of the world. As society struggles to accept that the economic surge of the 1920s are long gone, Cletus also clings to the memory of his last phone conversation with his cousin Dorothy. Having formed and maintained a relationship with two of her close friends - the recently married Reginald and Gail Carr Johnson - the three find solace in regular communication with one another.

Like Dorothy, Cletus possesses supernatural abilities inherited through his bloodline. His vivid dreams and visions - including ones of a beautiful young Romani woman and twin baby boys - continue to increase in strength. Meanwhile, Reginald and Gail begin falling prey to dark adversaries that have been lying in wait.
Evil surrounds at every turn, old friends race to help, and ancient evil re-emerges. A war between worlds brews beneath the surface, threatening to rip the protective seams that keep the portals sealed.

Then in the midst of it all, Cletus happens upon a caravan traveling through his Ohio town. The very familiar Romanichal family's history ties not only to his own past, but to all the kin of the four men that experienced worlds outside of their own on that summer solstice in 1844. All are linked to a future that will reunite the Blakes and the Livingstons, two families that at one time, shared a very unlikely friendship.

Kindred is the second full-length novel in The Birthrite Series. Picking up from where Descent and Sacred Atonement: A Novelette left off, the story continues to challenge all that is known about light and dark, good and evil. Passion, intrigue, and secrets abound as history unravels. Revelations uncovered in previous installments are given new perspectives, taking the reader on a thrilling ride into a world where nothing is ever what it appears to be.


SPECIAL GIVEAWAY:
Until July 10, all three of the first installments - Descent (The Birthrite Series, #1), Sacred Atonement: A Novelette (The Birthrite Series, #2.5), and Made in Heaven: A Birthrite Series Short - are available as free downloads from the following retailers:
My books are also available at Amazon (giveaways for Amazon coming soon): http://amazon.com/author/tiffanyapan

If you would like to check out my work, you may do so at the following links:
Official Website (where you can also sign up for my free monthly newsletter): http://tiffanyapan.com
My new online magazine dedicated to all things historical and paranormtal: http://partingofveilswebzine.blogspot.com
Authorgraph (where I give digital autographs!): http://www.authorgraph.com/authors/TIFFANYAPAN
My music is also available at CDBaby: http://cdbaby.com/artist/tiffanyapan
And if you love history and historical reenactment, you can catch me at the Depreciation Lands Museum on some Sundays throughout the summer and autumn of this year:

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

The Depreciation Lands Museum and "The Deacon"



Those of you that are keeping up with my official blog and newsletter have likely read of my working for the Depreciation Lands Museum this coming summer and autumn. I am excited of this endeavor for many reasons. Of course, I love history and learning of how those of the past lived. Oftentimes, we can take away great lessons and values from those who came before us. And oftentimes, what we may uncover can be quite surprising and even might oppose what we are typically told.

In addition to discovering new and exciting tidbits about the history of the Allison Park, PA area (and just of history in general), I also hope that this will had more depths to my fictional, non-fiction, and songwriting. But it also allows me more opportunity of exploration for this online magazine. You see, along with being a haven for folks wishing to delve deep into the past and walk into a world not their own, that of the 18th century, it is also home to a spectre known to everyone as The Deacon.


The story of The Deacon dates back to 1973 when the old, deserted church was being fixed up after Hampton Township had bought the property. Workers claimed to see sightings of a tall old man dressed in a long black coat and dark trousers appear briefly before vanishing. The man appeared as someone from another era; very much 18th century. He appeared so often that workers decided to officially name him. Thus, he was christened The Deacon.

Now those who might be having second thoughts of visiting the Depreciation Lands Museum due to risks of encountering a malevolent spirit, never fear. Those claim to have encountered The Deacon speak of him being rather helpful, even seeming to be glad to have the church fixed up, even if it is merely for show. While he has never spoken to those he appears to, his actions seem to confirm that he harbors no ill will toward any of the living.
His first known time helping someone working on the church was the time a woman was trying to replace one of the windows. She was struggling with squaring up the frames for a snug fit. A couple times, she saw The Deacon watching her out of the corner of her eye, and whenever she turned to face him, he vanished. Exasperated and frustrated over her disappearing spectator, she stated, "Don't just stand there. The least you can do is help me out!"
Right after that, her knife was able to cut into the wood perfectly, allowing the window to slide right into place.

