A Run For It launch title. Bram-stoker award nominated author Craig DiLouie presents a horror novel with a fun twist on having a bad ex.
A Run For It launch title. Bram-stoker award nominated author Craig DiLouie presents a horror novel with a fun twist on having a bad ex.
From Bram-stoker award nominated author Craig DiLouie comes a horror novel with a twisted tale of love, heartbreak, and the apocalypse. We all have bad exes. Lily Lawlor's just happens to be the antichrist.
Sometimes, love can be hell...1998: A punk band is formed by Lily Lawlor and Drake Morgan. Drake inspires faith in some. Fear in others. Lily is a believer.1999: A Battle of the Bands ends in a shocking death, and a riot that claims the lives of three teenagers.2009: At the height of her stardom, Lily walks into a police station and confesses to murder.Now: The band has refused to talk to the press about the night of the riot, Lily's confession, or anything else. It's been over a decade, but Lily has finally agreed to an interview. And the band is following her lead.What follows is a story of prophecy, death, and apocalypse. A story about love and love lost. A story about the antichrist. Maybe it's all true. Maybe none if it is.Either way, this is their story. And they're sticking to it."Craig DiLouie is the sly officiant presiding over this marriage of heady theology and anthemic punk rock. This book weaves age-old philosophical conundrums into a sensitive, aching, and raw portrait of a band's rags-to-riches tale. With its lively oral history format, reading My Ex, The Antichrist is like letting Behind the Music take you to hell and back."
--Andy Marino, author of The Swarm
"Cheekily playing off of the age-old accusation that harder-edged music is satanic, DiLouie spins a story that is fresh, entertaining, and intensely unsettling. Is Drake Morgan actually the Antichrist? The answer may leave readers existentially unmoored. An easy hand sell for fans of Grady Hendrix's We Sold Our Souls or Silvia Moreno-Garcia's Silver Nitrate, but don't forget those who loved the discomforting verisimilitude of The Ghost That Ate Us, by Daniel Kraus."
--Booklist"DiLouie seeds the narrative with enough pop theology to undergird its tongue-in-cheek excesses, which include a cabal of rogue clergy wielding rocket launchers and a Universal Priest stage performance that unfolds like a mash-up of The Omen and This Is Spinal Tap. It's a wild ride."
--Publishers Weekly"DiLouie remixes classic horror tropes into a harrowing thriller set in 1988... Readers will be pulled in by the morally twisted characters and serpentine plot. Film buffs will especially enjoy this paean to '80s slasher films and the people who love them."
--Publishers Weekly on How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive"With well-developed characters, a swiftly paced narrative, and mounting dread, this new twist on the ghost story will delight horror readers."
--Booklist on Episode Thirteen--Kealan Patrick Burke, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Kin on Episode Thirteen
Craig DiLouie is an acclaimed American-Canadian author of horror and other speculative fiction. Formerly a magazine editor and advertising executive, he also works as a journalist and educator covering the North American lighting industry. Craig is a member of the Imaginative Fiction Writers Association, International Thriller Writers and Horror Writers Association. He currently lives in Calgary, Canada with his partner, Chris Marrs, and two wonderful children.
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