"Atmospheric, suspenseful, passionate, entertaining, and fun! In Ghostflowers ,
Rus Wornom puts a vampire of myth and legend onto the back of a motorcycle,
and sets him loose in the Virginia countryside in the 1970s. Put an Allman
Brothers album on your turntable, and enjoy the ride." -Jamie Malanowski,
author of Commander Will Cushing and The Coup
"As immersive and lyrical as it is brutal and bloody, Ghostflowers is an
unputdownable examination of love, fear, and desperation-a thrill-ride launched
from page one that never lets up." -Mandy McHugh, author of Chloe Cates Is
Missing
"Romantic, mysterious, dark and beautiful, a journey to the alien and familiar, a
1970's small town world of bikers and diners. Thoroughly entertaining!" -
Colleen Doran, Eisner Award, Bram Stoker Award winner, Neil Gaiman's Snow,
Glass, Apples and Neil Gaiman's Chivalry, Creator of A Distant Soil
"Moody, atmospheric and thrilling. Ghostflowers is one hell of a ride. Rus
Wornom has crafted a unique vampire tale that hits you like a burst of sunlight
after leaving a dark room." -Darin De Paul, actor, Shazam!, Justice Society: World
War II, Apex Legends, Overwatch, and Final Fantasy XV
"Ghostflowers gripped me from the first page to the last. It's a glorious blend of
horror and romance, a story as shocking as it is beautiful and firmly rooted in the
southern gothic tradition." -Michael Howarth, author of A Still and Awful Red
"...Brilliant... I read more than half in one sitting. Dinner was late that night. ...
Ghostflowers is steeped in the heat of passion and a melting-pot summer. A
black Gothic rose of a novel, its petals drip with blood of the deepest red. It's a
love story with deadly consequences as its many layers peel back to reveal the
strange truth of the man who came to Stonebridge. There is ecstasy, pain, blood
and much more in this story steeped in atmosphere and the vampire mythos. It is a
horror-love story-that bites. ...I loved it." -Catherine Cavendish, author of The
Garden of Bewitchment and In Darkness, Shadows Breathe
"Like a classic rock song that comes on the radio, Ghostflowers will get stuck in
your head and make you want to read this on repeat! A dark blast!" -Steve Stred,
Splatterpunk-nominated author of Sacrament and Mastodon