Other incidents involve a young man standing on a ladder painting the frame around the stairwell. Eyewitnesses say that his ladder slipped about halfway off the wall, only to pop back up and save him from what might other wise have been a fatal fall. Those present believe that The Deacon was the one responsible for saving the young worker.
Despite his helpfulness though, he can be on the gruff side. There is also a report of how an electrician stormed out frustrated when the light switch he turned on kept getting turned off. And yes, no other live human was in the room with him. But overall, The Deacon seems to be an overall friendly spectator willing to step in and help out those working to preserve his building.

The Depreciation Lands Museum is open to the public on Sundays, May 4- October 25. A couple weekends out of each month, I will be among the costumed interpreters working to bring the 18th century alive. During the fall/Halloween season, we also host evening lantern tours, which yours truly will be involved with. Of course, the tours involve the age old tradition of storytelling as retellings of The Deacon are included.

For more information on The Depreciation Lands Museum, what they are and what we are about, check out the official website:

http://depreciationlandsmuseum.org 


Bibliography:
Ghosts Stories of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County by Beth E. Trapani and Charles J. Adams III
Pensylvania Haunts & History: http://hauntsandhistory.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-deacon.html







Tiffany Apan is a critically acclaimed independent recording artist, a stage/film actress, author, and award-winning producer/writer. You can find more about her at her Official Website, Blog, Twitter, Facebook, and her production company website. She can also be found on IMDb and her music releases on CDBaby along with iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers. She also does freelance writing, and editing. Her own stories are available at Smashwords, Barnesand Noble NOOK, Amazon, and other retailers. Her novel series, The Birthrite Series, is also available in both ebook and paperback form. In addition, she is a contributor to Ravenous Monster Webzine.



Thursday, May 14, 2015

When I Participated in a Paranormal Investigation at Farnam Manor in Richfield, OH

Hey all,

A few years ago (May of 2010), my partner in crime and I were invited by Paranormal expert and excavationist John Sabol to participate in an excavation of the haunted Farnam Manor in Richfield, OH. The Excavation was broadcast on the Paranormal Talk Radio Show, ParaNexus Universe. In a unique twist, two of my songs were used as part of the excavation ("Lullaby" and "Lost Little Girl" to be exact,, meant for the little ghost girl, Emily Farnam).

All sorts of crazy stuff happened, including seeing orbs, a shadowy figure pass by the room we were in and hearing what the present medium said was a banshee scream in the woods.

I posted some photos and video of our time there (WARNING: creepy dolls ahead!):





( Photo of John Sabol and Jason English)











Find out more about Farnam Manor, its history, their lantern tours and more at the following websites:
Farnam Manor Inn
Farnam Foundation





Tiffany Apan is a critically acclaimed independent recording artist, a stage/film actress, author, and award-winning producer/writer. You can find more about her at her Official Website, Blog, Twitter, Facebook, and her production company website. She can also be found on IMDb and her music releases on CDBaby along with iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers. She also does freelance writing, and editing. Her own stories are available at Smashwords, Barnesand Noble NOOK, Amazon, and other retailers. Her novel series, The Birthrite Series, is also available in both ebook and paperback form. In addition, she is a contributor to Ravenous Monster Webzine.

