Archive for the ‘mythology’ Category

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An Armored Awarwan

January 23, 2013

Awarwan, an alien god from younger aeons. He breathes life in Matthew Sawyer’s Pazuzu Trilogy.

Prints of his ghastly image are available from Deviantarts.

An Armored Awarwan


Matthew Sawyer's Pazuzu Trilogy

Purchase Pazuzu Trilogy Pocket books and Hardcovers at LULU.

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Matthew Sawyer’s Pazuzu Trilogy – The Wasted Revision

December 22, 2012

My Pazuzu Trilogy is a millennially unique, blasphemous, scrubbed-til-Sunday epic. The Eighth Revision was the first pass in which I did not make major changes – I found typos and a few obtuse sentences, but other than those, the changes are smattering instances of migrating blocks of text into dialogue. The following four revisions were then experiments with character names and locations. So yeah, the current and last revision is the Twelfth. It’s called the Wasted Revision. This last rewrite is dedicated to my pseudonym, Mr. Binger, the author of the two-volume hardcover edition of the Eleventh revision re-entitled The Waste.

* Mr. Binger has also recently self-published his weird and visceral horror stories Unction and Our Lord Weathercock. Pocketbooks available at LULU.

I hope readers enjoy the free ebook version of Manifestation – the first installment of the trilogy. And I’d like them to tell everyone they know and buy the second and third book. Manifestation is mostly background. It’s where I introduce the consequences of a godless world. Emergence is when the narrative grows teeth and nails. Here is where Pazuzu is revealed and my alien gods find this feckless demon.

Pazuzu (pahzoo’zoo) – king of demons in Assyrian mythology.

Manifestation (manufe’steyshun) – indication of the presence of a person or thing.

PAZUZU – MANIFESTATION is the first book in the Pazuzu Trilogy. This book introduces the godless world of the Shur desert and the sorrowful sinners therein. Readers follow a pair of UnChosen wretches as they flee for their lives from a crime lord in the city of Gomorrah. A stranger joins the Cortras brothers, but he doesn’t tell them about the voice following him. The wanderer doesn’t know the voice is Pazuzu. In fact, the demon reminds him his name is Ben. This man suffering amnesia carries salvation and damnation from the desert.

Download a free ebook version of Pazuzu – Manifestation (The Wasted Revision), the first book in the Pazuzu Trilogy by Matthew Sawyer. Get it from Smashwords!

Ebook Sample

Emergence (i’merjuns) – gradual coming out as a result of something.

PAZUZU – EMERGENCE is the second book in Matthew Sawyer’s Pazuzu Trilogy. This book continues the bleak tale begun in Pazuzu – Manifestation.

Horror comes to the battered squatters at Saint Erasmus once the demon, Pazuzu, finds a host. Lost in the chaos, Hen Cortras is taken prisoner and followed into the Shur desert, where he meets heathens – nomadic terrorists who crusade against the Chosen’s Church and military.

Ebook Sample from Smashwords

Ebook Sample

Abeyance (u’beyuns) – suspension.

PAZUZU – ABEYANCE is the last book in Matthew Sawyer’s Pazuzu Trilogy. The last book follows the demon, Pazuzu, in the shadow of the Promised Land’s destruction.

Achieving its goal, Pazuzu has claimed a human body. The demon steals the frame of a boy and makes the mother a missionary. Before the old mother dies, she proclaims her demon-possessed son is the messiah – the reincarnation of the Chosen’s eviscerated Mortal God. Meanwhile, the younger Cortras brother is arrested and beaten by the Chosen’s military and sent to a detention camp outside Capital.

At the camp, Hen Cortras meets real-life heathens. The prisoners escape the Chosen’s military and Hen joins their march against the Chosen’s Promised Land. The heathen attack has already begun behind the monumental Wall and Khetam burns. Pazuzu and Benedict Gage, his heathen minister, now cross the fires of Capital in search of the flock gathered by the mother of the possessed boy. The alien gods are now aware of the demon moving through the world and they send monsters.

Ebook Sample from Smashwords

Ebook Sample

Matthew Sawyer’s Bio: A few words concerning myself.

About me … I don’t have any awards – not even an honorable mention. Heck, I didn’t even go to school to become a Writer – I was going to be a Fine Art Painter. Yet I had to pay my student loans. After college, I worked in Mental Health – as in schizophrenics and other assortment of severe mental disorders. All the while, I painted and sketched – and wrote stories. In that time, I speculated the story I really wanted to conjure – years of drawing monsters had spun my own mythology and I hoped for something comparable and real.

