Books
The ‘Halloween Kills’ Novelization Drops a Very Unexpected “Cult of Thorn” Connection
At the time of writing this article I am 200 pages into writer Tim Waggoner‘s Halloween Kills, the official novelization of David Gordon Green’s sequel. As Waggoner recently explained in an interview with our own Jason Jenkins, “I was able to write it pretty much from the script,” which is usually how these sorts of things work. Waggoner was provided with the script for Halloween Kills and he wrote out the novelization based on the dialogue and descriptions found therein, building out from there to turn the script into a 312-page novel.
Characters and situations get fleshed out a bit more in Waggoner’s official novelization, which notably provides a backstory for the ill-fated Anthony Tivoli and touches upon what legacy characters including Tommy Doyle, Lindsey Wallace, and Lonnie Elam have been up to in recent years. And Waggoner also works fun some Easter Eggs into the mix for Halloween fans.
As he explained to BD, “I had two different editors on the project, and one of them was a big Halloween fan. Together, we seeded little Easter eggs throughout the book, just for fun.”
One of those Easter Egg nods is to Rob Zombie’s Halloween 2, with Waggoner making mention of a pizza shop called “White Horse Pizza,” but that’s not even the deepest or most interesting cut for fans of the Halloween franchise. That honor belongs to a nod on page 85, wherein Waggoner makes sure to give the infamous “Cult of Thorn” mythology a little mention.
One of the more polarizing ideas in the franchise’s history, the Cult of Thorn mythology was woven into Halloween 4, Halloween 5, and Halloween 6 as a way to explain Michael’s supernatural powers, but all of those sequels have of course been wiped away by the current timeline. In this timeline, after all, only the original classic remains part of the experience.
Nevertheless, the Halloween Kills novelization reveals that Tommy Doyle (played by Anthony Michael Hall in the movie) has a Cult of Thorn tattoo, just like Halloween 6‘s Michael Myers!
Waggoner writes, “Tommy… in some ways he was the worst of them, including Laurie. Ever since the night that Laurie saved him and Lindsey from Michael, he’d had difficulty controlling his anger. He had a hair-trigger temper, was quick to take offense at any perceived slight, no matter how mild, and he could be irritable, impatient, and impulsive. He’d gotten into a lot of fights in high school, and even more after he’d graduated. He drifted from job to job, unable to hold on to one for any length of time without blowing his top off at someone – usually his boss – or taking a swing at them. He’d gone through a series of relationships, but they never lasted long either. No one wanted to be the partner of someone with such a volatile emotional state.
“… Tommy had been in therapy on and off since his late twenties, and while he’d picked up a lot of psychological tools to help him deal with his anger, it was by no means fully under control. He was so obsessed with Michael and all things Halloween that he’d gotten a tattoo of a Thorn rune on his left arm, and when he was anxious, he rubbed his hand over it subconsciously.”
The book digs no further into the Halloween 6 connection, and doesn’t explain the tattoo for readers unfamiliar with the franchise’s past, but it’s a fun little connection that’s sure to have hardcore fans salivating with theories. Tommy Doyle was of course the central protagonist character in Halloween 6, however he was played by Paul Rudd back then. That version of Tommy Doyle, a character from the original classic, was similarly obsessed with Michael Myers and the Thorn mythology. Does this mean those two versions of Tommy are the same man?
At the end of the day, of course, it’s likely little more than an Easter Egg slipped in by Waggoner. In Halloween Kills, the movie, no such tattoo is ever seen on Tommy Doyle’s arm.
But it sure is fun to think about…
The Halloween Kills novelization is available now. Grab a copy here.
Books
‘Fabulous Bodies’ Review: Chuck Tingle Latest is a Wild, Unputdownable Ride
Chuck Tingle‘s writing is embedded with a particular tonal trick that makes him perfectly suited to horror. “Propulsive” is the first word that comes to mind when I think of Tingle’s energetic prose, and when his books start wrapping themselves around characters and digging through their various complexities, it’s easy to be pulled along, absorbed in the feeling that an old friend is simply telling you a story.
Then Tingle will drop one of the single creepiest bits of imagery you’ve ever read, and you’re right back in the horror space. It’s not always a jump scare, but it is always a pulsing feeling of dread that keeps you hooked through the rest of the book.
Fabulous Bodies, Tingle’s latest horror novel, carries on these gifts, and the promise Tingle showed on books like Camp Damascus and Bury Your Gays. His fiction’s growing ever more confident and precise, and his eye for horrific detail hasn’t dimmed in the least, making this a summer reading delight for horror fans.
Poppy is a single mother determined to make a better life for her daughter, particularly after growing up in group homes and foster systems. By day, she works hard to keep up the flow of upbeat, enthusiastic content as a fashion influencer, and while that’s going well, it’s not yet making ends meet. To make up the difference, she moonlights as a grave robber, lifting bodies from morgues and funeral homes and selling their pieces on the black market. It’s grueling, dangerous work, and it’s about to pay off big. Out of the blue, Poppy gets a call to transport the newly dead body of her musical hero, the legendary Eddie Michaels. It’s a weird gig, but the payout is big enough that she could walk away from her macabre side gig forever. Poppy takes the job, and things get complicated when Eddie turns out to be, well, only mostly dead.
From the moment Eddie’s corpse enters the picture, Fabulous Bodies takes on the vibe of a road novel, as the grave robber and the undead rock star make stop after stop, and Poppy tries again and again to wrap her mind about what she’s gotten herself into, and how she might get herself out. It’s a delightful premise, and Tingle never loses his grip on the fun of it. No matter how dark the novel gets, and it does get quite dark, the narrative keeps barreling forward, delivering macabre laughs and moments of beautifully gruesome invention along the way.
Because he’s set his protagonist up as a fashion influencer, Tingle has lots of room to play in the space of how we view human bodies, both alive and dead, how we use them, and what we value in them. This is the emotional core of Fabulous Bodies, and while it’s sometimes overshadowed by the runaway train of the plot, it remains a potent source of thematic exploration throughout the book, and it gets more complicated when you consider certain gifts Eddie’s been granted in his strange supernatural state.
In essence, we’re looking at a story about a grave robber who discovers a body that not only fights back, but takes control of any given situation. That throws Poppy for repeated loops and keeps the plot moving, but it also makes us consider on a deeper level exactly what we value about our own physical form, and what might happen when we lose our grip on it entirely.
The book’s themes and emotional concerns hum through the whole narrative, but the overwhelming impression I got while reading Fabulous Bodies was just how much damn fun this book is. I couldn’t stop reading it, not just because it’s so filled with sudden swerves and ghoulish setpieces, but because Tingle has honed his horror storytelling down to a fine, very sharp point. Fabulous Bodies moves like a roller coaster, complete with a tension-filled ramp-up and a finale that’ll leave you breathless by the time the ride is over.
If you haven’t been reading Chuck Tingle’s horror work up to this point, it’s time to get on board, because he’s just getting started, and he’s already mastered the art of the scary page-turner.
Fabulous Bodies is available now.




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