5 of 5 Stars Review copy
We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone, the debut short story collection from Ronald Mafi, is a bit of a mixed bag. Although the twenty shorts included do make for an enjoyable read, I have to say I much prefer Malfi's recent novels to the tales included here. Little Girls made my top ten list in 2015, The Night Parade did the same in 2016, and Bone White is my favorite read so far in 2017.
The Dinner Party - The story of a paranoid housewife with an OMG ending. One of the best in the collection. Originally published at the Horror Drive-In.
Learned Children - Scarecrows creep me out and so do high school students. Both are featured prominently in this tale. Originally published at The Crow's Caw.
Knocking - There's an Edgar Allan Poe vibe to this story of strange tapping noise and the disappearance of a young wife. "I heard it again: a labored breathy sound, very much like respiration. My own breath seized in my throat. Then another sound: a dull thud. A knock. This was it—this was the sound Tara had heard coming from behind the closet door." Originally published at Horrorworld.
The Jumping Sharks of Dyer Island - Jealousy will make a man do some strange and potentially deadly things. Originally published in Splatterpunk 2.
The Glad Street Angel - Mafi's descriptive skills are highlighted in this gritty, hardcore story of a young addict just out of prison/rehab. "Carter Johnson is my father's construction worker buddy, and he looks like someone stretched a pair of filthy coveralls over a city bus. His face resembles a burlap sack with eye-holes and his breath is an aromatic amalgamation of unfiltered cigarettes, peppered beef jerky, and steamed cabbage." Originally published in Bare Bone #7.
Under the Tutelage of Mr. Trueheart - A lonely, middle school student befriends an elderly man who believes people are being "replaced." Originally published in Dark Hallows.
The House on Cottage Lane - Living next door to a foster family can be challenging. Troubled kids coming and going. This is the story of one such kid, Oliver, and a Halloween never to be forgotten. A standout tale in this collection. Originally published by Cemetery Dance.
Pembroke - A wonderfully creepy story which takes place in a used bookstore. "'...the other night, when I was straightening up, I went to put the book on the rolling cart when it cut me.' Tom held up his right index finger, which was capped in an adhesive bandage. 'A paper cut,' Pembroke marveled, recalling that odd splotch of blood on the book’s page. 'Yes, of course,' said Tom, 'only that’s not what I thought at the time. Because when it happened, Mr. Pembroke—and this is going to sound ridiculous, I know it—but when it happened, my first thought was that the book had bit me'". Originally published in Dark Discoveries.
In a Pet Shop - A strange woman with a preoccupation with the birds in a pet shop.
Couples Seeking Couples - A story of the dangers of wife swapping. Originally published in 24:7 Magazines.
The Good Father - A wife's infidelity. A father struggling alone with his two young children. Will she ever return and what would happen if she did. Originally published in Lamplight.
The Housewarming - A young, upwardly mobile couple moves into a new neighborhood and throws a housewarming party. As more and more neighbors show up time all but stands still in the twilight zone like story. Originally published in Shadow Masters.
Chupacabra - "I am thinking of the horror stories Martin used to tell me when I was younger and he’d return from weeks and sometimes months on the road. He would tell me of the chupacabra and of the way they drained the fluids from livestock and how, sometimes, they drained the fluids from people, too." Published in Bare Bones #11.
All the Pretty Girls - The tale of a very disturbed mind and a rotting 1962 Mercury Comet. Originally published in Bare Bones #8.
Closing In - Ever get the feeling the walls were closing in on you? Originally published in Dark Discoveries.
Underneath - A strange look at the writing process for a successful writer working under a pen name. Originally published in Lost Cause Quarterly.
All Is Calm - Dealing with the death of a spouse. A glimpse inside the mind of the survivor. Originally published in Bare Bones #10.
Painstation - A co-worker's obsession leads to a strange club where the rules are simple and breaking them can be painful in so many ways. "He pushed against the door and it opened with little protest. Before him, a wooden staircase dipped into blackness. The stink of sulfur now accosted him, potent and unapologetic. Something else, too… Lilacs, he thought. Her perfume." Originally published in Peep Show #3.
