One of the top three vampire movies ever!
I loved the look of the vampires and the horrible sound they made, it was nice that no cgi was used and they still looked very scary.
The idea of people being isolated in a small Alskan town for thirty days and thirty nights is fantastic! Love it.
Author: Steve Vernon Man, with a title like that how could you go wrong?
Vampire Outlaw of the Milky Way is a tight little explosion of a novella that ties a connection between a young autistic boy, Fred Flintstone, a galaxy-spanning evil empire, a six-armed warrior, an animate ship and the toff-duelist who wears her sister’s armour, and of course a vampire outlaw.
Ochse’ sense of playful creativity knows no bounds as he creates an intriguing world-vision that could easily carry a novel or two all by its own self. Definitely a new way of looking at vampires and given Weston Ochse’ budding potential as an author I’d bet the street value of this novella is bound to appreciate.
This little gem of a book was released in an edition of 300 perfect bound numbered copies and 26 lettered hardcover texts. I recommend you pick this up, quicker than you can say Yabbadabbadoo.
Author: geoff guthrie This is a fun sci-fi pulp story, reminiscent of Robert Silverberg back in the 50’s, but with a lot of humor. The main character is the vampire, and it tells a story of a failed attempt to rescue a shared one. A shared one is a creature with a shared soul with another across the universe. The Vampire, Moonray is also a shared one, and it is with a human boy from earth who also happens to be mentally disabled. But the boy knows who Moonray is. Without going into detail, there is a link between the two and is deteriorating because of the boy and Moonray must figure out a way to fix that problem. At first I was unsure of the parts with the earth boy, but in the end it all worked out and made sense. This was a fun book.
Author: Josef Hernandez In Vampire Outlaws, Ochse creates a B movie world of action and science fiction to rival the old sci fi pulps of old. This is the story of a vampire and the ragtag ship and aliens the surround him as he tries to find a way to preserve his connection to an autistic human child on Earth. This is a trip through the light fantastic as Ochse gives us a story that is both entertaining and bizarre but never boring. Recommended.
Author: Richard Spiers My first experience with Weston Osche has been a delight for this reviewer. His prose was light, crisp, and entertaining.
Brian Keene's introduction gushes over Osche and rightly so.
The main plot involves the anti-heroic vampire Monray. Together hea nd his band zoom across the galaxy ruled by a tainted royalty, and featuring a capitalistic organization ruled by greed.
You might think that Osche has created just another workable and lively weird tale franchise. He has, but the poignancy and immediacy of this fantasy is not the vivid characters, but the b-plot of the novella.
The heart of the book is a little broken boy with autism. His Mom and Dad love him very much, but he's had a relapse and it's tearing their family and their hearts apart. Trying every imaginable therapy, they are at their wits end until the boy is placed before a keyboard and begins to type out what is really going on in his private, cloistered, and unimaginable world.