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GINGER NUTS OF HORROR
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THIS IS WHERE THE FAMILY TREE MEETS THE FAMILY PLOT. THIS IS BLOODLINES. (BOOK REVIEW)

15/2/2022
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BLURB

If you’ve ever dreaded a family dinner, felt terror at the blood pumping in your veins; if you’ve ever thought maybe the people you call kin just aren’t quite right—Bloodlines will hold you in its thrall with its literary daring, blood-soaked wit, and taste for carnage. From quiet horror to caterwauling bloodshed, this quadruple feature is fun for the whole family.

A trio of sisters take turns sharing a migraine that challenges their pain tolerance—and sanity ("Our Migraine," Christopher O’Halloran).

A man struggles with his inheritance when his absent father—and namesake—dies, leaving him with disturbing visions and an unwanted purpose ("Nos Da, Tad," Antony Frost).

A young ghost watches a sinister family gathering complete with a prettier, smarter replica of herself—then, makes sure it’s their last ("I Am Not to be Replaced," Carson Winter).

Following the death of his mother, the eldest of five siblings must uncover the true nature of his family’s strange, isolated existence while an apocalyptic event looms ("The Heads of Leviathan," Alex Wolfgang).

This is where the family tree meets the family plot. This is Bloodlines.

REVIEW

Family is a complex organism. No one else has the ability to make us feel emotions as deeply as family does. It can bring us solace, shoring us up against the world when it's done well. However, when it's not, only those who know us best can make us can feel ashamed, betrayed and so disconnected. All too often our interactions with family can be hurtful, filled with miscommunications and bitterness. Those who should be our closest allies, our greatest sources of support and love, often end up feeling like strangers or even worse our foes. These four stories carry us along through family dynamics of strife, pain, trauma, and yes, compassion and affection.

In Christopher O'Halloran's "Our Migraine", a painful illness and the subsequent passing of their mother leads three sisters to carry the burden of pain in this novelette. A wish made out of love quickly twists their interactions which are at first caring, quickly degenerating to indifference, and finally to outright cruelty with the unequal division of hardship and hurt.  Familiar obligation and the shared burden after a parent's passing rests heavily on the sisters as they quite literally take their mother's pain in the form of an eternal migraine. In true monkey's paw form, their wish to relive their mother of her deathbed suffering descends with a horrific consequence. What makes this story unique is that the sisters can carry the pain of the migraine individually—each of them taking a turn. It doesn't take long for this arrangement to wear unevenly, leading to resentment and eventually to almost an inhuman mercilessness. The tension accumulates, closing the curtain on an ending scene that is both shocking and heart-wrenching.

"Nos Da, Tad" by Anthony Frost brings into play familial inheritance in another manner. Another parental death, although this time it's met with indifference. Our protagonist, Owen can't manage to drum up concern when told of his father's death after a lifetime devoid of his presence. When he discovers that his father bequeaths his house and its strange contents, he and his lover, Martin set off on a path of discovery. He gets flashes of atrocious happenings that aren't memories of his own but that of his birth father. The story unravels from there into a fast-paced plot of secret societies, occultism, and some terrific body and cosmic horror imagery.

The first-person view of "Nos Da, Tad" made Owen's emotional plight very relatable. Also, the relationship between Owen and his lover, Martin was vulnerable and devoted and was a great demarcation from that of his wayward father. At the center of this is the concept of self-identity and that while we are made from our parents, we still get to forge our own paths. Their darkness does not have to be our darkness but we can choose to let their light shine through us.

In Carson Winter's "I am Not to be Replaced", we have an entirely new type of narrator--a ghostly one.  This tale is more of a mystery than the other two in the collection but that's what makes it so intriguing. It's difficult to know exactly where it's going or even honestly where it is, to begin with, but the author draws us in giving us little fragments at a time. All we know is that there is a family settling into a vacation cabin and there are two of the narrator: the one walking around and the apparition that used to be her. As the story progresses, the mystery asserts itself or should I say herself. It's a lesson surely, on attaining perfection and how not living up to the expectations of your family can be both lonely and liberating. I loved this one. It's clever and darkly humorous at times. I highly enjoyed the revenge of the black sheep in this horned eldritch tale.

