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REVIEW: Thomas S Flowers - Lanmo

Genre: Horror
Publisher: Shadow Work Publishing
Publication Date: 21st February 2016
Pages: 53

REVIEWED BY NEV:

A copy of Lanmowas sent to Confessions of a Reviewer by the author, Thomas S Flowers, in exchange for an honest review. This is said review. This book is published by Shadow Work Publishing.

Thomas S Flowers is an author that, if you haven’t already picked up his stuff, is a new and fresh face proving that there is still young blood in this horror writing genre that can compete with the big boys that have been doing it for years.

Whenever a request comes through to read one of his books, I am not ashamed to say this, but, most other things get dropped so that I can pick his stuff up straight away. When Lanmowas released as a stand-alone story, there was only one thing I could do. Read it again and give it its own full review. This story really deserves it.

1964 Mississippi. John is a young black man canvassing for votes in the Delta during the fight for civil rights. He is pulled over by a local police officer and ends up in a lot more trouble than he would have hoped for that evening. Not only was he stopped by the local police, they were also the local branch of the Ku Klux Klan.

They thought they would get away with things. They didn’t bank on the powers of the good old southern voodoo.

Lanmo is a story that first made its appearance in the wonderful anthology, The Black Room Manuscripts from the equally wonderful Sinister Horror Company. It stood out in this anthology purely and simply for one reason; the superb writing. It is written in such a way that you cannot help but be caught up in the tension and pressure and the outright hatred of the times. You can smell the fear. You can smell the hatred. You can smell the emotion.

It is a story that totally embraces the times without going overboard. It doesn’t glorify it in any way. It does the complete opposite in fact. It makes you hate the perpetrators for what they are, vile, disgusting, ignorant and arrogant people who, quite frankly do not deserve to walk the earth.

Mixed in with the racism we have the flip side of the coin. The age old practice of voodoo. Lanmoclearly demonstrates the belief in the old rituals that was still held strong by the black population in the deep south even in the 60’s. It is to me the ultimate type of witchcraft. It honestly gives me the creeps because voodoo, more than most ancient cultures of supposed evil, is extremely believable to me. Don’t ask me why. It just is.

In Lanmo, Thomas S Flowers make it even more believable, if that is even possible. You get right inside the head of the victim. You get right inside the head of the witch doctor. It is scary scary stuff that will have your spine tingling. If I can give you one tip of something you must do while reading this story, it is this; sit in a seat that is up against the wall when you open it to read. If you do not, you will be constantly looking over your shoulder!

To summarise: Absolutely loved this story. Very atmospheric. Gives you a true feeling of the times and the horror of the times. Makes you feel ashamed in many respects. Very creepy. Thomas S Flowers writing is genius. With this being a short story, it is perfect to give you a feel of how he writes and how he can scare the pants off of you!


General rating:

★★★★★ big fat ones!

Horror rating:

★★★★★ big fat scary ones!


If you would like to help support Confessions of a Reviewer, then please consider using the links below to buy Lanmo or any other books from Thomas. This not only supports me but also lets me know how many people actually like to buy books after reading my reviews.

Thanks.




Book Synopsis:

1964 Mississippi. John Turner, a young black man canvassing for votes in the Delta is pulled over by local police on a rural dusty road. After carrying out what they believed was their civic duty, the klansmen believed they'd gotten away with what they did to John. But they didn’t know the powers residing in those dark Delta woods. And they certainly didn't bank on southern voodoo.


CONFESSIONS REVIEWS THOMAS S FLOWERS







Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:

Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page


SHOW-OFF AND TELL #32 - Thomas S Flowers - Emerging (Subdue Book 2)

#32 is the Show-Off and Tell feature is following on from last weeks. It’s the beautiful Emerging (Subdue Book 2) from Thomas S Flowers.

This is without doubt one of my favourite series ever. If you want to know why then check out the reviews at the bottom of the page.

The physical books themselves are absolutely wonderful. You know when you get a book and you just fall in love with the cover and the presentation right down to the font and how the print looks on the page? That’s exactly how I feel about these books.

