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Michael Lightsey

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In 1973, Michael was born in Ohio and grew up with an eclectic mixture of art, athletics, music, and theatre. In high school, he was inducted into the National Honor Society, won the Westerville Art League Scholarship, the Louis Armstrong Jazz Award, the Quill & Scroll Journalism Award, achieved the rank of Eagle Scout, and was inducted into Who's Who in American High Schools in 1991.

He attended Columbus College of Art & Design on scholarship and studied theatre at The Ohio State University. While at OSU, he won the Gerald Black Theatre Scholarship and the Central Ohio Theatre Critics Circle Award.

In the late 1990s, he moved to California, where his acting work earned him a nomination at the Los Angeles Robby Awards and an honorable mention at the Back Stage West Garland Awards. Since 2006, he's worked as an IATSE Union Box Office clerk at Center Theatre Group.

His abstract art has placed him as a finalist in The Artist's Magazine. His portrait art is among the private estates of Kirk Douglas, Angela Lansbury, Barry Humphries, Cicely Tyson, Terry Gilliam, Phylicia Rashad, John Leguizamo, and Sting.

Through the years, he's also served his time on Mother Earth as an activist, bartender, courier, dancer, director, janitor, masseur, Mensan, model, musician, producer, short-order cook, singer, stagehand, stuntman, and writer.

After raising two children, he now lives in California, where he enjoys making art when he's not making his family crazy.

HECATE’S LABYRINTH Cover
SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY

HECATE’S LABYRINTH

BY Michael Lightsey • POSTED ON March 30, 2021

Lightsey’s debut fantasy novel follows a teenager, seemingly lost in time, who may be destined to bring peace to hostile nations.

In the modern era, Helena, a 19-year-old witch and the Russian president’s daughter, is held captive by a Georgian army deserter on a boat at sea. She manages to escape her abductor’s clutches, only to wind up overboard and unconscious. When she comes to, she’s safely inside Sarkel Fortress in the year 1361, which is assuredly not the year Helena is from… though her memories are oddly jumbled. The people she encounters there believe that Helena is the new Essenoi, the only one who can defeat Icelos—a nightmare god whose destructive path threatens to incite war between Russia and Georgia. This god’s lair lies within a “phantom” fortress that only appears at a certain time and place. Helena has a shot at finding it with the help of eccentric pickpockets Dogett and Catiana, who have allegedly been there. Surely, she can conjure up a way to destroy the god of nightmares, especially with her book smarts and the new knowledge she unexpectedly picks up in the mid-14th century. Lightsey’s novel overflows with references to classic literature and religious texts, from Shakespeare’s works to the ancient I Ching. The determinedly convoluted plot repeatedly jolts Helena, who’s surprised when discovering she can, for example, read myriad languages. The narrative includes such reliably entertaining genre trademarks as a well-defined quest and fantastical creatures like hobgoblins and pixies. Helena is an appealing, intuitive hero, while her comrades, Dogett and Catiana, deliver abundant humor courtesy of their perpetual bickering and unforgettable insults (“Caluminous, full-gorged measle!”). The sublime ending, though open to interpretation, provides readers with welcome illumination.

A sensational cast fuels this exuberant tale that baffles as often as it charms.

Pub Date: March 30, 2021

ISBN: 9781794867437

Page count: 234pp

Review Posted Online: Oct. 23, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2023

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