"The Heads of the Leviathan" by Alex Wolfgang brings us full circle again to the death of a parent and the responsibility of those left behind as five siblings are left with more questions than answers after their mother's death.  It begins with a hospice procession to the sea where their mother simply fades away in the seawater and the children then attempt to process their complex emotions. As someone who lost her mother too early, this one reverberated in me a bit with the line "There was no one right way to feel." Everyone experiences loss in their own way and while the loss is shared, the experience can feel isolating. Grief and horror intermingle as the family left behind struggle to stay unified in the wake of death. This story was unconventional and otherworldly but it stayed with me long after the conclusion.

While staying on the theme of family, each of the four novelettes brought a different perspective with it. These stories are raw, showing both the grotesque and the extraordinary. Each of the authors did an outstanding job at conveying both sides of the coin while remaining insightful and complex. Family is an intricate thing with experiences and emotions that can sometimes be either dreadful or wonderful, and occasionally both simultaneously. This collection embodies that with wit and wonder.

Bloodlines: Four Tales of Familial Fear ​

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If you’ve ever dreaded a family dinner, felt terror at the blood pumping in your veins; if you’ve ever thought maybe the people you call kin just aren’t quite right--Bloodlines will hold you in its thrall with its literary daring, blood-soaked wit, and taste for carnage. From quiet horror to caterwauling bloodshed, this quadruple feature is fun for the whole family.
A trio of sisters take turns sharing a migraine that challenges their pain tolerance—and sanity ("Our Migraine," Christopher O’Halloran).
A man struggles with his inheritance when his absent father—and namesake—dies, leaving him with disturbing visions and an unwanted purpose ("Nos Da, Tad," Antony Frost).
A young ghost watches a sinister family gathering complete with a prettier, smarter replica of herself—then, makes sure it’s their last ("I Am Not to be Replaced," Carson Winter).
Following the death of his mother, the eldest of five siblings must uncover the true nature of his family’s strange, isolated existence while an apocalyptic event looms ("The Heads of Leviathan," Alex Wolfgang).
This is where the family tree meets the family plot. This is Bloodlines.

TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

YOUNG ADULT AND MIDDLE GRADE HORROR BOOK ROUNDUP (JAN / FEB)

PAPERBACKS FROM HELL: GWEN, IN GREEN BY HUGH ZACHARY

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR BOOK REVIEWS

DARK MEMORIES ARE CARRIED ON THE SCENT OF ROSES

14/2/2022
HORROR BOOK REVIEW OUR FEARFUL ROOTS BY CARMILLA VOIEZ AND FAITH MARLOW
Our Fearful Roots, written by Carmilla Voiez and Faith Marlow, is a Southern Gothic tale following the Anderson family as they relocate from Seattle to Alabama upon inheriting a house from Mary’s recently deceased aunt, Blanche.

The story is told from four viewpoints, Mary (wife/mother), Chuck (husband/father/stepfather), Eric (son/stepson/stepbrother), and Anita (daughter/stepsister). While the story incorporates all four character’s viewpoints, the narrative mostly centers around Mary and Eric, both of whom have ties to this beautiful cottage, and its horrible history.

True to Southern Gothic style, the ghostly hauntings in this tale are representations of traumatic memories resurfaced after many years of dormancy. The book is heavy with atmosphere. Not since Michael McDowell's classic, The Elementals, have I read a sticky, humid Alabama summer that served as much of a presence as any of the novel's characters. 

The one major drawback, at least for this reader, was Chuck’s character arc. I had a difficult time believing the authenticity of his change in character by the book's end. 

Despite this complaint, and a few cliched villains, this book is still one of the best Southern Gothic novels that I've read in a long time. Hailing from Alabama myself, I had high hopes for this book, and it did not disappoint. 

Recommended for fans of Southern Gothic and unique takes on haunted houses.



A book review by Holley Cornetto

Our Fearful Roots 
by Carmilla Voiez  & Faith Marlow

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Dark memories are carried on the scent of roses.

Mary wants a better life for her family and hopes the house she inherited from her aunt in Alabama will be a sanctuary for them all, but Mary and the house share a terrible secret.