The fact that they were surprise packages makes them even more special.

This is my copy.




The only problem I have now is that I will need to keep my collection of this series going as they come out in the future. I hope that I have to get them very soon!




You can buy Emergingor indeed any books by Thomas, here:




CONFESSIONS REVIEWS OF BOOKS BY THOMAS S FLOWERS







Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:

Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page


REVIEW: Thomas S Flowers - Reinheit

Genre: Horror
Publisher: Shadow Work Publishing
Publication Date: 1st June 2016
Pages: 196

MY REVIEW:

So very late in the year last year I got sent Thomas S Flowers’ first book in the Subdueseries, Dwelling, for review. In case you missed it, I absolutely loved it and you can find a link for the review at the bottom of this page. You can also check out my review of book two in the series, Emerging. If you want a pure overdose of Thomas S Flowers, then you can also check out the Confessions’ interview with him at the link below.

Reinheit is one that I heard so much about so I really just wanted to pick it up for my own reading pleasure instead of it being a review request.

Another reason for stating all of the above is because all of that was done before I read Reinheit, which was before I was asked to write the foreword for the current version. Just getting it out there that I loved this man’s writing before I was asked to do the foreword. I know there are some people out there that would throw an accusation of favouritism about. The rest of you that know me, know that isn’t true.

Anyway, on with the review.

Rebecca Moss has one mission in life; to please her husband, Frank. This generally means her life is easier and she has less bruises to cover.

When she sees an antique Queen Anne high back chair, she just must have it, no matter the cost. When she discovers that the chair’s last owner was a Nazi General responsible for some of the worst atrocities during World War II, she is still not put off and buys it for her beloved Frank.

Although Major Eric Schroder is long gone, he owned the chair for a reason.

That reason is still very much alive.

One thing I always comment on in a book by Thomas Flowers is his flawless character writing. Reinheitwas his first novel and I am so happy to see that this element of his writing was present from the very beginning.

This story is set in two different eras in time. We have a section set on the front line during the second World War spanning 1941 and 1942. In this we have only two main characters. Major Eric Schroder and his lieutenant, Braun. Major Schroder is a dedicated SS officer who believes totally in the Furhrer’s cause and what he is trying to achieve. Vicious in one sense, he also has secrets. Secrets that would have him executed without trial in the world he serves. Braun is a man trying to do his duty but when that duty involves the total destruction of any Jew living, the sense of duty is overtaken by his sense of humanity.

In the present day, our two main characters are Rebecca Moss and her husband, Frank. Rebecca is a timid woman in one sense but more powerful than she could ever imagine in others. The sort of person that would flourish in a totally different way if she was in a totally different situation. Frank is just vile. An over confident, self-righteous prick who believes he is better than everyone and dishes out abuse to Rebecca whenever he feels like it, just to teach her lessons.

There is one other, mysterious old man who keeps popping up. You have no idea who he is or what his purpose is until much later in the story. I had an idea early on who he was. I was sort of right but it in no way spoilt the story for me.

The plot? As well as the story being set in two different eras in time, the plot also has two very distinct sides to it.

The easy part is the story of the chair. It changes ownership throughout time and creates its own history due to something that is connected with it. Something evil. The chair may move around the world and have many owners but the inherent evil remains. If it obviously falls into the hands of someone who is evil in themselves, like Frank, well, you can only imagine the effects it might have.

The difficult bit is the direction in which the story moves but it is also the clever bit. This bit is also a trait you will see in other books by Thomas S Flowers. He likes to tell a good story but he likes to tackle stories while dealing with subjects that a lot of other authors wouldn’t touch in a million years. In his later books, for example, we see many people dealing with PTSD. Not an easy subject to write about let alone do it in a sensitive manor.

