Welcome to THE RIGHT THING site by author James Richard Larson


My third novel, written in 2005 and titled THE RIGHT THING, is classified in the Horror

genre. It is the story of a young woman who makes a pact with the devil. THE RIGHT

THING  will take you on a tour of the supernatural,  in a world where magic lives and evil

exists in the form of he who brings his terrible gift, the mysterious man in black.


For any author who has run the gamut of rejection after rejection from literary agents, The Right Thing will allow for a bit of sweet payback, a bit of good old fashioned revenge.

 


From James Richard Larson, author of The Eye of Odin and Wolfgar:The Story of a Viking, comes his third novel, a study in horror titled The Right Thing.

When a woman is found wandering on a quiet rural road her incoherent rambling is dismissed as fantasy. But others are about to learn that the man from the woods, the man attired in black, intends to pay them a visit as well. Not only will he enter their lives, he will alter their very reality.

The Right Thing will take you on a journey into a world of kabbalistic magic, a world of trance and ritual, where an ancient evil is released from the power of one woman’s will. So pick up the wand, sword, cup and pentacle, step into the magic circle, and accompany us on a tour of the dark place.

 

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Review: The Right Thing by James Richard Larson

The Right Thing
By James Richard Larson
ISBN: 0-595-42736-7
Paperback, ©2007, iUniverse
Review ©2007 Sabrina Williams for Armchair Interviews

Elsbeth Malone was an aspiring author. She wanted desperately to be published. With each agency's rejection letter, she became more despondent. Her husband Johnny stood by her through it all, knowing in his heart that she had talent and it was only a matter of time before someone else realized that.

When Elsbeth committed suicide, Johnny blamed himself. How could he not have seen how deeply depressed she had become? Only Johnny had no idea the degree to which Elsbeth's desperation had progressed. The note she left said that she had done something terrible that she couldn't stop. He knew that Elsbeth had been dabbling in magic, but all of that dark magic stuff is make-believe, right? Then again, Elsbeth's best friend, Mary, did claim to have seen a dark, cloaked figure outside the day she found Elsbeth's body. That is, she saw him right before she lost her mind for a period of time and was found wandering aimlessly down the rural streets. The police could find no evidence the man actually existed.

Two years have passed and Johnny is still trying to fill the void Elsbeth left in his life. Unbeknownst to him, something peculiar has been plaguing the literary world. It seems agents are committing horrific suicides left and right, all shortly after a visit from a dark, cloaked man identifying himself as William Bagnold from Two Ravens Publishing out of London. Problem is, Two Ravens Publishing hasn't existed since 1944. And Bagnold claims he is representing a client by the name of Elsbeth Malone.

The Right Thing by James Richard Larson is an absolutely thrilling novel. It is refreshing to find an author with such literary adeptness in the horror genre. Larson’s style could be compared to that of Stephen King, without the quirkiness. The story lacks any degree of predictability, keeping the reader on the edge of their seat from the first until the very last page.



*I am astounded this novel came from a vanity press. I became glued to it from page one, I would think publishers would be scrambling for it. Although I'm wondering if the terrible things that keep happening to agents in the novel has anything to do with it, LOL?
 
 
Magick, Horror, and Suspense! A fast-paced Thriller that Stephen King would enjoy!, March 26, 2007

"The Right Thing" is right for me! The first line of this book Grabbed me, and pulled me in. I was hooked from the beginning, and delved into the unfolding mysteries. "The Right Thing" draws the Reader into an isolated home in a pristine blanket of snow, the visit quickly revealing that within this quaint house lies a horrific surprise. Shocked, and unable to process what she has seen, a visitor nearly goes mad.

The Reader becomes so invested in the tragic and magickal events that pages turn without our realizing how deeply we are drawn into the story. Forces are called forth from beyond, entering the world, and infusing the story with life...and death.

The author's masterful use of vernacular, colloquialisms, "Inside" (in the know) speech patterns, and stories within stories draws the Reader further into the unfolding events. Much like Stephen King (but with his own Unique style), the author introduces us to a new person, makes us care about that person...then creates suspense and gives surprise twists that hook us further and drag us deeper into the mysteries. Each person we meet we become invested in, and must know more. Each chapter is written with unique styles, flowing with local slang and speech patterns which bring each person to life, as some confront death.

Who is "The Man in Black?" Why is he so ubiquitous, and frightening? Who called him forth into the lives of so many individuals? Why does his stare control so much and so many?

Those Readers who know Creativity, the Arts, Literature...or the Black Arts...will feel compelled to delve further into the mysteries and suspense. Pages will turn and magick will unfold, answers will be sought as Time becomes precious.

