Oh man...aren't nightmares bad enough? Do we need to dedicate a room to them? I'm a bit scared already. Luckily we have Chris Sorensen here today to chat with us and calm our nerves for a few moments.
SC: Tell me a little bit about your main character of this book.
CS:
Much like myself, Peter Lawson is an audiobook narrator. He and his wife Hannah
have just gone through an extremely rough patch in their life, so when the
opportunity to pick up and leave New York for rural Illinois presents itself,
they jump at it. Peter’s been through a lot and he’s near his breaking point.
Peter
and Hannah are in two different spaces when we first meet them. Hannah, though
beaten down, is ready to move forward. Peter, on the other hand, feels himself
drawn toward the past—both his own personal past and the history of the house
they end up inhabiting. If you met him on a good day, in a good year, you’d
love Peter. But meeting him in the timeline of The Nightmare Room, one has to
wonder what’s really going on beneath the surface.
SC:
I would think, being an audio book narrator, that you need to make things spooky
from time to time. Do you believe in the paranormal and if so, do you have an
experience you can share?
CS:
This may sound like a made up scenario, but I swear it isn’t. I used to be
friends with a family that owned a hotel out in Colorado that used to be a
hospital back in the 1890’s. Each room still bears the name of that room’s
former function—Maternity Room, Convalescent Room, etc. I stayed there a few
days all by myself. The hotel closed for the winter, and I was directing a show
in town. I used to have to lock myself into the hotel at night. No joke.
One
night as I lay alone in this two-story hotel, I heard a rustling sound at the
foot of the bed. I looked down I could swear I saw a shadow hunched down,
peering at me between my feet.
I
turned on the light (no, ALL the lights) and stayed up all night. Others have
experienced similar during their stays, but I’d rather not mention the name of
the place. Let visitors find out for themselves.
SC:
That sounds like it might keep you up
for the rest of the night. Speaking of made up scenarios, what titles are you
working on now that you can tell us about?
CS:
I’m busy writing The Hungry Ones, the follow-up to The Nightmare Room. I’m also
mapping out a new middle grade book (sci fi) as well as two other stand-alone
horror novels. There just aren’t enough hours in the day…or the night!
SC:
Thanks so much for dropping by today, Chris. Let's take a look at your book
now.
The Nightmare Room
The Messy Man Series
Book One
Chris Sorensen
Genre: Paranormal Fiction
Publisher: Harmful Monkey Press
Date of Publication: 1/25/2018
ISBN: 978-0998342412
ASIN: B07943P5S8
Number of pages: 273
Word Count: 45,000
Tagline: The past is always present in the Nightmare Room.
Book Description:
A boy in a basement, a man in a booth and a darkness that threatens to swallow them both...
New York audiobook narrator Peter Larson and his wife Hannah head to his hometown of Maple City to help Peter's ailing father and to put a recent tragedy behind them. Though the small, Midwestern town seems the idyllic place to start afresh, Peter and Hannah will soon learn that evil currents flow beneath its surface.
They move into an old farmhouse on the outskirts of town—a house purchased by Peter's father at auction and kept secret until now—and start to settle into their new life.
But as Peter sets up his recording studio in a small basement room, disturbing things begin to occur—mysterious voices haunt audio tracks, malevolent shadows creep about the house. And when an insidious presence emerges from the woodwork, Peter must face old demons in order to save his family and himself.
Book Trailer: https://youtu.be/8Qtce0shydM
Excerpt:
The man threw
open the basement door. A rush of mildewed air rose up from the darkness, like
the hideous breath of some subterranean thing. He flicked on the light, and the
cascade of descending stairs came into view. Among their number was the
treacherous one midway down, the one that bent like a bow at the slightest
weight.
“Are you going
down on your own or do I have to make you?”
The boy looked
up at his father. The anger that had fueled him thus far was fading, seemingly
sapped by the trip from the boy’s bedroom. Instead, his father looked pained.
If he didn’t know better, he might think the Old Man was about to cry. But his
father had said he was tired. Dead tired. And perhaps it was as simple as that.
"I'll
go," the boy whispered, and he took the first tentative step down.
The change in
temperature was immediate; it was like diving into a cold pool. He took another
step down, and another.
He paused on the
third step and looked back at his father. The bare bulb above paled the man’s
countenance. The grey circles under his eyes made him look like he’d been
bludgeoned.
“Git!” the Old
Man snarled. The boy went. When he reached the sagging step, he stopped, took a
breath and leaped over it. His heel hit the lip of the next step, but the wood
was damp, and the boy came down hard on his butt.
“Get some sleep.
And no more dreams.”
As if he could
help it.
His father
closed the door, and the lock clicked. It would not open again until morning.
The boy
descended the final few stairs and stepped onto the floor. Ice-cold cement
sucked heat from his soles. He squinted, trying to adjust to the dark.
The usefulness
of the light bulb ended a few feet into the basement. And there was no more
source of light until he reached the…
The gears in his
head ground to a halt, stopping short of allowing the dreaded name to be
uttered.
He started
picking out objects around him. The solemn metal face of the furnace, a stack
of water softener salt bags, the frame of an old bicycle.
