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Annabel Lee Book Tour & Giveaway – Luv Saving Money

Annabel Lee Book Tour & Giveaway

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Annabel Lee:The Story of a Woman, Written By Herself by Christopher Conlon Genre: Historical Gothic

Everybody knows Edgar Allan Poe’s “Annabel Lee”—but who was she really? In this haunting and evocative novel, Christopher Conlon (“one of the preeminent names in contemporary literary horror”—Booklist ) imagines a life for one of literature’s most renowned characters. Hers is a chronicle even more thrilling, doom-haunted, and tragic than Poe himself could have conceived, for here Annabel Lee tells her own story in her own words…for the first time. Add to Goodreads Amazon * Google * Smashwords

Christopher Conlon (b. 1962) is best known as the editor of the Bram Stoker Award-winning anthology “He Is Legend” (Gauntlet/Tor), a tribute to author Richard Matheson which was reprinted by the Science Fiction Book Club and in multiple foreign translations. His novel “Savaging the Dark” was included in Booklist’s “Top Ten: Horror” for 2015 (starred review) and acclaimed by Paste Magazine both as one of the 21 Best Horror Books of the 21st Century and as one of the 50 Best Horror Novels of All Time. Two of his earlier novels, “Midnight on Mourn Street” and “A Matrix of Angels,” were finalists for the Stoker Award, and he has written numerous collections of stories and poems along with two full-length stage plays. A former Peace Corps Volunteer, Conlon holds an M.A. in American Literature from the University of Maryland and lives in the Washington, DC area. Website * Blog * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

I heard Mrs. Krasnoff cry out. One of the men shouted. I rushed to Mother. It all
happened in an instant—she whirled to face me and I saw the knife plunge down in a flash. A
indescribable pain erupted in my shoulder, between my collarbone and the base of my neck, like
nothing I had ever felt. I heard screaming and knew it was my mother’s. I knew also that as
quickly as the knife had sunk into my flesh it had been pulled clear again. The world tilted. I felt
myself falling—saw blood flowing across my shoulder and chest—I collapsed onto the floor.
The pain immediately became something more akin to a numbness, a strange lack of feeling, as
if I were disconnecting from my body and looking down upon it as a separate being. I felt that I
was part of another world even as I was there, on the floor, with my eyes open, watching as the
men rushed at my mother. There was the sound of glass shattering as she hurled the doctor away
and his back crashed into a kitchen window. Sheriff Wyre reached for the knife in her hand, but
was a moment too late. She plunged it into her own heart—deeply, I saw—more deeply than I
would have imagined possible, so deeply that nothing but the knife handle could be seen, the
knife handle in her hand now covered in a copious, flowing river of blood. There was a terrible
silence as Sheriff Wyre backed away in shock and all expression died out of my mother’s eyes
and she fell forward, the knife being plunged ever more deeply her body as she collapsed onto
the floor directly beside me, her empty and now lifeless eyes only inches from my own. I heard
screaming then, but whose it was I did not know. The sound seemed to fade away and I heard it
as from far away, down a long empty canyon. The world darkened as I heard hurried shufflings
around me, felt hands touching and pressing around my neck. I could not move. I stared
helplessly into my mother’s dead eyes and the world turned white—then gray—then black.
I believe that at that moment I died. The sounds around me were remote and I felt myself
suddenly dematerialize—become lighter than air—float free—and somehow was witnessing the

scene from above: Mrs. Krasnoff rushing to us with towels in her hands, the doctor frantically
applying the towels to me and trying to stanch the flow of blood, the sheriff asking, “Do I take it
out? Do I?” and the doctor saying, “Yes, yes,” and the sheriff wrenching the knife from my
mother’s heart, blood burbling forth then as from a cauldron, soaking her nightgown, his hands,
the floor, my dress and hair. Then higher—as if I were suspended in the sky now, past the ceiling
and roof, looking down at the top of the house which was now somehow transparent, and seeing
them working desperately to save us, or rather to save me—I saw the sheriff give up on Mother
and turn his attention to the doctor and his young emergency patient. They worked and worked
and somehow, though I was far above in the sky, I felt them maneuvering my body this way and
that, felt the hard press of the towel against my neck, heard the doctor say, “Annabel, are you
there? Can you hear me, child? Try to respond. Can you speak? Can you squeeze my hand?”
And just then I realized that my left hand was within the doctor’s big palm and I slowly forced
movement through my fingers, enough that he said, “She is alive. Keep the pressure on the
wound, sheriff. Hold it as tightly as you can. Mrs. Krasnoff, more towels, please, or cloth,
whatever you can find. And water.” After a moment, more quietly, “I think her artery is all right.
If that is so, she may live. She may just live.”

Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway! a Rafflecopter giveaway

Author: Angie

I'm a wife and a a mom of 4: 3 boys and a girl. I also have 3 fur babies, cats named Soleil, Luna, and a Savannah cat name Malkia. I work part-time outside my home as a COTA/L at a local hospital. I cover Johnstown, Altoona, and Pittsburgh areas. I love to do reviews and host giveaways for my readers. Contact me: angwith4 at gmail dot com if you would like a review.

One thought on “Annabel Lee Book Tour & Giveaway”

  1. I like the eerie cover, and I like the woman’s dress. Thanks for the giveaway!

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