Discussions Concerning the Ingestion of Living Insects - A wonderfully disturbing tale of survival. Originally published in Sick: An Anthology of Illness.
Then There is Boston - Malfi closes out his collection with an original story of love and poetry in Boston.
We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone is a fine collection of speculative fiction and one I can readily recommend.
We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone is currently available in hardback, paperback, and e-book formats from JournalStone.
From the author's bio - Ronald Malfi is an award-winning author of several horror novels, mysteries, and thrillers. He's also a Bram Stoker Award nominee. Most recognized for his haunting, literary style, and memorable characters, Malfi's dark fiction has gained acceptance among readers of all genres. He currently lives in Maryland with his wife, Debra, and their two daughters.
Reviews of what I'm reading. Mostly in the Horror genre, but you never know.
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Review: The Crabian Heart - by Erik Hofstatter
4 of 5 Stars
The Crabian Heart protects from inevitable heartaches. It's a story of young love and perhaps, more importantly, an immigrant's tale.
It is a story well-told with beautiful prose.
Aleš obeyed and thought about Enola. He missed her already. She was an enigma, something dangerous but exhilarating—like diving with sharks. Her company dulled the pain of existence.
The Crabian Heart is a living, breathing piece of fiction.
In addition to the main novella, there's a bonus short story from Erik, called Fountain of Drowned Memories.
Erik Hofstatter is not afraid to tackle the difficult subjects. Between the stories in this brief collection, he takes on both immigration and dementia with aplomb.
Recommended.
The Crabian Heart is available now from Parallel Universe Publications. If you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited you can read it at no additional charge. Also, if you are an Amazon Prime member you can read it for FREE using the Kindle Owners Lending Library.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Erik Hofstatter is a dark fiction writer and a member of the Horror Writers Association. Born in the wild lands of the Czech Republic, he roamed Europe before subsequently settling on English shores, studying creative writing at the London School of Journalism. He now dwells in Kent, where he can be encountered consuming copious amounts of mead and tyrannizing local peasantry. Erik's books include The Pariahs, Amaranthine and Other Stories, Katerina, Moribund Tales and Rare Breeds.
The Crabian Heart protects from inevitable heartaches. It's a story of young love and perhaps, more importantly, an immigrant's tale.
It is a story well-told with beautiful prose.
Aleš obeyed and thought about Enola. He missed her already. She was an enigma, something dangerous but exhilarating—like diving with sharks. Her company dulled the pain of existence.
The Crabian Heart is a living, breathing piece of fiction.
In addition to the main novella, there's a bonus short story from Erik, called Fountain of Drowned Memories.
Erik Hofstatter is not afraid to tackle the difficult subjects. Between the stories in this brief collection, he takes on both immigration and dementia with aplomb.
Recommended.
The Crabian Heart is available now from Parallel Universe Publications. If you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited you can read it at no additional charge. Also, if you are an Amazon Prime member you can read it for FREE using the Kindle Owners Lending Library.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Erik Hofstatter is a dark fiction writer and a member of the Horror Writers Association. Born in the wild lands of the Czech Republic, he roamed Europe before subsequently settling on English shores, studying creative writing at the London School of Journalism. He now dwells in Kent, where he can be encountered consuming copious amounts of mead and tyrannizing local peasantry. Erik's books include The Pariahs, Amaranthine and Other Stories, Katerina, Moribund Tales and Rare Breeds.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Review: Teeth of the Sea - by Tim Waggoner
5 of 5 Stars Review copy
Teeth of the Sea begins from the point of view of some very large sea creatures and returns to that viewpoint periodically throughout, to great effect.
Most of the action takes place in and around the relatively new luxury resort, Elysium, far from anywhere, in the middle of the ocean.
Ancient sea creatures return to the place where they've come every ten years or so to lay their eggs and they are terribly hungry.
The best quotes are expletive-laden but are oh so good.
