Showing posts with label Shaun Jeffrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shaun Jeffrey. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 March 2013

The Heist by Shaun Jeffrey

I've read just about everything by this author and the themes are mainly serial killers / horror / paranormalish.  This one is none of these.  It is a straight forward crime / chase story.  Well as straight forward as you'd expect in a Shaun Jeffrey novella.

It is not a long book, I read it in one sitting.  There are puzzles for the characters to solve and myself stopping to try and solve the puzzles myself didn't detract from reading the book.

As usual, it's an easy read.  The story just flows along.  I didn't know too much about it beforehand, so I didn't spot any of the twists along the way.  There is a bit of swearing going on, but I didn't feel this was as "18 rated" as some of the author's other books

www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00BBZXMFI/?tag=jookuf-21



Sunday, 10 February 2013

Evilution by Shaun Jeffrey

This is Shaun Jeffrey's first novel, but is not the first story I've read by him.  I find his stories always a bit creepy and this certainly fits into that category.

A woman wins a prize in a competition she doesn't remember entering.  The house is in an isolated village, made even more isolated by the strange fog surrounding it.  That's been there for a few years.  Yes, that does sound like a ludicrous plot, but hey, not all plots have to be sensible.  This is a spooky horror(ish) book, so you have to suspend belief.

I needed to be in the right mood to get into this.  I started it once, then put it aside, but once I got into it, I rather enjoyed it.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B004S81HW0/?tag=jookuf-21



Thursday, 25 October 2012

Deadfall by Shaun Jeffrey


Deadfall is a zombie book.  Now I'm not really into zombies, but I am into Shaun Jeffrey books, so gave it a go.

It starts off like a Chris Ryan sort of book, but with a female lead.  Woman special ops type person leads a team of blokes all tooled up on what they think is a kidnap rescue mission, which turns oh so badly wrong.

Another reviewer mentioned they could imagine this as a film, but I was picturing it in my mind more as a video game.

Being not much of a zombie fan, at times I was "get on with the plot" but since to plot was humans v zombies, that was the plot lol.

On the whole, a decent enough story, if not quite my cup of tea.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B004TGSYAE/?tag=jookuf-21



Friday, 15 June 2012

Day by Day by Shaun Jeffrey

I've read a few of Shaun's books, from the police procedurals of Prosper Snow in The Kult to the wierd and dark worlds in  books such as Dead World and Dark Seduction.
But this book is the scariest.  It reads as if it's a newspaper report/interview rather than a novel story.  The horror in this story is that it is the truth in many towns around the country.
I can't say I "enjoyed" it as such, but it was gripping reading and I didn't want to stop until I found out the ending.

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B008AQGSNY/?tag=kuffbl-21

Friday, 18 May 2012

Dead World by Shaun Jeffrey

Dead World is set in another of Shaun’s weird worlds in his imagination.

Life is bleak within the walled city of Sanctuary after mankind has fallen.  But there’s only so much room there and it’s a case of “one in one out” when a new child is born.  The “one out” has to leave the safety and go out to be sacrificed to the gods – the undead beings that wander outside being the gods.  But we know gods don’t exist and what the undead really are.

In the post Kindle apocalypse, novellas seem to be coming to the fore and this being a novella, it was the right length for this story.  Shaun certainly knows how to put his varied imagination on the page.


Friday, 6 April 2012

Dark Seduction by Shaun Jeffrey

This is not my usual choice of reading.  I tend to prefer lighter reads or serial killers.  This book is a novella about a dark place called Shadowlands.

The story involves a bloke called Zen who gets caught up in a wager that he doesn't really want to bet on.  If he loses, the price is his soul.

The story is a good descriptive read.  There's no padding as you get taken to hell and back with the characters.  And some of these characters are very scary indeed.

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B007UILHAW


Monday, 26 March 2012

Interrogating Shaun Jeffrey

My 5th interview is with Shaun Jeffrey, author of many a scary book.  Although to be fair, The Kult and Killers aren't horror books, they are serial killer books, which apparently does make a difference.



How do you strike the balance between writing something you want to write and writing something that people want to read, in terms of the compromises you make, if any?

I always write what I want to write. Whether people want to read it doesn’t really cross my mind, because if it did, I guess I’d try to jump on some bandwagon to catch the latest wave of whatever’s in vogue. If I didn’t write something I wanted to write, then I guess I wouldn’t feel so inspired. To lock yourself away and write is hard at the best of times, so it has to be something I enjoy doing, especially as it’s not my full time career.

What excites, attracts or appeals to you about the genre(s) you write in.

I love the fact that writing in the thriller and horror genres, I can write fast paced adventures that will hopefully introduce the reader to terrifying situations that will put a chill down their spine or keep them awake at night. But having been brought up in a house in a cemetery, I guess my fascination with the darker side of life is in my roots, so I was never going to write romance novels. But ultimately there’s nothing like being transported to another place by a piece of fiction and if you get totally engrossed in the story then the author has done their job.


Do you have a box, drawer, folder etc where you keep thoughts and ideas for future stories? Such as names you have come across, bits of dialogue, ideas, characters - even if you have no idea when you might use them?

I do have a scrap book, but I haven’t updated it for a while. I went through a stage of writing things on bits of paper, but they invariably got lost and I also sometimes have trouble reading my own hastily scribbled notes, so perhaps I should be a doctor. I also make notes on my computer, and at least I can read what those say.


How much of you is in your characters? Which of your characters is the you that you’d most like to be? Or be with ?

I guess I put a lot of myself into my characters as I draw from my own experiences to try to make their experiences seem as real as possible. In that regard the characters Prosper Snow and Wolfe from The Kult and Killers are the two main ones that I have put most of myself into. If I had to be one of them, then I suppose Wolfe is the man to be. He’s reckless, rich and attractive but deep down he is very supportive of his friends, well the few that survive that is!


Do you become so wrapped up in your writing that your spouse wonders if they're married to you or one of your characters?

Not really. I keep both things completely separate. If my fiction was ever to intervene with real life there would be problems. I mean, I write about serial killers and monsters, so if my better half was to think I’d become one of my characters, I’d hate to think which one it was.


What type of book do you like reading? Is it the same genre as you write?

I primarily like reading thrillers and horror but I will read anything if it appeals to me. The main criteria is that I don’t like stories that drag and if the author drones on and on with little happening in the story then I switch off. Life’s too short and there are too many other books to discover.


What lengths do you go to to convince us readers that your book has the X factor?

I don’t go to any lengths to convince readers of anything. If people like what I write that’s great. If they don’t, well there’s nothing at all I can do about it. Perhaps that’s why I haven’t yet become a superstar.


How do you feel when a reader points out the spelling mistake(s) you have made?

What spelling mishtakes? Seriously, I appreciate the time anyone takes to let me know if something is wrong. Nobody’s perfect. Mistakes creep into most books, even those published by the major publishing houses.


What do you like most about visiting KUF?

It’s a friendly place populated with people who like good books. Some of them even like mine! But forums and groups like KUF can be fantastic places for authors to hang out as there are always going to be a few readers who might be interested in what you write.


What is on your near horizon?

I’m always working on something. Currently I’m working on a novella called Dark Seduction. I’m also outlining another Prosper Snow novel. I’m also keeping my fingers crossed that the film of The Kult is eventually released. There has been some further work done on it and the production company are in talks with a distributor, so hopefully it will be released eventually.


Where can we find you for more information?

I have a website, which is in dire need of updating:
http://www.shaunjeffrey.com and I’m on twitter @ShaunJeffrey and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=665480388