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  • HOME
  • CONTACT / FEATURE
  • FEATURES
  • FICTION REVIEWS
  • FILM REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • YOUNG BLOOD
  • MY LIFE IN HORROR
  • FILM GUTTER
  • ARCHIVES
    • SPLASHES OF DARKNESS
    • THE MASTERS OF HORROR
    • THE DEVL'S MUSIC
    • HORROR BOOK REVIEWS
    • Challenge Kayleigh
    • ALICE IN SUMMERLAND
    • 13 FOR HALLOWEEN
    • FILMS THAT MATTER
    • BOOKS THAT MATTER
    • THE SCARLET GOSPELS
GINGER NUTS OF HORROR
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FROM HELL TO ETERNITY BY THANA NIVEAU

28/3/2013
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When Grey Friar Press first announced this anthology from Thana Niveua I knew I had read it.  Based on the short stories of hers that I had read in a number of anthologies this year, she soon found her way onto my list of discoveries of the year.  So when I got a copy from my mother as a birthday present I put every other book aside and gave this collection my full attention.  From Hell to Eternity collects 16 of her stories, prefaced by an intelligent and thoughtful introduction from the Grandmaster Himself Ramsey Campbell.   This collection like a vintage single malt whisky deserves to be savoured slowly and lovingly one fabulous story at a time.  This is not a light read, her stories are layered, dark, melancholic and in a number of cases exceptionally 


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HELL BY JOHN PRESCOTT 

18/3/2013
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This review has been a long time time coming.  Even though the John Prescott's first instalment in this trilogy, was one of my favourite reads, I had put off reading this book, until I finally hit holiday time.  I wanted to be able to read this book with the least amount of interruptions.  If you haven't read the first book Pray, then do yourself a favour go and get it now.  So after a couple of days R&;R, I finally sat down with one of my most anticipated books this year.



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LONDON MACABRE by STEVEN SAVILE

18/3/2013
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When this was first announced a few years ago, I gave out a little yelp of excitement, a new Steven Savile novel is always something that makes me happy. 

However...


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WHITSTABLE BY STEPHEN VOLK

14/3/2013
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It's fitting that my début post on the new site should be a review of the latest release from one of the true masters of the genre.  

"1971. A middle-aged man, wracked with grief, walks along the beach at Whitstable in Kent.

A boy approaches him and, taking him for the famous vampire-hunter Doctor Van Helsing from the Hammer movies, asks for his help. Because he believes his stepfather really is a vampire…"



There is a great misconception that horror is just about big scary monsters and buxom women who need saving.  When horror is at it's best it becomes more about the human condition than many so called non genre literary works.  Whitstable is one such book.  Stephen Volk has produced a novella that is works both as a gripping thriller and as a beautiful and heart breaking tribute to one of horrors finest stars.  

This is a story of two polar opposite,  but interwoven narrative  threads.  Firstly there is extremely moving and intimate account of Peter Cushing coming to terms with the death of his beloved wife Helen.  These passages  are achingly beautiful, very few books  have actually caused tears to well up in my eyes. The love and respect that the author has for peter Cushing is laid bare on the pages, and as a reader you cannot help but become totally immersed in this poignant tale. It is not an easy read, Volk paints a factional biography of Cushing with a warts and all.  By showing, that  Cushing was a man full love for his wife and those around him, while also being a stubborn man, and at times a man too full of pride. Volk ensures that   you the reader will feel nothing but compassion for Peter  in his time of mourning.

As for the second thread, it couldn't be more different.  Where the passages with Peter as the main or sole protagonist have a for want of a better term quaint and cosy, almost picture postcard  feel to them, Those that feature Les  Gledhill are shocking to say the least.  The way in which they explode into the narrative and rip apart the the safe world of a 1971 Whitstable is really impressive.  This is not just  a clash between hero and monster, it's clash between a true English gentleman and a thuggish brute.  The passage where Gledhill first confronts Peter is truly gripping, and when Gledhill swears at Peter for the first time I was truly shocked, it just felt so brutal, and animalistic. 

Volk capitalises on these feelings with a chilling scene set inside a film house, where the two protagonists confront each other while The Vampire Lovers plays in background.  This i one of the most enthralling and terrifying  passages I have read in a long time.  



Not all monsters are real, but sadly some are all too real. 


 Sadly the limited edition has sold out, but never fear folks you can still pick up a copy of the paperback, from the Publisher by clicking here.

Or you can hop on over to Amazon by clicking the link below.  

It's Peter's birthday this weekend, and I can't think of a better way to celebrate it than by getting a copy of this book.  




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