Some deeply buried primal instinct rose within him and shrieked a warning. He stopped climbing and looked over his shoulder, and what he saw was too much for his conscious mind to process all at once. Something was coming at him – something huge – gliding through the water with silent, graceful speed. He thought it was a whale at first, but when he saw its mouthful of sharp teeth, he amended his identification to shark. A big-ass shark. Jaws on {EXPLETIVE DELETED} steroids. Except that didn’t seem right, either. The thing’s head was long, narrow, and tapered at the snout, more like a crocodile than a marine animal. Then the creature lunged forward, fastened those teeth around Spencer's legs, and pulled him beneath the water.
Teeth of the Sea is filled with both likable characters (Joel Tucker and the crew of The Hidden World and researcher Andrew Rivera and his daughter Lara) and those you can't wait to see become the next meal for these pre-historic monsters (The king of gross-out comedies, Shayne Ferreira, and any number of clueless Millennials).
One of the things I liked about Waggoner's latest tale of terror is that no one is safe...in the
water...or on land.
I know it's cheezy, but this is the kind of story where cheezy seems fitting. Teeth of the Sea has real bite.
Recommended.
Teeth of the Sea is available in both paperback and for the Kindle. If you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited you can read it at no additional charge. Also, if you are an Amazon Prime member you can read it for FREE using the Kindle Owners Lending Library.
From the author's bio - Tim Waggoner’s first novel came out in 2001, and he’s published over thirty novels and three collections of short stories since. He’s written tie-in fiction for Supernatural, Grimm, the X-Files, Doctor Who, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Transformers, among others. In 2016, the Horror Writers Association honored him with the Mentor of the Year Award, and in 2017 his novella The Winter Box won the Bram Stoker Award for Long Fiction. In addition to writing, Tim is also a full-time tenured professor who teaches creative writing and composition at Sinclair College.
Teeth of the Sea begins from the point of view of some very large sea creatures and returns to that viewpoint periodically throughout, to great effect.
Most of the action takes place in and around the relatively new luxury resort, Elysium, far from anywhere, in the middle of the ocean.
Ancient sea creatures return to the place where they've come every ten years or so to lay their eggs and they are terribly hungry.
The best quotes are expletive-laden but are oh so good.
Some deeply buried primal instinct rose within him and shrieked a warning. He stopped climbing and looked over his shoulder, and what he saw was too much for his conscious mind to process all at once. Something was coming at him – something huge – gliding through the water with silent, graceful speed. He thought it was a whale at first, but when he saw its mouthful of sharp teeth, he amended his identification to shark. A big-ass shark. Jaws on {EXPLETIVE DELETED} steroids. Except that didn’t seem right, either. The thing’s head was long, narrow, and tapered at the snout, more like a crocodile than a marine animal. Then the creature lunged forward, fastened those teeth around Spencer's legs, and pulled him beneath the water.
Teeth of the Sea is filled with both likable characters (Joel Tucker and the crew of The Hidden World and researcher Andrew Rivera and his daughter Lara) and those you can't wait to see become the next meal for these pre-historic monsters (The king of gross-out comedies, Shayne Ferreira, and any number of clueless Millennials).
One of the things I liked about Waggoner's latest tale of terror is that no one is safe...in the
water...or on land.
I know it's cheezy, but this is the kind of story where cheezy seems fitting. Teeth of the Sea has real bite.
Recommended.
Teeth of the Sea is available in both paperback and for the Kindle. If you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited you can read it at no additional charge. Also, if you are an Amazon Prime member you can read it for FREE using the Kindle Owners Lending Library.
From the author's bio - Tim Waggoner’s first novel came out in 2001, and he’s published over thirty novels and three collections of short stories since. He’s written tie-in fiction for Supernatural, Grimm, the X-Files, Doctor Who, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Transformers, among others. In 2016, the Horror Writers Association honored him with the Mentor of the Year Award, and in 2017 his novella The Winter Box won the Bram Stoker Award for Long Fiction. In addition to writing, Tim is also a full-time tenured professor who teaches creative writing and composition at Sinclair College.
