The Two Mikes

The Two Mikes
Ever wanted to talk with someone about a book you just read? You could just join a book group and talk about it, drink a little, veer off on tangents, work back around to the book again, and finally wrap it up by picking the next book.

But what happens when the book you just read is about about hungry zombies or a haunted house, and your Eat, Pray, Love–reading friends aren’t really into reading it, much less discussing its finer points? That’s what we’re here for. We Two Mikes will be your virtual book group for discussing new and interesting and old and half-forgotten horror books.

If you want to follow along with us, look at the next forbidden book on the table and start reading.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Episode 160: T. Chris Martindale's Night Blood


In a town that is not Salem's Lot, comes a man who is not John Rambo to fight a vampire who is really a vampire. What should we title it? Not First Blood. How about Night Blood! Yeah, that's good.

It's Cocktail Time!

The Hoosier Hot Shot
  • Perk some crappy hospital coffee (not the goods stuff).
  • Pour into a diner-style mug, leave an inch of space
  • Float shot of James Dickel bourbon
  • a shot or two of half-and-half
  • shot of Kahlua

 

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hey Mikes,

Thanks for the kind words on Nightblood, I'm glad you had a good time with it. It's nice to see it being read again after all these years.

Did you read the Paperbacks from Hell edition by any chance? Because it has a foreword by Grady Hendrix that tells the history of the book, why it never made it to a series, etc. Kinda wish it had been an AFTERword, though, since it spoiled a few aspects of the story beforehand. If anyone else decides to give it a try, I suggest you read the book first, then go back for the opening...

Since you guys mentioned Where the Chill Waits, I thought I'd let you know that the ebook only came up for sale last week (on the 16th). There will be a print edition available too, probably a week or two after that.

Best,

T. Chris Martindale
(tchrismartindale@outlook.com)