Saturday, September 30, 2017
Review: Collected Halloween Horror Shorts: Trick 'r Treat
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Release Oct. 1
Review: Collected Easter Horror Shorts (Kevin Kennedy and Various)
I've totally enjoyed the first two anthologies in this series COLLECTED CHRISTMAS HORROR SHORTS and COLLECTED EASTER HORROR SHORTS) so I was poised to expect a delightfully horrific romp through the ramifications of horror lovers' favourite holiday. Needless to say, once again, Mr. Kennedy has collated an excellent set of tales to inspire and frighten all of us who love horror well delivered, thoughtful, and scary. I'd like to especially note Kevin Kennedy' s tale of "HalloweenIand," a "traveling" carnival with Lovecraftian tendencies (just read it--you'll see) which we all need to hope never travels to our locale [if it ever visits your town, lock up your pets and your kids and stay home, safe].
Meanwhile, settle in for a rockin' October with a chilled spine as you peruse these tales. Remember, horror writers and storytellers were delivering the scares long before the invention of horror films. So.why not spend your October with books?
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Friday, September 29, 2017
Review: Quiet Places: A Novella of Cosmic Folk Horror
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: QUIET PLACES by Jasper Bark
I read an earlier version of this fascinating story in.the lovely 2016 anthology GREEN AND PLEASANT LAND VOL. 1, edited by Steve J. Shaw, which collected rural British horror. This version, according to the author's own account, is greatly revised plus expanded.
Those who've read Jasper Bark' s THE FINAL CUT; BED OF CRIMSON ROSES; STUCK ON YOU; and others know that he is a master indeed when it comes to laying out the gore. But you also know, as with THE FINAL CUT, he is equally accomplished playing in the fields of metaphysics. Here in QUIET PLACES, he strums chords somewhat reminiscent of those in THE FINAL CUT, but here he presents a totally British setting. Indeed, I cannot imagine such a tale occurring anywhere but in isolated, insular, rural, small-village Britain, a land where millennia of history drape the region, and heavy upon the head of scions lies history's burden, and the obligation of duty to one's lessers.
My especial thanks to Mr. Bark for including my humble name in his acknowledgements--indeed an honour.
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Thursday, September 28, 2017
Review: Money Back Guarantee
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: MONEY BACK GUARANTEE by Hunter Shea
(MAIL ORDER MASSACRES)
WOW! WOW! WOW! Talk about pageturner! Talk about speed of light reading experience! Hunter Shea continues to outdo himself!
I didn't breathe while reading. I certainly didn't blink. If the world ended, guess I missed it. Nothing existed for me but the characters and plot in this story.
Three truisms here:
If it's too good to be true, it isn't true. Avoid it.
The customer is NOT always right. Sometimes, the customer is dead.
Yes, Virginia, there really are worse bugaboos than multinational corporations or the government. And they're hungry and like to toy with humanity. Beware.
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Review: Infinite Darkness
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: INFINITE DARKNESS by Patrick Reuman
and Others
The word I most take away from this book is: SCARY. Scary, Scary, Scary. Yes, indeed. Impressively so.
What author/curator Patrick Reuman accomplishes herein is to gently cocoon stories of other authors, within a framework of his own writing. It's not a format I've encountered before, but it works excellently. The reader doesn't have time to repress the fear from one story before launching into the horror of the next. Titled "INFINITE DARKNESS," that is truth in advertising, because darkness both covers and infuses this collection, and rightfully so.
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Wednesday, September 27, 2017
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Review: Shadows Over Main Street Volume 2
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: SHADOWS OVER MAIN STREET VOLUME 2 (Various Authors. Editors, Doug Murano and D. Alexander Ward)
This extraordinary anthology series continues, with this new volume. It's readily understandable that the Editors, Doug Murano and D. Alexander Ward, are Bram Stoker Award nominees. Their ability to identify and collate excellence is definitely gifted.