Saturday, November 18, 2017
Review: Halloween Carnival Volume Five - Edited by Brian James Freeman
4 of 5 Stars Review copy
During the month of October 2017, Brian James Freeman and the folks at Hydra, have gotten together to present a total of twenty-five Halloween tales of horror from twenty-five of the best genre writers working today. Every Tuesday during October there was a new volume in the Halloween Carnival anthology series.
Volume Five concludes the series with five tales of Halloween horror. The fun begins with...
Devil's Night by Richard Chizmar - "Tonight was Devils's Night. A night for mischief as my father used to say." A love triangle and a murder. I've read this short before. A great "What would you do?" mystery.
The Last Dare by Lisa Tuttle - The Tower House was both foreboding and forbidden. All the more reason to visit on Halloween.
The Halloween Bleed (A Dr. Sibley Curiosity) by Norman Prentiss - "What if Halloween...bleeds into other days? It doesn't matter when a story is written, or when you read it. What matters is that it has an effect on you. It casts a spell." A well-crafted tale with a delightful twist.
Swing by Kevin Quigley - "Love is strange and death is an aphrodisiac."
Port Pie Hat by Peter Straub - The novella in this collection is another I've read before, but it also happens to be one of the best Halloween horror stories I've ever read. Hat is a Jazz musician and when a fan tries to conduct an interview he hears the horrifying story of a Halloween night in the 'the Backs."
Definitely recommended and somewhat sad to see this series come to a close.
Halloween Carnival Volume Five is published by Hydra, a division of Random House, and is available as an ebook.
During the month of October 2017, Brian James Freeman and the folks at Hydra, have gotten together to present a total of twenty-five Halloween tales of horror from twenty-five of the best genre writers working today. Every Tuesday during October there was a new volume in the Halloween Carnival anthology series.
Volume Five concludes the series with five tales of Halloween horror. The fun begins with...
Devil's Night by Richard Chizmar - "Tonight was Devils's Night. A night for mischief as my father used to say." A love triangle and a murder. I've read this short before. A great "What would you do?" mystery.
The Last Dare by Lisa Tuttle - The Tower House was both foreboding and forbidden. All the more reason to visit on Halloween.
The Halloween Bleed (A Dr. Sibley Curiosity) by Norman Prentiss - "What if Halloween...bleeds into other days? It doesn't matter when a story is written, or when you read it. What matters is that it has an effect on you. It casts a spell." A well-crafted tale with a delightful twist.
Swing by Kevin Quigley - "Love is strange and death is an aphrodisiac."
Port Pie Hat by Peter Straub - The novella in this collection is another I've read before, but it also happens to be one of the best Halloween horror stories I've ever read. Hat is a Jazz musician and when a fan tries to conduct an interview he hears the horrifying story of a Halloween night in the 'the Backs."
Definitely recommended and somewhat sad to see this series come to a close.
Halloween Carnival Volume Five is published by Hydra, a division of Random House, and is available as an ebook.
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Review: The Truants - by Lee Markham
4of 5 Stars Review copy
The Truants is Lee Markham's debut novel and in some ways, it shows.
I admit I had a love-hate relationship with this book. It was a bit esoteric for me and the author had an annoying habit of just listing the character's actions. For example...
She looks at him, and shakes her head. Then she pulls the sheet up and over his face, hangs the notes back on the end of the bed and pads out of the room. The door swishes quietly closed behind her. And the boy sits up. The sheet falls away and his eyes open. They are pale. Blue irises. They'd been brown, like his skin, when he died. But now they are pale, as is his skin without blood. He has changed.
The writing style aside there is much to like in The Truants. Without ever mentioning vampires, the author manages to tell the story of the last of their kind who, a week apart, end things on the same park bench by staying out in the sun. But, due to unforeseen circumstances, they are doomed to begin again.
And he dies. For just a moment, he dies, and he submits, and he gives himself to me. This feral little rat-child kneels before me and prays for my grace. I give it to him. Then I open our eyes. And we rise.
Overall, The Truants, is decidedly different, in a good way. Twisted, and filled with some remarkable imagery, and a creep factor that is exceptionally high.