The narrative I wanted to create would fulfill a fading desire and breathe life into the chimeras I had drawn in my notebooks. That visual mythology had been collectively called “The Mortui Philosophies.” I tried animation, but the repetitive work only produced frustration. So much in fact, I joined the ‘sane’ world and switched careers into Internet Technology. Secure, I had stopped painting and focused on a very rewarding career. After a few years lacking expression from my creative self, my Pazuzu Trilogy took its first breath.


Matthew Sawyer's Pazuzu Trilogy

Purchase Pazuzu Trilogy Pocket books and Hardcovers at LULU.

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Our Lord Weathercock by Mr. Binger

December 9, 2012

Our Lord Weathercock by M. Binger

Our Lord Weathercock shares the regional mythology of a damned Southern Wisconsin town. This story of cults, monsters and home-schooled magicians emulates Luke 17:26 – “And as it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man.

There are new gods and this is where they manifest. Here in Wister Town, a retired farmer is harassed by a coven of aspiring juvenile witches. His name is Bill De Corbin and the arthritic man spends an inexplicably warm winter alone in his small house. Trouble comes to him when pubescent children vandalize his backyard and steal his keepsake weather vane. This being where the tale is told, Mr. De Corbin concludes he needs a monster to scare away the thieving brats. Bill researches Dark Magic at the public library and he speaks with the Cult of Hathor. The old man does get his monster and the young coven knows. They go to his house and confront him. This begins the end of them all.

Ebooks available from Smashwords.

Printed Pocketbook available at LuLu.

 

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Ignorech – a short rumor of horror

November 26, 2012

Here is yet another Wister Town story wherein evil comes home with news from a whistle blower. Larger evil takes the form of an expensive, modern-day cult grown outside the borders of this small Midwestern hellhole…

IGNORECH - a weird horror story

The phone rings and rings until I cross the bullpen at the office of the Wister Evening Times – a meager newspaper delivered with subscribers’ mail every weekday afternoon to the good citizens of Wister Town. Wister Town is actually a small city in Southern Wisconsin – ten thousand people and full of insignificance. Nothing happens here, almost nothing happens here, and we newspaper reporters, all two of us, often stretch High School sports articles with nonsense about cheese so that there are no blank sections in the typical, seventy-five cents, four-page editions. Expecting the same as everyday, I don’t rush to my desk and pick-up my phone. Usually, folks hang-up and call-back when stymied by an unanswered call – that or they abandon their effort entirely. I hope that. Yet the phone never stops ringing.

This time isn’t a scenario in which the caller gives-up and tries again. Nor does someone else call and now wait next for an answer. No, my phone never stops ringing. The clunky, black corded machine keeps perfect, mechanical rhythm. My footsteps across the linoleum covered concrete floor accompanies its song with a stumbling, human thump. Whomever calls now wants their singular message heard.

“You shouldn’t have broken the answering machine,” Sally Fowdyson tells me. The healthy middle-aged, concealed-gray brunette woman is the second reporter.

I’m the owner of our hometown paper. Our Internet doesn’t work either. Sally blames me for breaking our modem but she knows that isn’t true. Because I own everything in our tiny news writing monopoly, she says everything broken is my fault. I ignore her teasing and return to business. I answer my determined caller.

“Wister Evening Times,” I say before the receiver gets near my chin. Nearer my mouth, the receiver clearly delivers “Jason speaking.”

My decidedly male caller asks “Mr. Grentz?”

“Yes.”

He says “You’re the editor.”

“Part-time,” I tell him. Despite dedicating maybe a couple hours every week to real editing, I confess and say “Well, I’m the only editor.”

He says “I used to live in Wister Town. It’s safe.”

“From who?” I ask chuckling. Most folks born in Wister Town move away right after graduation. Few call home and none are so paranoid. This worried prodigal son tells me “Ignorechs.”

I’ve heard of the unfortunately named religion. It’s a twentieth century cult whom sell their workbooks for a heck of lot more money than a year subscription for our paper. It’s a religious scam – a modernized Prosperity theology based on sham science fiction. “Fiction,” I say to myself. Then I mumble “Bad science fiction.”