Often when reading a collection or anthology, I keep a mental running total of my personal favorites, but for SHADOWS OF MAIN STREET VOLUME 2, I would have to list every single entry. Here we have horror: subtle, scary, all-consuming. We have Lovecraftian overtones, of Elder Gods, of cosmic horrors inconceivable, worshipped by incalculable monsters, holding the universe hostage. If your spine doesn't chill, if your hair doesn't stand vertical, if your skin isn't 100% goosebumps_then you must not have read this anthology.
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Monday, September 25, 2017
Review: Fahrenheit 451
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: FAHRENHEIT 451 by Ray Bradbury
Something there is about Ray Bradbury' s incredible gift that is unlike any other I've read. I am certain that in some mysterious and unaccountable fashion, reading FAHRENHEIT 451 changed my life--or at least, altered me internally.
This novel made me grieve, for all the lost books, for all the lost knowledge, for the Firemen, who are such instruments of wanton destruction, and for a virtually blinded, "dumbed-down" populace, who would rather watch spectacularly-staged televised "talking heads" on their living room walls, than read or even think.
From the beginning, I knew this is a Dystopiana I never want to enter or experience. However, 64 years after its initial publication, popular culture holds little hope of avoiding it. We can only hope that, as in the conclusion of FAHRENHEIT 451, those there are who will memorize and retain millennia of wisdom, who will retain the wisdom of books.
The story is all about book burning {shudder}, and the title is the temperature at which paper burns. It's also a chronicle of the triumph of the human spirit, despite... It's a chronicle of wonder, and amazement, of the evolution of the imagination, and of change.
Read for Banned Books Week 2017
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Sunday, September 24, 2017
BANNED BOOKS WEEK SEPTEMBER 24-30
Banned Books Week is an initiative of the American Library Association and its Office for Intellectual Freedom. This year's event is September 24-30, inclusive. "Challenged" titles are those which an individual or group finds offensive, for whatever criterion. Usually criteria include profanity or obscenity; sexual references; religious or anti-religious connotations; ethnic reference or bias; and inappropriateness for a specified age group (occasionally, for all age groups).
Challenges are attempts to remove or restrict the material. Banning means the challenged title is actually taken out of the curriculum, library, bookstore. Occasionally, books have even been destroyed--yes, in America also. (More on that topic in a subsequent post.)
Find out more here:
Banned Books Week
Review: OCEANS: The Anthology
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: OCEANS: THE ANTHOLOGY (Various Authors; edited Daniel Arthur Smith)
What a wonderfully imaginative, creatively speculative, multi-author collection! I loved it! I was intrigued by the title, as I have been an aficionado of the Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic sub-genres for nearly six decades, and because over the last couple of years that interest has focused on rising sea levels, climate change, and Lovecraftian apocalypses. I found plenty to gratify my intrigue here, and OCEANS: THE ANTHOLOGY has found a place on my special rereader shelf. You can't go wrong here, as there is much from which to choose, all of it guaranteed to stretch the imagination.
Kindle release Sept. 26 2017
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Saturday, September 23, 2017
Review: 13 Night Terrors: An Anthology of Horror and Dark Fiction
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: 13: NIGHT TERRORS ANTHOLOGY (Various)
This third entry in Limitless Publishing's wonderful "13" Anthology series is every bit as delightful and engrossing as the first two entries. You want page-turning thrills? You got it here, you truly do. Horror, dark, grief, spooky, shocking, your choice. The added benefit is that this is a multi-author anthology. Got a favorite author or two? Go for it. A weekend free for reading? Sit down and read straight through. Not enough time? Sample a story; the rest will be there when you are ready. Or follow a returning author from one entry to the next. You can't go wrong. But you can take some truly scary pathways.
Release: September 26 2017
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Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Review: Monsters
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: MONSTERS by Thomas Smith
I loved this horror novella! It was an entertaining one-session read for me, much more due to my enrapture in the story than to length. Protagonist Jack has so much about which he could boast_; but he keeps his knowledge and talents to himself, an effective vigilante for the forces of good. What a refreshing character!
I can't be too specific, in order not to give away the tale. There is gore--in monstrous bucketloads. There are monsters--human and not. There is a wonderfully engaging tale. I expect to think of this one for quite a while.
