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Allow myself to introduce ... myself ...

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 4:45 am
by RayGarton
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Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 5:42 am
by Figarou
RAVENOUS....eh? Hmmmmmm....And in your version its sexually transmitted. Not by bite.

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 5:49 am
by Midnight
Hi there Ray! Welcome to the Pack.

The book you're talking about sounds interesting... Not quite my thing though but if I find it I might give it a read. I like reading innovative takes on the werewolf legends, but I prefer werewolf stories where the reader ends up cheering for the werewolf. I don't cheer for rapists.

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 6:02 am
by RayGarton
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Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 8:09 am
by Blue-eyes in the dark
I can't wait to check them out, i've been looking for a good wolfie book. Oh and if you wouldn't mind sampleing some of your work in the creative writeing section, that would be much ablidged. :D
Welcome tothe pack, you artist of the pen and wonderful dreams. :howl:  :oo

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 8:40 am
by Silver Predator Wolf
Welcome! Sorry for the late reply. Just got my new net today and my old onw got cut off. Welcome to the forum. Hope you enjoy your stay with us! :D

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:11 pm
by WereDragon25
Good book, my movies are the same. i like them because they don't portray werewolves and therians as monsters, they portray them as people, not evil demons. Sexually transmitted, eh? That might be how I became a therian. :lol: Welcome to the Pack, Ray. Pssst, send me a free copy! :D

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:15 pm
by Blue-eyes in the dark
me too, me too. :howl:  :oo

Oh, and if you'd like, Silver Predator Wolf and i have a Role Play we just started about a week ago, and we'd be glad to have you. :D it's named "Lune De Chasseurs" hope you join. :)

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:33 pm
by IndianaJones
What's up, welcome to the den. Wow, I am amazed to see a new werewolf novel coming out in 2008! I have been waiting for that for a long time now. I can't wait to get my hands on your first book, RAVENOUS. Are you going to release it in public bookstores like Borders?

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:43 pm
by Blue-eyes in the dark
or will it have to be an object i'll have to kill for. lck :lol:

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 2:01 pm
by RayGarton
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Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 2:13 pm
by Shadow Wulf
Hello RayGarton, and Welcome to the Pack, hope you have fun in here. :)

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 2:43 pm
by Blue-eyes in the dark
RayGarton wrote:Actually, RAVENOUS is not my first book, it's my 54th. It's being published by Leisure Books (Dorchester Publishing), which means it will be in book stores and grocery stores in paperback (the cover is GORGEOUS!), and it's available for order now from Amazon.

I'd love to join in on that role playing game, but I won't be able to for awhile. About six weeks ago, I submitted a proposal to my publisher for BESTIAL, the sequel to RAVENOUS, and an untitled follow-up novel. In the proposal, I included all I had of BESTIAL -- a prologue, the first chapter, and a brief synopsis. A couple of weeks ago, Leisure surprised me with a relatively quick response and let me know they wanted both the books. The catch is that BESTIAL is due at the end of June, which means I've got about three months to write a WHOLE BOOK! I used to be able to do that in my younger days -- I could write like the wind back then. But I'm slower and pickier now, so this is taking up almost all my time. So, I won't be able to join in the fun just yet, but maybe at some point down the line when my schedule's not so heavy.

If you'd like, drop in on my MySpace page -- http://www.myspace.com/raygarton
Ya, it's pretty cool. :D

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 3:03 pm
by Berserker
Welcome! I read the book reviews on Amazon.com and it does sound interesting, although I am wary of a "rapists = werewolves" metaphor... it seems a little heavy-handed and a throwback to grindhouse horror, of which I'm not a big fan. Maybe I'm too fickle in my werewolf preferences, though.

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 5:26 pm
by RayGarton
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Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 5:46 pm
by Xiroteus
Welcome. :D

Personally I am not too much into horror, I am one of those people that likes the idea of werewolves that maintain their human personality and many times defies the traditional way werewolves work, even so there is more then enough room for all types of werewolves and monsters, some good some bad, I felt this way before I knew many others liked the same idea when I looked online many years ago.

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 6:03 pm
by Berserker
I'm a big fan of horror films and stories, and my favorite werewolf movie happens to be Dog Soldiers, which is horror. I have nothing against horror, just that the description of your novel's theme raised one eyebrow for "sexploitation" and another eyebrow for "heavy-handed metaphor;" thus my skepticism. Since the story seems to be neither, then no worries about it. :D

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 6:27 pm
by RayGarton
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Posted: Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:04 am
by Moonwatcher
Hey man welcome to the pack sorry for the late replay hope u enjoy ur stay here
:D

Posted: Sat Mar 29, 2008 1:12 pm
by Figarou
RayGarton wrote:The werewolves in RAVENOUS are definitely not the kind for which you cheer. They're the monsters -- vicious bloodthirsty, and ... well ... ravenous.
ahhh......dark horror. I see.


I'm more into humor. (I think you can already tell by my responce.)