Roots run deep in the south, but secrets run even deeper.

Join the Anderson family in a tale of Southern Gothic Horror in four voices.

Our Fearful Roots

TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

IS HANNIBAL LECTOR IN LOVE WITH ME?

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEW: SOMEONE TO SHARE MY NIGHTMARES: STORIES BY SONORA TAYLOR

11/2/2022
HORROR BOOK REVIEW SOMEONE TO SHARE MY NIGHTMARES- STORIES BY SONORA TAYLOR.png
This is quite a short collection of spooky/horror tales. A significant chunk of which did not feel like horror to me, at least not when I first read them. However, the more I’ve puzzled, trying to collect my thoughts about this collection, the more it has haunted me and the more I have been able to see the horror. For me the horror was very much seen rather than felt within. There is a realism and relatability to most of the tales and it is the realism where the horror comes from. Even the stories with the heavy fantastic and supernatural elements. What horror there was in the tales was real and understandable, be it the horror of the consequences of your life biting your arse, the horror of customers, or fearing that you have made the wrong choice in your relationship once it’s too late.

 Most of the stories were simple and seemed to lack depth and meaning. But I think that this was deliberate and theorise that it is because there is no deep meaning in life, we just think there is and make what meanings we can. That is what I felt her characters were doing in the stories and I wonder if it is a lack of character depth or if Taylor is just being sparing with the information provided allowing the mind to wander and conjure up its own meaning. The stories have that kind of ambiguous feel.

The stories that stood out to me were ‘The Parrot’, a tale of vengeance, brutality and the consequences of victimizing others. ‘Candy’ stands out very vividly in my memory. Would you kill for your favourite candy? ‘You Promised Me Forever’ could the love you have for your loved one last for ever? Do you really want to put it to the test? ‘Tis Better to Want’ more exotic fantasy and obsession than horror but out of the collection, it is the one that will stay with me the longest.
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To summarize, all the stories are well written and have merit and have a unique unexpected quality. The horror is subtle and in cases too subtle. Almost every story has erotic elements. The more you think about the stories, the more alive they seem to feel and you realise that when you thought the characters were shallow you just weren’t seeing them properly. I would recommend this anthology to someone looking for softer horror or erotic horror that haunts and to someone who wants to look out of the window and wonder if they’ll see a gold pair of eyes staring back at them.

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Someone to Share My Nightmares: Stories 

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A band of bloodthirsty sea creatures terrorize a scientist and a journalist trapped in a Carolina cove. The seduction of a plumber making a house call becomes a nightmarish haunting for both parties. A woman transformed for her lover has second thoughts about just how good "together forever" can be. And the one man a woman wants for Christmas is the holiday demon sent to punish the wicked.

Someone to Share My Nightmares is a tapestry of horrors interwoven with sensuality. Can our deepest fears be vanquished when they’re shared with someone else? Or is the danger doubled when two people come together?


TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

THE  FILM THAT MADE ME: JOHN CARPENTER’S THE THING BY KEN BROSKY

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEW: LAMELLA BY MAX HALPER

9/2/2022
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An unexpected arrival leads to a surreal and disturbing bad trip
Sometimes the jib of a particular publisher catches your eye and when they drop something new interest skyrockets, Bad Dream Entertainment are such a small press. Back in 2020 they released Thomas Vaughan’s totally bizarre and hallucinogenic The Ethereal Transit Society which I reviewed for Ginger Nuts of Horror here:


https://gingernutsofhorror.com/fiction-reviews/book-review-the-ethereal-transit-society-by-thomas-vaughan 


I was so impressed by this bad trip tale of cosmic horror featuring cults and UFOs it also slotted into my top ten novellas of 2020 over at the Horror DNA site where I also review:


https://www.horrordna.com/features/tony-jones-top-ten-horror-novellas-of-2020


Lamella is Bad Dream Entertainment’s first release since The Ethereal Transit Society and so I just had to read it and the end result is an equally stranger and unnerving experience. This cool small press specialises in dark fiction, horror, science fiction, and humour and this latest oddity gleefully dances around most of those sweet spots. I loved Lamella and struggled to put it down and not to read its 154-pages in one single sitting. To be frank, I was really not sure what I was reading (or whether I was missing something of major significance) but found the fast paced, easy to read style, highly engaging and was sorry to reach the end.