My caller hears me and replies “Yep.”

There’s a nasal twang in his voice and I know the man is originally a local. A big urban environment has deadened his Midwest accent and this squeak slips through – probably occassionally and because of laziness. Despite recognizing the familiar noise, I’m instantly suspicious and proceed with caution. Our paranoia isn’t contagious. It’s bred in the corn and soy fields surrounding a little insular community. Growing-up in Southern Wisconsin, we’ve both been fed the stuff. Overcoming myself, I’m frank and ask my caller “What’s this about? Who are you?”

“I shouldn’t say,” he tells me.

I’m not surprised and say “Then why did you call this paper?”

He grumbles “I was getting to that. I just don’t want to say who I am.”

“An anonymous lead?”

“Yep.”

I tell him “Anonymous applies to our readers. I’d rather know who I’m talking with.”

“Is that necessary?”

I’m a dick and investigate and I express my limits. “I like to know my sources. Nothing gets printed without that little stipulation.”

My caller pauses. His ticks and heavy breaths suggest he’s thinking, coming to terms or arrangements with himself. Eventually, the man overcomes his personal dilemma. He says “Tom Bikenstegger – you won’t print that, right?”

“No,” I say. “Well, it depends what you have for me.”

“Ignorechs,” he says. “It’s dangerous, especially for me right now.”

“You’re not selling books, are you Mr. Bikenstegger?” I hopefully joke.

“No,” he says and his voice quivers. “No, no…”

“Alrigthy, what can I do for you?” I assume his call has something to do with the world-wide spiritual organization Ignorechs. So that I’m certain, I ask him “They have their headquarters in Los Angeles, right?”

“Yeah,” he says without the pop at the end of his affirmation.

Dissuaded by the subject and smelling the Springtime manure of a marketing proposal, I tell Mr. Bikenstegger forthright “I’m not interested in Ignorechs. I’m sure there are a few suckers in Wister Town spending all their retirement money on that junk, but this paper is not going to perpetuate that nonsense.”

“You shouldn’t,” my caller agrees. “Not now.”

Mr. Bikenstegger then stalls. I assume he expects something from me, but I’m thinking. He’s gotten me curious. Although, he’s foolish to expect anything about a science fiction cult will appear in my small town paper – the kinda-related shit that happened at the Rathskeller restaurant was enough for me and all of this community.  All the same, I’m curious. I don’t hang up and say “Okay.”

A little more time passes before I’m any more compliant. “What’s this about Ignorechs?”

Patient the whole time, Mr. Bikenstegger apparently uses the delay in our staggered conversation and excites himself. The man practically shouts.

“Come to the Ranch.”

“The Ranch? I’ve heard about that. Is that what Ignorechs call their headquarters? Everyone names their compounds the Ranch – Charlies Manson to Jim Jones.”

“No,”  Mr. Bikenstegger says. He tells me “The Ranch is just outside Los Angeles, off the Angeles Crest highway.”

“I’m not going to Los Angeles,” I tell the man. “But what’s there?”

Agitated, Mr. Bikenstegger tells me “Daniel Miscarriage.”

“Who?”

“He’s the leader of Ignorechs. All you have to do is look him in his eyes. You’ll see. They’ve changed. He’s changed.”

“I hope for the better,” I reply sounding conceited. I recognize the disdain in my own voice.

Mr. Bikenstegger tells me “No, Zippo is here on Earth.”

“Zippo?” I ask imagining generations of cartoon characters with the name. Most characters are the same. They change with age and never wrinkle their cellophane.

“Zippo is why we’re here. He created mankind and he was imprisoned under a mountain on another planet.”

Here I interrupt. “Mr. Bikenstegger, I don’t think anyone here in Wister Town wants to know anything about an alien god. Our one is enough for everyone.”

My assertion is not so firm. I then ask, tongue-in-cheek, “What did Zippo do wrong? Is he being punished because of all his mistakes with humankind?”

“No, he’s here on Earth. He’s escaped.”

“And what did he do wrong?”

“He’s like Hitler, sir,”  Mr. Bikenstegger strongly insists. More excited, he cries “This whole world is Auschwitz. He was gonna kill-off the human race.”

“I suppose he has the right,” I tell my insane caller. “Our God did flood us once.”

“That wasn’t Zippo,” Bikenstegger says on reflex.

I reply “I didn’t think so.”