:jester:

Posted: Sun Mar 30, 2008 2:48 pm
by Scott Gardener
Welcome here! You might enjoy browsing some of the posts from the early days, back when we were "Building the Ultimate Werewolf." We have covered quite a lot over the past three and a half years about what werewolves are, aren't, should be, and shouldn't be. We're all standing in line for Freeborn as well, but along the way, we've found and developed a lot of other projects. I myself have a novel manuscript, and I'm overdue sending out my next round of query letters.

Posted: Mon Mar 31, 2008 1:11 pm
by WereDragon25
well, u might should have some therians in the mix fighting against the evil werewolves. Like the couple from american werewolf in paris fighting against that cult of werewolves. Also you can ask anyone on here what a therian is, we all know. And almost all of us are therians.

Posted: Tue Apr 01, 2008 1:04 pm
by WereWolfBoy
hehehehehehehe yes indeed younger brother.

Posted: Tue Apr 01, 2008 1:42 pm
by Silverclaw
Welcome :D
I'll have to keep an eye open for your book when I go back to Borders :)
54 books!? How many do you write a year? :o
What about you? What are your favorite? What have been the biggest disappointments to you, and why?
Favs- An American Werewolf in London, The Howling, Bad Moon, Ginger Snaps....
Biggest disappointment- By far Blood and Chocolate. They absolutly RUINED the book :( :|

Posted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 2:32 am
by RayGarton
Figarou wrote:
ahhh......dark horror. I see.

I'm sorry, but there is no other kind of horror, Figarou. There is no "bright" horror, or "cheery" horror. Horror is, by definition, "dark". Saying, "Ahhh, dark horror," is a litle like saying, "Ahhh, funny comedy," or "Ahhh, sad tragedy." Perhaps you are thinking off the subgenre known as "paranormal romance", which uses some of the same elements as horror, but is not horror because it's ... well, basically romance.

Scott Gardener wrote:
We have covered quite a lot over the past three and a half years about what werewolves are, aren't, should be, and shouldn't be.

You may be a little late there, folks. Werewolf mythology has been around a long, long time -- loooong before Internet message boards, movies, massmarket novels, roleplaying games, or comic books. Werewolf mythology goes waaaay, waaaay back. Werewolves have *always* been savage, scary, bloodthirsty monsters. In 1941, Universal Pictures made a movie called THE WOLF MAN, which is now considered a classic. In it, an actor named Lon Chaney Jr. played Larry Talbot, a man who is turned into a werewolf after being bitten by one. As a man, Larry is a tragic, tormented character, and very sympathetic -- but when he becomes a werewolf under the full moon, he is a savage, scary, bloodthirsty monster with no sense of right or wrong, a beast that will not hesitate to kill even those whom Larry loves most. As a werewolf, he does not maintain his sensitivity or tragedy -- that all goes out the window and he becomes a ravenous, deadly beast. Much of the mythology in THE WOLF MAN was concocted out of whole cloth, but it was firmly based on much older mythology that goes back centuries. Werewolves -- or shapeshifters or lycanthropes or strigoi, they have many names that come from many different cultures -- have long been an icon of traditional horror film and literature. The idea of sensitive, sympathetic werewolves who are romantic and noble and who apparently grow fur, fangs, and snouts and then go around doing good deeds and conducting emotional relationships with people is very, very, very new and seems to have sprung up under the broad umbrella of "goth" culture. It has nothing to do with the traditional werewolf in the horror genre.

Obviously, I made a mistake in coming here. I'm a writer, it's what I do for a living, and when I have a new book about to be released, I do everything I can to draw attention to it so it will sell. I should've looked more closely at this board before posting here. I mistakenly thought it to be a gathering place for fans of werewolves and werewolf mythology, and the horror genre in general -- had I looked closer, I would've seen that its purpose is apparently to set rules and parameters for something that had its rules and parameters set long, long ago, to somehow create mythology that actually was created centuries ago, and to avoid things as unpleasant and unseemly as "horror". Horror on a werewolf message board? What was I thinking? I was under the mistaken impression that FREEBORN was a horror movie about werewolves. Apparently, it's something else -- a movie created specifically for a limited group that has its own particular, non-traditional ideas about lycanthropy that seem to have nothing to do with traditional mythology or the horror genre, a group that seems to turn its nose up at the stuffy old ideas about scary monsters, and that sneers at "horror". I suspect the movie will be limiting its viewership to that particular group as a result. The attitude here seems to be that the traditional werewolf found in the horror genre (a genre clearly disapproved of on this board), which has stood the test of time, is frowned upon and summarily dismissed, or at least it's something preferrably not discussed. I apologize. My mistake. If I offended anyone, I'm sorry. That was not my intention. I will limit my posts from now on to other boards frequented by horror fans who have what appears to be a misguided concept of the lycanthrope ... people who will no doubt be flocking to see the more traditional, crowd-pleasing upcoming remake of THE WOLF MAN rather than the far less traditional and apparently more sophisticated and recently-developed-by-online-committee FREEBORN.

Again, I apologize for my posts and will move along now. Thank you.