Monday, May 4, 2015

INTERVIEW: Gary Vincent, Author of the Darkened series



I have met author Gary Vincent on several occasions (usually when we are appearing at the same event). On one of these occasions, I picked up his work, Darkened Hills, the first book in his series Darkened. While I have interviewed him before for my official blog, the fact that this particular book series takes place in a setting inspired by actual towns in West Virginia (one of which seems to have a real haunted history), I wanted to discuss the Darkened series on The Parting of Veils as well. Read on and check out his books and where he might be next. :)

 


 TA: For those unfamiliar with the Darkened series, tell us a little of it and what inspired the story.
GLV: The Darkened series is based upon the book Darkened Hills.  Darkened Hills was written in 2010 and originally intended to be a stand-alone book.  The months leading up to and during the writing of the novel, I experienced several 'dark' episodes in my life: my mother was battling life-threating Stage IV cancer and we were traveling back and forth to the Cancer Treatment Centers of America almost every three weeks for months while they treated her, my beloved 8-year-old dog Roger died of cancer during this time, and a musical album that I had just completed 'died' because I could not promote it because as I was taking care of my mother and holding down a full time job.  I attempted to use the album as a fund raiser for my mom's medical expenses and ended up selling one copy. My daughter Amber was also born the same year during the apex of all this stress and ultimately, I fell into depression.

My friend and co-worker Rich Bottles Jr. had suggested we both try writing a horror novel set in West Virginia.  His book ultimately became Lumberjacked and mine became Darkened Hills. Both were completed in the fall of 2010.

At the time, my life was turning into a collection of real-life 'horror stories' and I thought it might be interesting to create a new horror story set in today's world with characters, plot mixes and settings from classic tales.  For example, what would happen if you took Vincent Price's character from The House on Haunted Hill and mixed with Dr. Frankenstein, but made him a modern-day vampire embodiment from Dracula?  That persona in my book became Victor Rothenstein. Similarly, what if you took Jonathan Harker as himself from Dracula, but instead of a socially-adept lawyer of the Victorian era and made him a common truck driver, blue collar worker from West Virginia.  Also, what if the world of 'salems Lot played out in Salem, West Virginia with new characters, new drama and new horror that pushed the envelope?  What would happen?

When looking into a mirror, a word held to the mirror is seen in reverse.  Much like a 'magic mirror' that looked into an alternate world, Salem, WV's evil twin Melas was born.  In this magical land, all elements of horror seep through into the real world of today's West Virginia.  It is also a play on the word 'malice,' because bad things happen here.  Very bad things.

So with that premise, I began writing Darkened Hills as a way to channel my depression (and love and knowledge of horror stories) out onto paper and see what I could come up with. It first came out as a stand-alone novel and got the attention of the world when it won the prestigious Book of the Year award by ForeWord Reviews Magazine as the top (might I say scariest) horror novel of 2010.

In essence, the formula worked! For me on a personal level, I could write as therapy for my depression and push my pain onto the paper.  For the readers, they got a new horror story with just enough of the familiar to not be totally lost in the wilderness of backwoods West Virginia.

In later years, I saw ABC do something similar with their series Once Upon A Time, where they took characters from fairy tales and set them in modern-day town of Storybrooke, Maine without a memory of their past life.  In Darkened, it is characters from horror stories set in modern-day Salem, West Virginia.  Some love this approach and others, well, let's just say are 'misguided.'  (**grinning**)


TA: Now, the town of Melas, WV was named after Salem, WV and according to the intro in Darkened Hills, Melas shares many locations with the real Salem. Care to elaborate?

GLV: The town of Melas and the town of Salem are perfect copies of each other and many locations are real.  The difference is in the topography, or layout of where these locations are.  In the real town of Salem – just as in Melas – it lies deep in a valley and secluded from the main highway (U.S. Route 50.)  Melas, however, is different in the sense that it is more 'open' and some locations can be seen from far away.  For example, in Salem, the Cecil Randolph house is located in downtown next to the college.  You really can't see it from far away unless you are close to it.  That house's counterpart in Melas – the infamous Madison House – is perched up on a hill and can be seen from all over.  This technique is used in a lot of horror stories – a scary house on the hill – and although I risked being cliché and drawing scorn from rabid horror fans for 'copying' this good ole standard, it really fit having it remote and isolated rather than downtown.  Haunted houses are best when they are isolated and mysterious, am I right?

Another topographical change was moving the location of real life Lake Floyd (just to the east of Salem) to a position closer to the Madison house and elevated upstream from the city.  This tactic proves very well by book three and I'll not spoil it here for the readers.