Reinheit deals with two types of abuse. In the World War II scenes it deals with the Holocaust. Not the sort of subject that a lot of us like to think about never mind read about. Imagine what it must be like to write about it? Thomas Flowers pulls it off spectacularly. He makes it horrific. He makes you want to cry. He makes you ashamed. But within all of that, he does it in such a way that sensitivity just oozes from the pages. It’s not glorified in any way shape or form. It shows the struggles within the minds of the people involved in carrying it out. It shows the sickening reality of what could have happened. It is described perfectly to give you a sense of horror and despair, without you feeling it was overboard at all. Bravo Mr Flowers.

In the present day scenes, we see images of domestic or physical abuse. Whatever you want to call it, it’s wrong. Again this is not a subject I can imagine a lot of people feeling confident writing about. Again, Thomas S Flowers pulls it off masterfully. You want to do all of the above from the War scenes. Cry, feel horror, feel anger, feel ashamed. For a writer to make you feel genuine anger towards a fictional character to the point where you have to walk away from the book for a while to calm down, that’s some pretty powerful writing right there.

These scenes highlight the plight of many women who have to suffer this type of abuse daily. Highlight being the appropriate word. Not once did it come across as anything but brutal for the victim. Bravo again Mr Flowers.

But with all the hidden messages and deep and meaningful thoughts that this story will plant in your head, it is a bloody fantastic read, again.

It’s like old skool horror in the sense of having an object that is possessed by some sort of inherent evil that travels everywhere with it. It touches on the occult from the Nazi perspective right through to the good old fashioned scare the pants off of you present day horror, where people can’t control or stop the evil.

Add into that mix the beautifully written scenes with the sensitive issues and when you have finished this you will look like a cartoon character who has just had a bomb go off in their face. Your hair will be everywhere and your face black and you will have no idea what just happened to you.

To summarise: an ancient evil spans decades to bring terror and despair to anyone who comes into contact with a chair. Adding in the sensitive issues, this is a very powerful story that will hold your attention and your emotions to the very end.


General rating:

★★★★★ superb!

Horror rating:

★★★★★ yup, superb!


If you would like to help support Confessions of a Reviewer, then please consider using the links below to buy Reinheit or any other books from Thomas. This not only supports me but also lets me know how many people actually like to buy books after reading my reviews.

Thanks.




Book Synopsis:

Rebecca Moss never questioned the purchase of the strange seductive armchair. She wanted to please Frank. But the armchair has a dark purpose. Nazi officer Major Eric Schröder believed fervently in Hitler's vision of purity. Now the chair has passed to Frank, an abusive thug who has his own twisted understanding of patriotism. There are those who want to destroy the armchair, to end its curse. But can the armchair be stopped before it completes its work?


CONFESSIONS REVIEWS OTHER BOOKS BY THOMAS S FLOWERS







Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:

Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page


SHOW-OFF AND TELL #31 - Thomas S Flowers - Dwelling (Subdue Book 1)

#31 in the Show-Off and Tell series is a book I dreamed of having a signed copy of since I read it, but never thought I would.

It’s Dwelling (Subdue Book 1), by Thomas S Flowers.

There is one very simple reason why I wanted it. It’s one of my favourite books ever and, in my opinion, one of the finest examples of writing I have ever had the pleasure of reading. This story is made up of so many different elements and emotions that it will scare you, make you laugh and make you cry, all in one sitting.

Apart from that fact, the production of the actual book itself is superb and trust me, you really need to have this book in your hands to appreciate that cover!

This is my copy:




I feel very privileged to have this signed copy on my shelf. When people are queuing out doors of stores all over the world to get Thomas to sign their copy, I can always say I was one of the first!




You can read my review of Dwelling here.


You can buy Dwelling, or indeed any books by Thomas here:




Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:

Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page

REVIEW: Thomas S Flowers - The Incredible Zilch Von Whitstein

Genre: Horror
Publisher: Shadow Work Publishing
Publication Date: 13th May 2016
Pages: 44

MY REVIEW:

A copy of The Incredible Zilch Von Whitstein was sent to Confessions of a Reviewer by the author, Thomas S Flowers in exchange for an honest review. This is said review. This book is published by Shadow Work Publishing.