Recommended.
The Truants is published by The Overlook Press and is available in both paperback and e-book formats.
From the author's bio - Lee Markham is the founder of the children’s publishing house Chestnut Tree Tales and No Man, an independent publishing house. He has previously worked as a brand content developer, and he has written articles for magazines including Admap and Brand Strategy. The Truants is his debut novel.
The Truants is Lee Markham's debut novel and in some ways, it shows.
I admit I had a love-hate relationship with this book. It was a bit esoteric for me and the author had an annoying habit of just listing the character's actions. For example...
She looks at him, and shakes her head. Then she pulls the sheet up and over his face, hangs the notes back on the end of the bed and pads out of the room. The door swishes quietly closed behind her. And the boy sits up. The sheet falls away and his eyes open. They are pale. Blue irises. They'd been brown, like his skin, when he died. But now they are pale, as is his skin without blood. He has changed.
The writing style aside there is much to like in The Truants. Without ever mentioning vampires, the author manages to tell the story of the last of their kind who, a week apart, end things on the same park bench by staying out in the sun. But, due to unforeseen circumstances, they are doomed to begin again.
And he dies. For just a moment, he dies, and he submits, and he gives himself to me. This feral little rat-child kneels before me and prays for my grace. I give it to him. Then I open our eyes. And we rise.
Overall, The Truants, is decidedly different, in a good way. Twisted, and filled with some remarkable imagery, and a creep factor that is exceptionally high.
Recommended.
The Truants is published by The Overlook Press and is available in both paperback and e-book formats.
From the author's bio - Lee Markham is the founder of the children’s publishing house Chestnut Tree Tales and No Man, an independent publishing house. He has previously worked as a brand content developer, and he has written articles for magazines including Admap and Brand Strategy. The Truants is his debut novel.
Friday, October 27, 2017
Movie review: Happy Death Day
4 of 5 Stars
Tree Gelbman is a blissfully self-centered collegian who wakes up on her birthday in the bed of a student named Carter. As the morning goes on, Tree gets the eerie feeling that she's experienced the events of this day before. When a masked killer suddenly takes her life in a brutal attack, she once again magically wakes up in Carter's dorm room unharmed. Now, the frightened young woman must relive the same day over and over until she figures out who murdered her.
Happy Death Day is like Groundhog Day on acid and much more fun than I expected it to be. Jessica Rothe is a pleasure to watch as she attempts to unravel the truth about who is trying to kill her. It's not who you think and although it's a horror movie, it's not all that scary.
Release date: October 13, 2017 (USA)
Director: Christopher B. Landon
Budget: 4.8 million USD
Producer: Jason Blum
Screenplay: Scott Lobdell
In it's first two weeks out the film has a worldwide gross of more than 56-million dollars. Not in the mega-movie arena, but it's certainly a success considering the modest budget under 5-Million.
If you haven't seen this one yet, it's certainly worth a look.
Tree Gelbman is a blissfully self-centered collegian who wakes up on her birthday in the bed of a student named Carter. As the morning goes on, Tree gets the eerie feeling that she's experienced the events of this day before. When a masked killer suddenly takes her life in a brutal attack, she once again magically wakes up in Carter's dorm room unharmed. Now, the frightened young woman must relive the same day over and over until she figures out who murdered her.
Happy Death Day is like Groundhog Day on acid and much more fun than I expected it to be. Jessica Rothe is a pleasure to watch as she attempts to unravel the truth about who is trying to kill her. It's not who you think and although it's a horror movie, it's not all that scary.
Release date: October 13, 2017 (USA)
Director: Christopher B. Landon
Budget: 4.8 million USD
Producer: Jason Blum
Screenplay: Scott Lobdell
In it's first two weeks out the film has a worldwide gross of more than 56-million dollars. Not in the mega-movie arena, but it's certainly a success considering the modest budget under 5-Million.
If you haven't seen this one yet, it's certainly worth a look.