Although Lamella is broadly horror, it is more in tune with Bizarro Fiction, which is defined by Eraserhead Press as “if an audience enjoys a book or film primarily because of its weirdness, then it is Bizarro.” I am far from an expert on this type of wackiness, but Lamella fits this description almost word-for-word and is vaguely reminiscent of other Bizarro leaning authors I have reviewed, including John Bassoff, Amy M. Vaughn, Nicole Cushing and Andrew Stone.


Before getting to the plot of Lamella, I want to highlight one of its major strengths (out of context) to avoid spoilers. The story is revealed through two closely interconnected plotlines which are linked by the major character, and first-person narrator, Mel Lane. What makes them unique is that they seemingly move at different time speeds, with one narrative taking place over a weekend and the other over a much longer period, with neither being truly aware of the other progressing at a different pace, or if they are it is not noted as significant. Confused? Do not worry, if you read Lamella you will quickly figure out what I meant. This led to a deliberately disjointed but highly engaging reading experience which clicked together nicely, even though it was totally off-the-wall.


Both plotlines are based around the internal anxieties of central character Mel who teaches English courses at a further education college. He enjoys his job but has limited ambitions and his teaching workload revolves around the basics of ‘101’ courses to students who need to pass his class to progress onto other things. However, things start to strangely unravel after he reports a student for plagiarism, who submits an excellent third essay after two earlier stinkers. Mel does not think much of this until the student then counter-reports him to the college, claiming he has been singled out, and an investigation begins. There is no Bizarro element to this part of the story, but at the same time it was populated with strange interactions and an almost Kafkaesque investigation into the student accusation which by its nature increases the anxiety of Mel who feels completely isolated. Although this was not the main part of the story I found it totally absorbing and perfectly balanced with Mel’s even stranger home life. Bizarro Fiction is often at its most effective when the mundane contrasts with the strange and Lamella does than in some style.


Mel returns home from work one day and finds his girlfriend has a baby, however, they did not have a child that same morning. Where did the baby come from? Why does she act as if the baby has always been there and that he is the father? Why does he not remember the pregnancy? One would imagine that these are all perfectly reasonable questions. To make things worse he realises his office has been turned into a nursery for the baby. This is only the beginning, the baby (or ‘it’ as Mel continually refers to the child) has holes in its face and does not even look human. Welcome to the world of Bizarro Fiction, and from that moment on things just get stranger, whilst the issues from his day job rumble on with Mel stressed that he is going to get into hot water over the student plagiarism issue.


Readers will have a lot of fun disappearing down a rabbit hole of identity with Mel who finds it increasingly difficult to focus on reality. Along the way there are a few incredibly disturbing (and grossly funny) scenes regarding ‘it’ as Mel struggles to cope with fatherhood, his girlfriend, his family and his own sanity. Lamella (also known as ‘it’) was a darkly surreal and thought-provoking story and if you ever thought the baby in David Lynch’s Eraserhead was as bad as it gets, think again and read Lamella. This was one of those novellas where there were no easy answers (even the questions themselves were obscure), but the journey was a trip in itself. Having finished this novella I’m none the wiser, but whoever said books had to make sense?


Tony Jones

Lamella Paperback 
by Max Halper

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Mel Lane assumed his life was on the track it was supposed to be: a career with upward movement, a home, a long-term relationship. That is, until he comes home one day to a girlfriend he knows and a child he doesn't. Stranger still, no one else seems disturbed by the child's presence-or by its bizarre, inhuman features. Mel is a reasonable man, and he knows there is a reasonable explanation-but once the veil of reality begins to ripple, the world around him becomes something he simply doesn't understand. Worse yet, it's becoming very clear that he may never have understood it quite as well as he thought he did.


He knows there are answers, written somewhere on the walls or in the airwaves, but finding them will mean confronting truths about himself and the people around him as he spirals down a rabbit hole of identity and place that will threaten to upend the delicate balance of his life.


A darkly surreal and thought-provoking story, 'Lamella' is the debut novella of American author Max Halper.


​TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR FICTION REVIEWS ​

PAPERBACKS FROM HELL: THE AUCTIONEER BY JOAN SAMSON

8/2/2022
PAPERBACKS FROM HELL THE AUCTIONEER BY JOAN SAMSON
The Auctioneer is something of an outlier among Valencourt’s Paperbacks From Hell line, for a number of reasons. Firstly, it was an undeniable smash hit at the time of release. Drawing near universal critical praise from outlets like Newsweek and The New York Times, selling in excess of a million copies and being advertised on television (a rarity for books, even at the time) it was even picked up for a film option that future printings teased on the cover (“Soon to be a major film”). It was a runaway success for first time novelist Joan Samson. Tragically, it proved to be her only novel, as she passed away mere months after the books release. The movie adaptation never materialised, the book went out of print, and The Auctioneer faded into relative obscurity.

Another thing that separates The Auctioneer from other horror paperbacks of this era, is how subtly it tackles its subject, and how insidiously the horror creeps up on you. It isn’t just that it is a slow burn of a book (which it is), but it manages to find horror in the most ostensibly innocuous of exchanges. There is little to no action, not a drop of blood, yet it is an immensely affecting and painfully unsettling book that finds all too plausible horror in the seemingly mundane.

Set in a small New England town in the early 1970s, The Auctioneer focuses largely on the Moore family. John Moore lives on his families farm, passed down from the previous generation, with his wife, young daughter and elderly mother. There life isn’t an easy one, but they are content, and fiercely proud of the home they have built. They care deeply about their small community, most of whom they have known their entire life, so think nothing of it when Perly Dunsmore, a new arrival in town, begins requesting donations in order to raise funds for improvements to the local police force.

When the funds are raised and the police force is increased, deputising disreputable locals into newfound positions of power, the requests for donations continue, suggesting unspoken consequences for those who dare refuse, the proceeds now lining the pockets of Perly. As the Moores find their livelihoods being literally taken from them by the charming yet conniving outsider, they’ll find their community, their relationships and their very lives at risk in this harrowing tale of helplessness and greed.

Things escalate so gradually in The Auctioneer that events have taken a subtly dark turn long before the reader realises it, the author deftly putting us in the same position as the book’s characters, whereby we don’t realise quite what we’re in for until it’s too late. What begins as a seemingly mutually beneficial arrangement whereby the towns’ residents are able to rid themselves of some unwanted belongings in exchange for some welcome cash, while also being able to support their community slowly but surely becomes something else entirely. The requests for items to sell at the auctions continue and, with the clutter gone, the families become less willing to part with their remaining properties. They realise too late that their previous generosity and community spirit has lined the pockets of a man who has no qualms using the proceeds from what they freely gave to squeeze even more from them. I wont spoil just how far things escalate, but rest assured it is a shocking revelation, and one you will not see coming.

The Auctioneer boasts a fantastic cast of characters, whether that be the stoic but conflicted lead of John Moore, torn between defending the only life he knows and protecting his family, his wife and mother who act as the personifications of this inner conflict, or local farmer turned officer Mickey Cogswell, who goes through a very different, but no less interesting journey as a result of Perly Dunsmore’s arrival in town. It is Perly Dunsmore who, unsurprisingly, steals the show and proves himself to be a literary creation you wont soon forget. He is an incredibly charismatic and charming man, friendly and affable almost to the last page. His actions, however, belie the outwardly amiable persona, making him one of the most evil and reprehensible characters ever put to paper. The callous indifference he shows in his treatment of the townspeople is unnerving and what makes him so disturbing to read is that he takes no joy in any of the acts he commits, but nor does he regret a single one. He is motivated purely by what he can take and the ease with which he manipulates everyone around him, and the extent to which he is successful, is what makes him scary.