I have not been so inspired by a book in many years, and I was completely immersed in the quest for closure of the mystery and to see if the horrific events could be overcome.

Magick, Horror, and Suspense! A fast-paced Thriller that Stephen King would enjoy! By the author of:
The Eye of Odin

Do "The Right Thing" for James Richard Larson. You will not regret it.


 
Great Book!, April 27, 2007

I get a lot of offers from people to review their books as a result of my writing reviews on Amazon. I always say I will be happy to, providing the person sends me a book. Only about half of the people do. This is the first book of this nature that I am actually going to review, as many of the others were not enjoyable to me and I cannot in good conscience give a bad review to an aspiring author - being one myself!

This book however, necessitates a review. I can count on one hand how many books I have read that grabs the reader in the first chapter the way this one did. Ten minutes into the book I was hooked. The writing style was friendly and folksy, quite reminiscent of Stephen King in my opinion. The story itself also deserves high praise. Book publishers begin to die in bizarre ways - some by what is thought to be murder, others by what is thought to be suicide. Without spoiling the plot, neither of these causes of death is accurate. The truth is far more sinister.

The author here uses a unique device where many chapters often introduce new characters and sub-stories surrounding the soon-to-be-departed book publishers. I was impressed how quickly I became attached to the new characters - a sure sign of a skilled writer. The common thread throughout these chapters consisted of the widower of a deceased novelist - who had a penchant for the occult and also died under mysterious circumstances - begins to notice a pattern that the dead book publishers were all people who had rejected his wife's book. Moreover, he discovers that a "man in black" visited these victims prior to their deaths. The same man who was allegedly seen outside his home the day of his own wife's death. Peter Benchley used the same structure of constantly introducing new characters in "The Beast" - if only to kill them off - and it worked well in that book and was just as effective here.

I strongly recommend this book, not just because it has some gory deaths of book publishers [which is a fantasy of many writers I suspect] but also because it represents what independent publishing should be about.

Do the "Right Thing", and buy this book!

Relic113

 
A great beginning, a great ending, and a darn good story in between, May 1, 2007
By  Daniel Jolley "darkgenius" (Shelby, North Carolina USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

This may be James Richard Larson's first horror novel, but the man knows how to tell a good story and conjure up a creepy atmosphere. The Right Thing hits the ground running, the first chapter bristling with suspense and a strong sense of malevolence as the reader gets a disturbing introduction to the mysterious "man in black" - seen first as a deathly quiet form lurking at the edge of the forest, and then in a much more up close and personal way - it's enough to send one female character into hysteria. Now, I'm not saying this book will have you huddled in a corner in the fetal position; it will, however, hook you solidly in the very first chapter with its presence and atmosphere. As for the ending, Larson delivers a little last-minute surprise that basically hit me right out of the blue. That definitely calls for a kudos on my part.

Johnny Malone's world is turned up side down by the sudden death of his wife Elsbeth. All of the evidence points to suicide, so Johnny reluctantly tries to accept the fact that he never saw any of the warning signs his wife must have shown him. When Elsbeth's friend Mary (the hysterical woman who found the body and saw the "man in black") and Mary's mother tell him that his wife was not only a believer but a practitioner of the black arts, he refuses to believe it. He thought his wife's interest in magickal objects was strictly symbolic in nature. The idea that Elsbeth had indeed done something terrible and unleashed something she could not control (as she had claimed in her suicide note) begins to make a little more sense to Johnny, however, after a string of suspicious deaths begins to coalesce around his own little world.

The one thing Elsbeth had always desperately wanted was to be a published writer. After years of labor, however, she had nothing to show for her effort other than a sizeable collection of rejection letters. Her increasingly vitriolic comments about the agents who turned her away is laid bare in the personal files of her computer, but the depth of her frustration and anger may best be revealed by a series of deaths claiming the lives of several literary agents all across the country. In each case, the individual is called upon by a strange English man claiming to be publishing Elsbeth's last novel and dies by his/her own hand under mysterious circumstances shortly thereafter.

The story sometimes wanders slightly afield as the lives and deaths of secondary characters are presented, but everything really comes full circle by the end. There is a lot of action along the way, and not just in terms of suicides and murders: you also have a bondage scene, an attempted rape, drug deals going down (and going wrong), and all sorts of sundry affairs.

The Right Thing is quite an impressive horror novel. Even when the road of plot development seems pretty straight and narrow, Larson manages to conceal some black spots on the surface and to throw in a few dangerous curves that hit you unawares - right up until the very end. I also appreciated the variety of deaths the author inflicted on a number of his characters. To sum up, I for one hope that this, Larson's first horror novel, is not also his last.