Review: Halloween Carnival Volume Four - Ed. by Brian James Freeman
3 of 5 Stars Review copy
During the month of October 2017, Brian James Freeman and the folks at Hydra, have gotten together to present a total of twenty-five Halloween tales of horror from twenty-five of the best genre writers working today. Every Tuesday during October there will be a new volume in the Halloween Carnival anthology series.
Volume Four is my least favorite so far this series but it's still worth your time this Halloween reading season.
The Mannequin Challenge by Kealan Patrick Burke - A Twilight Zone kind of story about an office Halloween party and a rather bizarre mannequin challenge. There were sixteen people in all, every one of them in costume, every one of them playing statues." All except Theo, late to the party, no costume, and his reaction is perfect.
Across the Tracks by Ray Garton - Sometimes you have to cross the tracks to find a better neighborhood for trick-or-treating. "That was another benefit of crossing the tracks on Halloween. There were frequent parties underway in the houses they visited, and a lot of hot moms wore slutty costumes. It was a great opportunity for eleven and twelve-year-old boys to catch a glimpse of some thighs and cleavage that were not on a screen." What Kenny, Sam, and JayJay stumble upon at one such house was certainly an eye-opener.
The Halloween Tree by Bev Vincent - My favorite story in this collection. Trick or treating with friends and a scary old tree. "On Halloween night they'd have to walk beneath it and that was freaking Luke out."
Pumpkin Eater by C. A. Suleman - An interesting story about how couples grow apart over the years.
When the Leaves Fall by Paul Melniczek - This collection's novella is about a terror which slowly consumes a town and they way one young man deals with it as a kid and then as an adult. There is some lovely prose in this story. "Leaves had begun their slow patient glide to death weeks ago and now September was just a recent memory, as October wrapped the landscape in its dusky arms and stole its life, peeling apart the summer flowers and snatching up the burnt orange and yellow leaves, pulling them to the ground where they dried into husks and shriveled away."
I may have been a bit disappointed in this set of Halloween tales, but I'm still looking forward to Volume Five to close out the series.
Halloween Carnival Volume Four is published by Hydra, a division of Random House, and is available as an ebook.
During the month of October 2017, Brian James Freeman and the folks at Hydra, have gotten together to present a total of twenty-five Halloween tales of horror from twenty-five of the best genre writers working today. Every Tuesday during October there will be a new volume in the Halloween Carnival anthology series.
Volume Four is my least favorite so far this series but it's still worth your time this Halloween reading season.
The Mannequin Challenge by Kealan Patrick Burke - A Twilight Zone kind of story about an office Halloween party and a rather bizarre mannequin challenge. There were sixteen people in all, every one of them in costume, every one of them playing statues." All except Theo, late to the party, no costume, and his reaction is perfect.
Across the Tracks by Ray Garton - Sometimes you have to cross the tracks to find a better neighborhood for trick-or-treating. "That was another benefit of crossing the tracks on Halloween. There were frequent parties underway in the houses they visited, and a lot of hot moms wore slutty costumes. It was a great opportunity for eleven and twelve-year-old boys to catch a glimpse of some thighs and cleavage that were not on a screen." What Kenny, Sam, and JayJay stumble upon at one such house was certainly an eye-opener.
The Halloween Tree by Bev Vincent - My favorite story in this collection. Trick or treating with friends and a scary old tree. "On Halloween night they'd have to walk beneath it and that was freaking Luke out."
Pumpkin Eater by C. A. Suleman - An interesting story about how couples grow apart over the years.
When the Leaves Fall by Paul Melniczek - This collection's novella is about a terror which slowly consumes a town and they way one young man deals with it as a kid and then as an adult. There is some lovely prose in this story. "Leaves had begun their slow patient glide to death weeks ago and now September was just a recent memory, as October wrapped the landscape in its dusky arms and stole its life, peeling apart the summer flowers and snatching up the burnt orange and yellow leaves, pulling them to the ground where they dried into husks and shriveled away."
I may have been a bit disappointed in this set of Halloween tales, but I'm still looking forward to Volume Five to close out the series.
Halloween Carnival Volume Four is published by Hydra, a division of Random House, and is available as an ebook.
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