Reading The Auctioneer, you can’t help but wonder what might have been, should Joan Samson been able to keep on writing, because it is an incredibly effective and wonderfully evocative book. There is clearly a lot of passion for the locale, which shines through when the focus is on John and his family, and which really pays dividends when the story gets going and the stakes get higher. The prose is tight and straightforward, like the story itself, and the book doesn’t build tension, so much as it is a constant, lingering presence throughout, never letting up. When you consider this was a debut novel, it makes how effective it is all the more impressive.
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Thirteen books into the Paperbacks From Hell line, which has featured killer creatures, vampires and monsters both human and otherwise, it is difficult to express why such a low key story about an unscrupulous auctioneer is the most unsettling book of the series to date, but it is the fact that it is so understated that makes it so horrifying. It’s an all too plausible look into what can happen when you let your guard down and how easy it is to gradually find yourself in an increasingly hopeless situation. The Auctioneer may not be your typical Paperback From Hell, but it may well be the best example of just how good these books could be.
         
Join me next time when I’ll be sharing my thoughts on Gwen in Green by Hugh Zachary. If you’d like to read along with this series and want to pick up copies of the books, or learn more about Valancourts’ Paperbacks From Hell line, visit their site at www.valancourtbooks.com/paperbacksfromhell


The Auctioneer 
by Joan Samson  

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One of the finest and best-selling horror novels of the 1970s returns at last to chill a new generation of readers

In the isolated farming community of Harlowe, New Hampshire, where life has changed little over the past several decades, John Moore and his wife Mim work the land that has been in his family for generations. But from the moment the charismatic Perly Dinsmore arrives in town and starts soliciting donations for his auctions, things begin slowly and insidiously to change in Harlowe. As the auctioneer carries out his terrible, inscrutable plan, the Moores and their neighbors will find themselves gradually but inexorably stripped of their freedom, their possessions, and perhaps even their lives ...

A chilling masterpiece of terror whose sense of creeping menace and dread increases page by page, Joan Samson's The Auctioneer (1975) is a rediscovered classic of 20th-century fiction. With echoes of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" and Stephen King's Needful Things, Samson's novel returns to print at last in this long-awaited new edition, which features an introduction by Grady Hendrix (Horrorstör, Paperbacks from Hell) and an afterword by the author's husband.

"Buy this book ... there is no way to stop reading it, once you've started!" - Baltimore Sun


TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

BOOK REVIEW: DEAD SILENCE BY S.A. BARNES

HOW SHOULD THE GUILTY BE PUNISHED? A COVER REVEAL FOR THE BUTCHER BY LAURA KAT YOUNG

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEW: DEAD SILENCE BY S.A. BARNES

8/2/2022
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Is it possible to ever read a book without some preconceived misconceptions? Suppose you read the back cover copy for S.A. Barnes latest novel Dead Silence. In that case, you could easily be forgiven for thinking that you are about to read a novel that riffs on such films as Ghost Ship. By the time you reach the third half of this, you could easily be forgiven that thinking you are about t take a deep dive into an Event Horizon piece of fan fiction. I'll admit that I had some concerns about how the story was going to unfold at this point. Did I want to invest my time in a book that felt like I had read the plot a million times before? My preconceived thoughts about the book were fighting with the enjoyment I was having reading it, which sounds odd; I know, why would you stop reading a book that you enjoyed? But when you have hundreds of other books waiting to be read, do you want to invest your limited reading time reading a book that you have read so many times before from other authors. I almost put the book aside, but there was something special in Barnes' writing style, and more importantly, Barnes had created a fascinating main character in Claire Kovalic. These were enough for me to keep Dead Silence in my hands, and oh boy, was I so glad I did.  


Dead Silence is a wonderfully multilayered science fiction horror thriller; However, most of the horror doesn't appear directly on the page; the true horror of the story comes from how the characters are used by their employers to discover the truth about what happened to the luxury space liner. I won't say too much more about this as the story's truth is perhaps one of the bravest moves in plot development that the author could have taken. Barnes could easily have taken the safer, more well-travelled path in terms of narrative structure, and to be honest, it would have still resulted in a highly entertaining story. However, the massive curveball she throws into the mix is a pure stroke of genius. It not only elevates Dead Silence beyond the trappings of readers expectations in where the story is going, but it also gets the author out of a tight spot. There were many other ways the author could have taken the story. Still, all of the ones playing out in my head all felt somewhat lacklustre and filled with too many problems in terms of how it could lead to a successful and fulfilling conclusion. I'll put my head on the line here and say that it was one of the best reveals I've read in recent times, it might annoy some readers, but if you look critically at the narrative of the story, it fits perfectly.  