 
In the Wake of the Man in Black, May 12, 2007
By  Lonnie E. Holder "The Review's the Thing" (Sullivan, Illinois United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

There are many different ways to write a novel. One of the most challenging ways is to write a series of vignettes and then tie them together with a unifying theme. James Richard Larson does that in the horror novel "The Right Thing."

Elsbeth Malone is an aspiring novelist. Elsbeth wrote a novel titled "Circle of Light" and sent it to a lengthy list of agents. Unfortunately, every one of the agents she sent her manuscript to has rejected it. Unfortunately for those agents, Elsbeth also practices magic; not just any magic, but black magic.

There is a man in black. Death precedes him and it follows him. Perhaps he is death. The man in black has multiple incarnations and they call themselves William Bagnold of Two Ravens Publishing of London, England. Every time someone checks on Mr. William Bagnold and Two Ravens Publishing, they learn that Mr. Bagnold has been dead for decades, as dead as Two Ravens Publishing, which went out of business around World War II. Mr. Bagnold does not care whether he is dead. Mr. Bagnold is on a mission, a mission set by Mrs. Elsbeth Malone before she killed herself.

This story follows John Malone as he tries to recover from the apparent suicide of his wife. We meet the man in black very early in the novel, and his first appearance is not auspicious for anyone he encounters, including Elsbeth Malone. John slowly learns sinister facts related to his wife's death and eventually learns that he may have a connection to the mysterious man in black. "The Right Thing" also follows the man in black as he visits literary agents across the United States, asking each of the agents that they do the right thing for his client, Elsbeth Malone. Each of the visits by the man in black to a literary agent is a short story, sewn into a novel by the mysterious mission of the man in black.

The tension in this novel slowly rises as John learns about the man in black, determined to understand who or what he is. At first John thinks the man in black is imaginary, but as time passes John learns that many other people have seen the man in black, nearly always to their regret. John's mission becomes desperate when he realizes that the man in black may have targeted a woman he has grown to love for a visit.

Endings rarely surprise me. I have read many novels and I have gotten to the point where I thought I had seen all the possible variations on an ending. However, the ending to "The Right Thing" surprised me so much that I had to read it several times. James Richard Larson tricked me with his superb sleight of hand ending.

James Richard Larson's story-telling pulled me into this novel quickly. The pile of bodies builds quickly in the wake of the man in black, and so did my fascination with the novel. In between bodies are all sorts of other perversions and crimes that add further spice to this story.

James Richard Larson also did a daring thing. Eliphas Lévi that Larson mentions in this novel was a real person. Larson ties Bagnold and Lévi together, and though he never provides specifics of the relationship, he does say that Bagnold carried on with Lévi's work, and he says that Bagnold surpassed Lévi.

This novel is quite clever. The story is fast-paced and contains a lot of action between the explanations. Though this book is Larson's third, and his first fictional novel, he knows what he is doing. I look forward to seeing where Larson's abilities take him.

If you like novels about mysterious characters from the beyond stalking about the country leaving a wake of death, you will find this novel to be superb. Fans of Stephen King and Dean Koontz should consider reading this novel by James Richard Larson.

Enjoy!

 
The Sting of Rejection, May 5, 2007
By  James T. Herro (greenfield, wi United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

Perhaps no feeling breeds ill-will more than being rejected. One's life work ridiculed and laughed at, gnaws at the core of our humanity. Mr. Larson' book, The Right Thing, probes one solution to this injustice. Bagnold, a name reincarnated from Larson's first novel, is up to his old devilish ways. The book is well written and the plot intricately conceived. A must read for avid horror lovers.



 
Another page turner from Larson!, April 24, 2007
By  J. I. Meyers "Paleo-Carnivore Guy" (Flagstaff, AZ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

James R. Larson has written three books that I have read, and like the others, this one does not disappoint. It is a quick and exciting read, a book I found difficult to put down. It is not complex, but simply enjoyable. Mr. Larson has a way of making his characters come alive. His books truly transport the reader to another world; the primary reason we read books, is it not? The Right Thing is a thriller that is fun and exciting, but doesn't require a post-graduate degree to follow. I truly and highly recommend this and other James Richard Larson books.


 
 The Right Thing, March 29, 2007
By  Lester Jakubiak (waukesha, WI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is the 3rd book I have read by Jim Larson. He just keeps improving. This book on horror is right up there with King and Koontz.









 

 

The Right Thing

A novel by James Richard Larson

Comments from critic and reader Judy Holliday:

"Gripping and suspenseful."

"The characters...<became> real to me in this riveting novel."

"I was totally unprepared for the surreal ending."

"This is truly a must-read!"