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Friday, September 15, 2017
Review: Ugly Little Things: Collected Horrors
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: UGLY LITTLE THINGS by Todd Keisling
When commencing an anthology or a single-author collection, a reader often doesn't know quite what to expect in terms of quantity. Some single-author collections are of such high quality, consistently, that the discerning reader wishes to read, savor, reread, ponder. This year I have been immensely privileged and gratified to discover two magnificent authors new to me, via the venue of their collections: Paul F. Olson, WHISPERED ECHOES, and now Todd Keisling, in UGLY LITTLE THINGS.
Oh my oh my. When I am in the presence of a master, I am rendered speechless. I had requested to review UGLY LITTLE THINGS in advance of release, and from page one was awestruck. A review copy was not enough; I rushed to purchase. There is no single story, no single page, in this collection that is not extraordinarily perfect. I don't know from whence Mr. Keisling derives such a gift; I am satisfied to bask in his application of it.
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Sunday, September 10, 2017
Review: Carter & Lovecraft
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: CARTER & LOVECRAFT by Jonathan Howard
I am so totally impressed with CARTER & LOVECRAFT: very faithful to the master, and expands the Mythos in an unexpected direction. I love to read of science, and of metaphysics tautly combined with science. I won't go into too much detail, so as not to spoil the many surprises; suffice it to state, if you love Lovecraft, or love the Mythos, you will surely be awestruck.
For those who aren't Lovecraft fanboys and fangirls, let me say that Jonathan Howard is a superb novelist. Despite the very serious nature of the plot, his tone is laid back, he treats the horrors so subtly, so that they really are startling and frightening because so unexpected! I have in mind several particular scenes, exquisitely undertaken. Jonathan Howard definitely is firmly established in the Lovecraft Mythos pantheon.
I am delighted to discover CARTER & LOVECRAFT. I can't imagine anyone not loving this novel, and I am ecstatically anticipating the release of the sequel in November!
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Sunday, September 3, 2017
Review: Ride the Lighting
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Review: RIDE THE LIGHTNING by Nick Younker
Reading this short story is a joy and delight, as I have found to be true throughout Nick Younker' s oeuvre. RIDE THE LIGHTNING focuses on two intrepid young men, lifelong friends as close as brothers. Scott and Brandon are intrepid explorers of the unknown: supernatural, paranormal, outre. This story links to the mysterious State Island in Lake Michigan, to the cursed millennia-old Native American Turik, to Lucy, Indiana, and to the disappeared online journalist of the paranormal, Duncan Criss.
Scott and Brandon's quests take them to State Island, where they discover that, like Cthulhu, that which is dead is still extremely dangerous, and for Brandon, their visit becomes a life-altering encounter.
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Saturday, September 2, 2017
OCTOBER IS LOVECRAFT COUNTRY!!! FRIGHTFALL 2017
Michelle Miller of Seasons of Reading is also holding a September-long Edgar Allan Poe reading at her blog Castle Macabre, which inspired me to declare my personal version of October reading:
LOVECRAFT COUNTRY
In hopes that this Christmas Eve will see Cthhulhu slithering down my chimney, or that Samhain will bring the proper alignment of stars for Cthulhu to awake from his dead and dreaming sleep in sunken R'lyeh, I will spend October in the pursuit of the Master, H. P. Lovecraft, and of his worthy successors who toil in the fields of the Lovecraft Mythos. I will read as much of the original HPL as I can, plus novels, short stories, anthologies, and collections in the Mythos. {Who knows, perhaps I shall be gifted with Cthulhuian dreams?}
October 1:
I collated a list of about 27 books.