Last year I read the first two books in the Subdue Series by Thomas S Flowers. In my opinion, they are two of the finest books I have read in years. It is a series that is exceptional in so many different ways. In case you missed them, there are links to the reviews at the bottom of this one.

The Incredible Zilch Von Whitstein intrigued me purely because it looked totally different to that series so I was very interested to pick it up and give it a go.

This is what I thought.

Zilch is boring. He would be the first to admit that. He leads a boring existence in a boring world with a boring job and a boring house and even a boring car. Zilch likes boring however. It suits him just fine.

His boring life is about to be completely turned upside down after a visit to the doctor’s office. He wasn’t expecting this change to his normal mundane existence.

Discovering a new lease of life, Zilch starts to try things he wouldn’t normally. Why does that clown speak to him though? Why does he think nasty thoughts now? This is incredible.

In terms of a character, Zilch Von Whitstein is one of those people you would avoid because he is so, well, boring. Mundane and humdrum are two words I could use to describe his life. You know what though? I defy you to not like him in this story. He grows and grows on you and you will find yourself liking him more and more and really rooting for him the further into the story you go.

There are a few others in the story but telling you about them takes me into the spoiler direction and I am not going there. Other than to mention the fat burger bar manager, Zilch’s asshole boss and a string of others that annoy him more than he thinks.

The plot? Zilch’s life is boring, he gets sick and things have to change. That is all you are getting. You really need to read this as it unfurls to get the true feeling and effect of the story.

How does this stand up in comparison to the Subdue series? Well quite simply there is no way you could compare the two. This is a completely different style of story. It certainly was not what I was expecting from Mr Flowers. I am, however, absolutely delighted that this is the case.

This is a short story, comes in at around forty-five pages so you will have it read in a short space of time. I predict you will do it in one sitting because you will not want to put it down. Mr Flowers has a knack of totally drawing you into his stories. It feels like you are a very small fish on a very big hook. Each time you come to the end of a chapter it is left perfectly poised to force you to turn the page to see what happens next and thus you are into another chapter and so on and so on.

As with everything else in Thomas Flowers writing, there is an additional underlying topic in this story. Not telling you what it is, but, he has a habit of taking a made up in his head story and putting it into real words on a page and including a subject that a lot of authors may not want to touch but even if they do, cannot do it as effectively as Mr Flowers. I have read his stories before where he dealt with racism and PTSD and they truly brought me to tears. The topic in this one is an underlying health issue that I am sure nearly all of you reading this have been touched by in one form or another.

Let’s face it; this book is a form of entertainment. You are reading it to have some fun or to escape from your own mundane existence to get away from everything. Keeping a level of entertainment, whilst dealing with these taboo subjects can be very cringe worthy, and in very bad taste at times. Thomas Flowers has a distinct ability to handle these subjects with the grace and respect that they deserve while scaring the pants off you and giving you every bit of entertainment you wanted. And more. 

Everything this man writes totally blows me away whether it be a series of novels, all interconnected to give you a story of epic proportions, or a short story like this that will make you laugh, touch your heart and scare the hair off your head. Tension and fear is the name of the game Thomas S Flowers plays.

To summarise: a short horror story that is worth every penny you will spend on it. Just buy it.


General rating:

★★★★★ fantastic!

Horror rating:

★★★★★ in so many different ways!


If you would like to help support Confessions of a Reviewer, then please consider using the links below to buy The Incredible Zilch Von Whitstein or any other books from Thomas. This not only supports me but also lets me know how many people actually like to buy books after reading my reviews.

Thanks.




Book Synopsis:

Whit had done everything right, but when the world seems against you, can good boys stay good? Whit never drank in excess, never said a bad word to anyone, did his taxes, even called his mom on Sundays, never even had a tattoo...until one night, the night a malicious clown turned everything upside down.


You can read my review of Dwelling (Subdue #1) here.

You can read my review of Emerging (Subdue #2) here.


Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:


Website  Facebook  Twitter  Goodreads  Amazon Page

GUEST POST: Learning How to Write..........



Learning How to Write with Stephen King’s Night Shift

By

Thomas S. Flowers




Is this really such an odd statement to make? Learning to write with King?

To look upon a legendary talent such as Stephen King and boast of him as a mentor should not be too surprising. If you’re questioning the legendary side of things, I’ll probably ask if you’ve lived and breathed in the 21st century, because even if you are not a fan of the macabre, you should have at some point heard rumor or mention of at least one book, one story, one made for TV special or adaptation to the big screen, something that was once a part of Stephen King.

Now for talent? While some may not care for his work, especially his most recent undertakings, to deny his talent is to deny the evolution of modern pop culture.

Stop me if you’ve heard this: “Sometimes dead is better,” or “Redrum,” or “I’m your biggest fan,” or “We all float down here,” or “Get busy living or get busy dying,” or “Small towns have long memories and pass their horrors down from generation to generation,” or “Humor is almost always anger with its make-up on,” or “Wendy? Darling? Light of my life. I’m not gonna hurt ya. I’m just going to bash your brains in,” and so on and so forth.

Chances are, you’ve seen or heard at least one of the above quotes. Each being born first from a book which later branched out into either a made for TV special or movie, all becoming part of cinematic history, and there are many more not mentioned here, including some fifty-four novels, six non-fiction works, and two hundred short stories. So ya, the man’s got talent. He’s got what we call in the butcher shop, chops. So, what better mentor to learn from. As King is often quoted saying, and I’m paraphrasing here, “If you want to write, you have to read, and read a lot.”

Around this time last year, I had the great pleasure of finally sitting down to read Stephen King’s first published collection of short stories, Night Shift. First published, according to the copyright in 1976, though I think it was more like 1978 when it hit shelves, with stories that had been previously published in magazines, such as Cavalier, Maine, Penthouse, Cosmopolitan, and Gallery.

The stories included, of course, the introduction by John D. MacDonald, our first peek into Jerusalem’s Lot, Graveyard Shift, another first look at what would later evolve into The Standwith Night Surf, I Am the Doorway (a fantastic tale of cosmic horror), The Mangler, The Boogeyman, Gray Matter, Battleground, Trucks, Sometimes They Come Back, Strawberry Spring, The Ledge, The Lawnmower Man (not what you’re thinking), Quitters, Inc., I Know What You Need, Children of the Corn, The Last Rung on the Ladder (a really sad tale of suicide), The Man Who Loved Flowers, One for the Road, and The Woman in the Room.

Each of the above stories have taught me three important things when it comes to writing. Be imaginative. Take risks. And to hell with the rules. Allow me a moment to break these down.

Everyone, at some point or another, has read (I’m guessing) an anthology. Maybe not a collection, per say, but certainly an anthology. If you’ve ever taken an English literature class or even just basic English (not sure what the equivalent is overseas), but in those classes, those books contained a collection of sorts from various writers in which teachers believe would help in passing on some form of information, something of worth to budding minds. Style. Prose. Subject. Verbs. Adjectives. Setting. Theme. Form. Something. An anthology is a remarkable thing. We get little glimpses into all sorts of worlds and imaginations. However, a collection differs in the respect that the massed stories all come from one mind, one author. We get to spend more time indulging ourselves into the cosmos of one single writer and one imagination. Seeing things from differing angles. Sitting a spell, as my Memaw often told us grandchildren. This is why, sometimes, I’m more of a fan of collections, rather than anthologies. Getting to spend more time with one author from multiple perspectives is enlightening.

Being imaginative…goes without saying. Or at least it should. What I learned from Stephen King in his collection Night Shift regarding imagination is to allow myself to go into worlds I would never typically go. Consider our first look into the infamous town of Jerusalem’s Lot, which would later be known as Salem’s Lot. This is an eighteenth-ninetieth century story, molded or inspired no doubt from H.P. Lovecraft’s “Rats in the Walls,” written by an author who typically is known for modern stories. Similarly, consider “I Am the Doorway,” not so much as a futuristic story as it is a cosmic one. An astronaut comes home from a trip to Saturn with something inside him, something with eyes, something that eventually develops a will all its own. Talk about imaginative!