Straight ahead
lay a distance of twenty or so feet before he'd come to a door. Three-quarters
of that stretch was in pitch black. To get to the door, to get to the room, he
had to dash through the darkness until his hand found the doorknob. Then, he
would throw the door open, reach to his right, flip the wall switch and presto.
An island of light in an ocean of black.
He girded
himself for the sprint.
“One…two…”
He hesitated…but
why? He’d already made this run two times this week. Both Monday and Thursday,
he’d awakened screaming, bringing down the Old Man’s wrath, and sending him
here. To the penalty box. To time out. To the Night—
“Three!”
The boy startled
at the sound of his own voice, and he lurched into motion. He hurtled into the
darkness, his feet slapping the floor, echoing off the walls in hollow
applause.
He bumped into
something and spun, temporarily throwing himself and his inner compass off
balance. He skidded across the floor and came to a stop.
Heart pounding
in his chest, he quickly located the lit stairs off to his left. He made a
rapid calculation and turned to face the invisible pathway to the room. He
bolted, coming to a halt only when he slammed head-on into the door.
His hand
floundered before finding the knob. He launched into his practiced routine.
Open door, flip switch, step inside.
In seconds, the
boy slipped into the room and slammed the door shut. A pink light overhead
bathed him in imaginary warmth—he had made it.
He stepped back
and sank into the waiting beanbag chair, facing the door. The small room with
its mint green walls and rollaway bed felt almost welcoming, an odd feeling for
a place that was meant as a punishment.
The boy pulled a
quilt from the bed and wrapped it around him tight. For the first time in his
life, he felt safe here in this room—in the Nightmare Room.
Because he
hadn’t bumped into something out there in the dark. He had bumped into someone.
He was almost
certain of it.
He kept one eye
on the door as the minutes hummed past on the illuminated clock on the
nightstand. He busied himself with crayon and paper, doodling to keep his mind
quiet. Soon, his vision began to flutter; the room began to strobe. And, in the
space between two breaths, the boy sank into his beanbag chair and fell into a
fitful sleep.
The doorknob
twitched.
The boy bolted
upright. He pressed back into the chair. His whole body started shivering, and
he feared he would wet himself for the second time that night.
A thought…no, a
voice crept into his head.
Coming in.
The door
quivered as if someone was leaning against it, trying to stifle a laugh. Nails
scratched against the wood.
“Dad?” the boy
whispered.
The door
shuddered.
“Is that you?”
Knowing it was not.
Coming…
“Please don’t.”
Coming…
“No.”
Coming…
“No!”
In.
About the Author:
Chris Sorensen spends many days and nights locked away inside his own nightmare room. He is the narrator of over 200 audiobooks (including the award-winning The Missing series by Margaret Peterson Haddix) and the recipient of three AudioFile Earphone Awards. Over the past fifteen years, the Butte Theater and Thin Air Theatre Company in Cripple Creek, Colorado have produced dozens of his plays including Dr. Jekyll’s Medicine Show, Werewolves of Poverty Gulch and The Vampire of Cripple Creek. He is the author of the middle grade book The Mad Scientists of New Jersey and has written numerous screenplay including Suckerville, Bee Tornado and The Roswell Project.
Mailing List Sign Up: http://www.casorensen.com/
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SC:
Tell me a little bit about your main character of this book.
CS:
Much like myself, Peter Lawson is an audiobook narrator. He and his wife Hannah
have just gone through an extremely rough patch in their life, so when the
opportunity to pick up and leave New York for rural Illinois presents itself,
they jump at it. Peter’s been through a lot and he’s near his breaking point.
Peter
and Hannah are in two different spaces when we first meet them. Hannah, though
beaten down, is ready to move forward. Peter, on the other hand, feels himself
drawn toward the past—both his own personal past and the history of the house
they end up inhabiting. If you met him on a good day, in a good year, you’d
love Peter. But meeting him in the timeline of The Nightmare Room, one has to
wonder what’s really going on beneath the surface.
SC:
I would think, being an audio book narrator, that you need to make things spooky
from time to time. Do you believe in the paranormal and if so, do you have an
experience you can share?
CS:
This may sound like a made up scenario, but I swear it isn’t. I used to be
friends with a family that owned a hotel out in Colorado that used to be a
hospital back in the 1890’s. Each room still bears the name of that room’s
former function—Maternity Room, Convalescent Room, etc. I stayed there a few
days all by myself. The hotel closed for the winter, and I was directing a show
in town. I used to have to lock myself into the hotel at night. No joke.
One
night as I lay alone in this two-story hotel, I heard a rustling sound at the
foot of the bed. I looked down I could swear I saw a shadow hunched down,
peering at me between my feet.
I
turned on the light (no, ALL the lights) and stayed up all night. Others have
experienced similar during their stays, but I’d rather not mention the name of
the place. Let visitors find out for themselves.
SC:
That sounds like it might keep you up
for the rest of the night. Speaking of made up scenarios, what titles are you
working on now that you can tell us about?
CS:
I’m busy writing The Hungry Ones, the follow-up to The Nightmare Room. I’m also
mapping out a new middle grade book (sci fi) as well as two other stand-alone
horror novels. There just aren’t enough hours in the day…or the night!
SC:
Thanks so much for dropping by today, Chris. Let's take a look at your book
now.
Thanks for having me!
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