As mentioned earlier, Barnes has created a fascinating protagonist in Claire Kovalic; unreliable narrators are always an intriguing hook on which to hang the narrative onto, and Claire is a truly fascinating character. Deeply traumatised by previous events, she is stronghanded into leading the salvage mission. Haunted by the ghosts of her past, can we genuinely believe what she sees? Claire could easily have been portrayed as another kickass Ripley or Pvt. Vasquez hellbent on revenge on the forces that slaughtered her previous crew. While these two character tropes are fun to experience, the more relatable way Claire handled it brings more humanity to the story. I mean, who among you would turn into an all-action hero after witnessing the whole of your off-world settlement being callously left to die and then watching as your salvage crew are picked off by mysterious forces while attempting to salvage a ship filled with the corpses of its crew and passengers. Truthfully you'd be a nervous wreck; I know I would be.  


Barnes handles Claire's trauma with a sensitive and thoughtful eye, which can only come from a writer writing from the heart, from personal experience. Anxiety and fear are crippling conditions that make you take some very odd and somewhat stupid decisions, and it was an utter joy to see a protagonist that was so easy to relate to and get behind.  


Dead Silence is one of those horror novels that gleefully plays with genre tropes and the reader's expectations, tightly written, brimming with fascinating ideas, and a razor-sharp critique of big business and insignificance of us mere grunts. This is a haunting story that allows the tension to build at a perfect rate, dropping in some genuinely grotesque imagery along the way to a fitting and perfect ending. Any concerns I had about this story were blown out of the airlock long before I finished reading this deeply entertaining novel, Dead Silence, is so good you should all be screaming about it.  


 They used to say, "In space, no one can hear you scream," after reading Dead Space, it should be, "Even if they did, they just don't care." ​

Dead Silence 
by S.A. Barnes  

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​Titanic meets The Shining in S.A. Barnes’ Dead Silence, a SF horror novel in which a woman and her crew board a decades-lost luxury cruiser and find the wreckage of a nightmare that hasn't yet ended.

A GHOST SHIP.
A SALVAGE CREW.
UNSPEAKABLE HORRORS.

Claire Kovalik is days away from being unemployed—made obsolete—when her beacon repair crew picks up a strange distress signal. With nothing to lose and no desire to return to Earth, Claire and her team decide to investigate.

What they find is shocking: the Aurora, a famous luxury spaceliner that vanished on its maiden tour of the solar system more than twenty years ago. A salvage claim like this could set Claire and her crew up for life. But a quick search of the ship reveals something isn’t right.

Whispers in the dark. Flickers of movement. Messages scrawled in blood. Claire must fight to hold on to her sanity and find out what really happened on the Aurora before she and her crew meet the same ghastly fate.

​TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

PAPERBACKS FROM HELL: THE AUCTIONEER BY JOAN SAMSON

HOW SHOULD THE GUILTY BE PUNISHED? A COVER REVEAL FOR THE BUTCHER BY LAURA KAT YOUNG

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR FICTION REVIEWS 

150 EXQUISITE HORROR BOOKS BY ALESSANDRO MANZETTI

4/2/2022
HORROR BOOK REVIEW 150 EXQUISITE HORROR BOOKS BY ALESSANDRO MANZETTI
Don’t know what to read next?

Alessandro Manzetti will happily sort you out…
In 150 Exquisite Horror Books: Essential Guide to the Best 150 Books of Contemporary Horror Fiction Alessandro Manzetti provides 150 short reviews of novels published between 1986 and 2020. These are all personal choices he loves and recommends. According to the author this specific date range allows him to feature the Splatterpunk movement, Extreme Horror, whilst also covering the renewal in the genre from kicked-off around the mid-eighties. Each novel is presented with its own page and a 100-to-200-word review with cover graphics. With such a short word count each piece lacks the level of detail you might find on any similar horror website review, but nevertheless provide nice engaging summaries which also indicate which type of reader might like the book. Released by Crystal Lake Publishing, this directory is inexpensive and represents excellent value for money, being very easy to dip in and out of, with more academic examples such as The Readers' Advisory Guide to Horror incredibly expensive in comparison.