If we’re not taking risks, what are we doing? We should have no business in writing if we are not willing to put ourselves out there and bend the mold. Not every story, even from a talented man such as Stephen King will be what they call in the biz, a homerun. Consider his short in this collection called “Trucks.” During my first read through, I skimmed past it. On a second go around, I discovered a tale basically about technology, vehicles mostly and our ever growing need for fossil fuels, taking us over and turning humanity into slaves. The character contemplates running away, across the marshlands, back to the caves, so he could draw with coal on the rock walls and warn future generations of their folly. Talk about risks, whenever a story is shaped by culture and works to raise questions or awareness, it’s always a risk.

From a storytelling perspective, considering “Battleground,” a tale of green plastic army men coming to life and killing the assassin that murdered their maker. Risky because it’s a story about plastic army men! But, it was fantastic nevertheless, and written beautifully. And as King is quoted saying, “The most important things are the hardest to say.” When we write, we take that risk upon ourselves, the risk of what we write falling on deaf ears.

Maybe I’m paraphrasing King again, but it is certainly true that to break the rules, one must first know the rules. Don’t just do, do and read, and read a lot. Read what other, more talented, writers then yourselves are doing. And pay attention in those English classes. Learn the ropes. Understand why teachers warn budding minds of avoiding alliterations, prepositions, clichés, abbreviations, generalizations, comparisons, fragments, exaggerations, rhetorical questions, and parenthetical remarks. And once we understand why these things are what they are, then we can confidently say, “To hell with them!” King, and more than a few other legendary authors, have taught me as much. Certainly the collected work in Night Shift has taught me that it is okay to break the rules, especially when we’re trying to tell a story. To get a point across. And to be, above all, entertaining. After all, we’re not here to lecture, are we? We’re not here to make billions, are we?

In King’s story, “The Woman in the Room” I felt he broke a few rules.

Between inner monologues and normal dialogue, the stylization got a bit wompy, but I think it was intended to get wompy, because of the nature of the story, watching the character’s mother dying painfully slow of a terminal sickness and then watching the character struggle in deciding to end her life. In this case, the rule breaking, the risk, the quiet imagination, it all turned into something quite amazing. In the end, Night Shift has certainly taught me another of King’s famous quotes, and I’ll paraphrase here so you can make sense of my own inner voice, “I’m not here to get rich. I don’t write to be famous, or get laid or to make a ton of friends (though in the process of writing, I have made new friends, good friends). When I write, I want to enrich the lives of those who read my stories, and to enrich my own life as well. I want to wake up each day, knowing that at some point I’ll let my imagination loose, I’ll be risky, and I’ll break the rules, and because of that, and because of the people that fill the walls of my life, I’ll be happy.

Yes. I’ll be happy.”


To buy any books from Thomas, please visit:




Thomas S Flowers was born in Walter Reed Medical Center, Maryland to a military family. He grew up in RAF Chicksands, England and then later Fort Meade, and finally Roanoke, Virginia. Thomas graduated high school in 2000 and on September 11, 2001, joined the U.S. Army. From 2001-2008, Thomas served in the military police corps, with one tour in South Korea and three tours serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, between deployments, Thomas met his wife and following his third and final tour to Iraq, decided to re-join the civilian ranks. Thomas was discharged honorably in February 2008 and moved to Houston, Texas where he found employment and attended night school. In 2014, Thomas graduated with a Bachelor in Arts in History from University of Houston-Clear Lake. Thomas blogs at www.machinemean.org, commenting and reviewing movies, books, shows, and historical content.

Thomas is living a rather simple and quite life with his beautiful wife and amazing daughter, just south of Houston, Texas.

And for more about Thomas, visit his site or find him on social media:


Website  Facebook  Twitter  Goodreads  Amazon Page