“So who pulled us out of the ovens? The Americans?”

“We’re still there,” the mad man declares. “The difference is Zippo has been reincarnated. He escaped after he killed himself.”

“That’s convenient,” I suppose aloud.

Sensing my disbelief, Mr. Bikenstegger tells me “We’re all reincarnated. That’s how life works.”

“Maybe for Hindus and Scientologists…”

“All of us,” says Mr. Bikenstegger. “We’re immortal and that’s how it works. Zippo was never suppose to die. He’s been on the planet Boloks for seventy-five million years and he was suppose to stay there.”

“Seventy-five million years,” I contemplate within the deranged exchange. “I can understand why he finally got around to giving-up-the-ghost.”

“An electric battery kept him alive,” Mr. Bikenstegger explains unbidden.

“I’m sure,” I say, myself giving-up. “Still, seventy-five million years is an awfully long time. Those cells had to have drained sometime.”

Upset, Mr. Bikenstegger confronts me. “You don’t understand. Zippo is now reincarnated here on Earth. He’s been reincarnated as Daniel Miscarriage, the leader of Ignorechs.”

Suppressing my laughter the best I’m able, and allowing my voice to shake, I tell my un-medicated caller “I hope he’s enjoying sunny California.”

“You have to see,” Mr. Bikenstegger says. He’s distraught and his voice scrambles up in pitch.

“I don’t think so,” I say when I disagree with this crazy fellow.

Mr. Bikenstegger begs. “Please, people need to know. We need a safe place where all untainted humankind can muster an army. You have to tell people so Zippo doesn’t kill us and change the human race into a communism of gut-monkeys.”

“Belly-what?” I ask with creative license. I’m sure Mr. Bikenstegger understands what I mean. I have no clue what he’s talking about.

“That’s secret knowledge,” Bikenstegger tells me. “It costs three hundred thousand dollars, but I’ll tell you for free when you get to Los Angeles.”

“Is that a discount? An incentive?” I ask completely uninterested. I’m honest and tell the disturbed caller “No, thank you. It was nice to speak with you, Mr. Bikenstegger. Maybe you can call the newspaper in Darlington – the Journal.”

“Maybe, I don’t know…” he says as I lower the archaic receiver back into its cradle. The man shouts so I hear his words clearly until our call succinctly ends.

Laughing, I gaze at my co-reporter Sally Fowdyson. Too polite to eavesdrop, the curious woman sits quietly at her secondhand, steel schoolteacher desk. She asks me “What’s so funny?”

“Zippo’s coming to town,” I answer.

She asks “The clown?”

“No, our god.” Amusing myself, I burst again. My voice is staggered when I tell Sally “The god of the Ignorechs.”

“Dear Jesus,” she replies and immediately lifts her purse from an open desk drawer. She fumbles and blanches all the while. Noticing her frantic movement, I ask “Whats the matter?”

She tells me “Zippo will kill us all.”

The woman pulls a handgun from her beige handbag. The fact she carries a .38 Cobra is okay – she’s got a concealed weapon permit, thanks to our governor, Scott Walker, and I allow firearms in the office. I’ve got one. I just don’t understand why she pulls out her own.

“What’s going on?” I ask the woman.

Tears form in her eyes. Before she places the weapon beneath her chin and pulls the trigger – pummeling my own eardrums – she demands of me “Tell everyone.”

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This Thanksgiving, Feed Debbie’s Hellmouth

November 18, 2012

Debbie's Hellmouth

The second revision of Debbie’s Hellmouth  is complete – new cover art! The ebook is available at Amazon, see the paperback at LULU.

Debbie’s Hellmouth is the insular urban horror story of Debbie Menon. She’s a good real estate agent at the Mikelmeier Real Estate office there is Wister Town, Wisconsin. Debbie has a house for sale and she’s got to get rid of it. Supernatural forces press upon the young lady and she fears she looses her mind. Understand, Ms. Menon is a sensitive, artistic soul. She’s not unfamiliar with magical glyphs. And she’ll resort to using one if no one helps her blessed the cursed Witch’s house.

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Curious about the mythology haunting Wister Town? Read the background stories…

Horrid Tales of Wister Townfree online reading

Bestial Cult of Hathor

Abandoned

Bloody Tannenbaum

A Codex of Malevolence – available at Smashwords and LULU

Portal Painter


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