October 2:
October 3:
October 4:
October 6:
October 7:
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL VOLUME 3
October 8-9:
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL VOLUME FOUR
October 9-11:
October 12:
THE BALLAD OF BLACK TOM by Victor LaValle
(NEW AGE BUNDLE by Tabatha Zalot--for review
RELIGION HISTORY BUNDLE by Michael Stewart--for review
OCTOBER 13:
OCTOBER 13-14:
OCTOBER 14-20:
OCTOBER 15:
OCTOBER 16:
OCTOBER 16-17:
PARADOX BOUND by Peter Clines
OCTOBER 17:
ANCIENT HISTORY BUNDLE by Robert Dean
OCTOBER 18:
THE DEMON GUARDIAN
BUBBY'S PUDDLE POND (children's, Nature)
OCTOBER 19:
THE GIRL WHO IGNORED GHOSTS, by K. C. Tansley (reread, from 2015)
SUB-BASEMENT, by Carol McMahon (horror)
OCTOBER 20-22:
OCTOBER 21:
OCTOBER 22:
HAUNTING OF CHAMBERS HOUSE by Sable Ridge
THE HAUNTING OF ANDLER HOUSE by K. C. Banter
OCTOBER 23:
WEEKEND GETAWAY
OCTOBER 24:
BEER 2 in 1 BUNDLE: ULTIMATE GUIDE [review]
OCTOBER 22-24:
OCTOBER 22-25:
OCTOBER 25:
OCTOBER 25-26:
OCTOBER 26:
TWO HALLOWEEN TALES by Mark Scioneaux and Dane Hatchell
OCTOBER 27:
OCTOBER 28:
OCTOBER 27-28:
OCTOBER 29:
SLITHERS by W.W. Mortensen
OCTOBER 30:
AMERICAN HISTORY BUNDLE II (review)
LIONS AND THE LIVING DEAD by Ruby Loren
DINO AND MONSTER AND THE MAGIC CARPET (children)
OCTOBER 30-31:
NOVEMBER 1 Wrap-Up:
NOVEMBER 1 Wrap-Up:
56 books. 3 are children's, + 1 juvenile version (Frankenstein).
3 short stories by H. P. Lovecraft {I'll endeavor to improve this month.} 10 are either single-author collections or anthologies (one of those is a 2-author, 2-story). 10 review non-fiction
29 are novels or novellas.
THE X-VARIANT by Rosemary Cole (sci fi),
FRANKENSTEIN, adaptation by Saviour Pirotta (for Junior Readers)(horror classic),
SMILEY by Michael Ezell (serial killer mystery/police procedural).
IN THE COMPANY OF FALSE GODS
PUCKERED
CARNACKI, THE GHOST FINDER
MESTLVN
AFTER THE END OF THE WORLD
YOGA NIDRA MEDITATION
THELEMA By Colin D.Campbell
LOVECRAFT COUNTRY by Matt Ruff
"DREAMS IN THE WITCH HOUSE" by H. P. Lovecraft
DEVIL BOARD by Glen Frost
THE CHANGELING
ENCOUNTERS WITH ENOCH COFFIN by W. H. Pugmire and Jeffrey Thomas
DISTURBED by Jennifer Jaynes (psychological suspense)
FRANKENSTEIN: A LIFE BEYOND by Pete Planisek
HEALTH BUNDLE by Diana Campbell
THE KING IN YELLOW DELUXE EDITION by Robert W. Chambers
"THE COLOUR OUT OF SPACE," H. P. Lovecraft
WICKED HAUNTED Anthology, New England Horror Writers
THE STRANGE CASE AT MISTY RIDGE by David Brian
"Picture in the House" by H. P. Lovecraft
MURDER IS A MONKEY'S GAME
AFTERNOON TEA 2 in 1 BUNDLE [review]
PSYCHOLOGICAL BREAKDOWN (collection) by David Owain Hughes
TALES FROM THE LAKE VOLUME 4
THE WENDIGO by Algernon Blackwood
HAVEN by Tom Deady {Bram Stoker Award Winner, debut novel]
A HALLOWEEN NIGHT by Laura Hiram [poem, children's]
DON'T BURY ME by Nick Younker
THE FOURTH PROPHECY by Ernest Dempsey
ARACHNOSAUR by Richard Jeffries
MONOCHROMES AND OTHER STORIES by Matt Bechtel
JOURNALING BUNDLE (review)
THE BLACK GOAT MOTORCYCLE CLUB By Jason Murphy (Lovecraftian horror)