Many other locations, such as the youth home, the Dairy Queen, the college, and the barn/church are in the same place in Melas as in its Salem counterpart.


TA: What is the creepiest location used in the book series and are there any real life stories or legends behind it?

GLV: The creepiest place in the entire series, in my opinion, is the Runners Ridge mine. Bad things happen there – really bad things – deep in the cold, wet dark.


TA: In the Darkened series, the Madison house was named after Madison, WV. According to your book intro (as well as my own perusal of the internet), Madison seems to have its own haunted history. What are some stories behind that town and are there any good resources (books, etc) to check out on the subject?

GLV: I would say that the best thing a person could do is visit Madison around October and find a haunted house attraction to attend. After all, the best way to experience it is to, well, experience it.


TA: Growing up in and around these areas, did you ever have any creepy experiences?

GLV: I have had quite a few.  When I was a boy, a guy named Jimbo was my neighbor. We were friends and played quite a bit of sandlot football and baseball together. In real life, Jimbo became a serial killer that burnt his house down in our neighborhood, confessed to the crimes on a tape and killed himself in the Town House West motel.  This was fodder for both books one and two of the series.

Another odd thing I had happen as a child – when I was about five or six, I was with family in the town of West Union (the next town from Salem heading west). I was with my cousin walking in the woods and we got separated from each other and I got lost.  At one point, I became entangled in dense briers to the point I couldn't pull free.  I described a similar scene when Ralphie and his brother were in the woods in Darkened Hills and the vampire attacks them.  Luckily in my case, my cousin finds me.  Hard to tell what would have happened had I been left out there overnight.

Another very creepy thing happened when I was sixteen. In addition to literature, I am also into music and my friend Paul and I needed to find a place to record a song I had written called Unsolid Ground. We learned of a guy's home studio and the man lived out near Salem off of Route 50.  To get there, you had to drive down Tarklin Run Road.  It was late afternoon when we got there, however a vicious electrical storm hit the area and fried some of the equipment, including an electric slide guitar that Paul brought with him.

The storm was incredible and lasted deep into the night.  There were downed power lines, flash flooding covering the road and trees branches everywhere, making the path driving back on Trarklin Run Road treacherous. It was incredibly dark.  Shortly after, I wrote a song called Darkness, and thought about that crazy night and coming home.  Eventually when the single was released, Darkness was the "A" side and Unsolid Ground was the "B" side.  

As I discuss this now and look back, it is of unique coincidence and remark that the song Darkness and the series Darkened, although separated by almost twenty years from when one was created to when the other was, share a common connection with Salem, WV, and an element of the macabre.


TA: Do you ever revisit these areas?
GLV: Not very often.  Although I do drive through the region on occasion – usually when I am with someone – and point out some of the landmarks that are in the series to them.


TA: What's coming up for the Darkened series and where can potential readers check it out?
GLV: Currently there are four books in the Darkened Series:  Darkened Hills, Darkened Hollows, Darkened Waters and Darkened Souls.  I recommend reading them in that order.

A fifth book – Darkened Minds – is in the works.  By now, a vampire queen rises to power channeling the full forces of darkness and the alliances of good and evil may have to combine to stand against her.

All of these can be purchased at amazon via the series website www.DarkenedHills.com.  Also, you can meet me and grab one (or all) in person at one of my book signings.  To find out where I may be at next, visit www.GaryVincent.com and click "News & Events."  Please note that this is a shared calendar with my publisher, Burning Bulb Publishing, so some events may be for other guests, so please read the description to make sure I will be at an event you are interested in.









Tiffany Apan is a critically acclaimed independent recording artist, a stage/film actress, author, and award-winning producer/writer. You can find more about her at her Official Website, Blog, Twitter, Facebook, and her production company website. She can also be found on IMDb and her music releases on CDBaby along with iTunes, Amazon, and other digital retailers. She also does freelance writing, and editing. Her own stories are available at Smashwords, Barnesand Noble NOOK, Amazon, and other retailers. Her novel series, The Birthrite Series, is also available in both ebook and paperback form. In addition, she is a contributor to Ravenous Monster Webzine.