Black Christmas
The citizens of Cedar Bluff, Tennessee, have never recovered from the Christmas Massacre of 1978 - that tragic day when Richard McFarland, armed with a shotgun, abandoned his wife and son and selected a local church as the stage for a bloody, murderous rampage. McFarland paid for his crimes in the electric chair. Yet, not even death will stop him from finishing what he started.
Bloody Legacy
After 14 years, Sonny's father is back. He'd been away so long that Sonny hardly remembered him. But Richard McFarland remembered his only son. And now, he will teach him how to kill.
Sonny is about to become a deadly force that will be unleashed on the unsuspecting citizens of Cedar Bluff. For, when the time is right, he will return to the small, quiet town, bringing death and destruction on an even more terrifying Christmas Day!
I took some time off from reading ARCs to get back to some old school Zebra horror from 1992. This particular version is hard to find these days, but it has since been rereleased for Kindle under the title "12 Gauge"
I had a hard time reading this one. Not because it isn't well written, but due to the subject matter. I think I just chose a bad time to read a book about mass shootings. Or maybe since there have probably been around 300 mass shootings in the 30 years since this was first published there may never come a time when I wouldn't struggle with such a plot. In Father's Little Helper, the son of a mass murderer comes back to town to shoot the survivors of his father's crime. It is gut wrenching, and brutal. The story opens with the original shooting spree, after which the killer's wife takes her young son into hiding. Sonny grew up never knowing what his father had done, but he always had an interest in serial killers and mass murderers. When he is 17 he learns the truth and sets out to make his daddy proud. I would only cautiously recommend this book to those who think they can handle it.
Kindle Version
About the author
Ronald Kelly was born and raised in the hills and hollows of Middle Tennessee. He became interested in horror as a child, watching the local "Creature Feature" on Saturday nights and "The Big Show"---a Nashville-based TV show that presented every old monster movie ever made ---in the afternoons after school. In high school, his interest turned to horror literature and he read such writers as Poe, Lovecraft, Matheson, and King. He originally had dreams of becoming a comic book artist and created many of his own super heroes. But during his junior year, the writing bug bit him and he focused his attention on penning short stories and full-length novels. To date, he has had ten novels and eight short fiction collections published. In 1992, his audio-book, DARK DIXIE, was included on the nominating ballot for a Grammy Award. He currently lives in Brush Creek, Tennessee with his wife, Joyce, his two daughters, Reilly and Makenna, and his son, Ryan (Bubba)