Considering Manzetti recommends all the books I am surprised he felt the need to include a rating system, surely he believes them all to be great? The relevant Good Reads rating is also included (which is totally pointless) who genuinely gives a monkey what that website says? Ratings can lead to unjust comparisons and if all 150 books rated are awesome the score should be entirely redundant. The lowest rating is 82 and the highest is 96 for Toni Morrison’s slave drama Beloved. I found it surprising that Manzetti even included this book, then bizarrely decided to rate it above the giants of genre, Robert McCammon, Graham Masterton, Ramsey Campbell and countless others. I am not disputing the quality of Beloved, but it is a highly distinguished mainstream modern classic, and scoring it above the very finest horror writers sends a mixed or negative message, particularly to newbie readers who might look at the exalted 96 score and decide that anybody can write horror. Ultimately Toni Morrison sits slightly uncomfortably at the top of a tree which celebrates horror fiction and her novel really needed no promotion in a horror genre guide. Of course, if there was no rating system in place she would have been less noticeable.

The beauty of ‘best of’ lists is that they are eternally open to debate and whilst I agree with many of Alessandro Manzetti’s selections, there are plenty I would not personally recommend. I also felt there were too many short story collections featured, so many in fact they could have merited being in a separate section and I got bored reading about them as they are difficult to review in 100-200 words. For the sake of argument, throughout this article, I will provide you with a few of my own ‘mini’ lists inspired by Manzetti’s 150 and you are very welcome to disagree with my own tips.

Ten of the 150 where Tony agrees with Manzetti (stone cold classics)
Alma Katsu – The Hunger
John A Lindqvist – Let the Right One In
Jonathan Maberry – Dead of Night
Jonathan Maberry - Ink
Josh Malerman – Bird Box
Robert McCammon – Boy’s Life
Robert McCammon – Swan Song
Dan Simmons – The Terror
Paul Tremblay – A Headful of Ghosts
Kristopher Triana – Gone to see the River Man


Thankfully I found myself agreeing with Manzetti on many of his selections, particularly those which were very well known, including the ten I have singled out above. Any newbie horror reader which picks up this guide is not going to go very far wrong with these novels and longer-term fans will undoubtedly have come across them, even if they have not read them. There are also a few authors, Poppy Z Brite for example, which Manzetti features three times, the maximum number a single author can be listed in his book.


Ten of the 150 which Tony believes are overrated (or failed to finish)
Mark Z Danielewski – House of Leaves (joint second highest scored with 95)
Silvia Moreno Garcia – Mexican Gothic
Sara Gran – Come Closer
Grady Hendrix – The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires
Gabino Iglesias – Coyote Songs
Stephen Graham Jones – The Only Good Indians
Chad Lutzke – The White Pale
Ahmed Saadawi – Frankenstein in Bagdad
Tim Waggoner – The Mouth of the Dark
Sarah Waters – The Little Stranger


Another reviewer would undoubtedly feature another ten disagreements, however, this list does host some of the most overhyped novels of the last few years, in particular House of Leaves (totally polarising), Mexican Gothic, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires and The Only Good Indians being four examples which I am forever shaking my head about. The Little Stranger is in the same boat as Morrison’s Beloved and I would argue that the mainstream media and literary world has given that book more than enough attention and plaudits. Thankfully the list where we disagreed was mercifully short and I am well aware that these books are loved by many.


Ten of the 150 Tony has not read, but intends to after being sold by Manzetti’s reviews
Tom Piccirilli – A Choir of Ill Will
Gary A Braunbeck – Coffin County
Gary A Braunbeck – In Silent Graves
Owl Goingback – Crota
Samantha Schweblin – Fever Dream
Elizabeth Hand – Generation Loss
Rick Hautala – Night Stone
Wesley Southard – One for the Road
Daryl Gregory – Pandemonium
Nicola Lombardi – The Tank


I am delighted to note that the above list of ten I had not read (but now want to) could have been considerably longer and it goes to show the depth of quality in the world or horror and that even the prolific readers cannot track everything. Extreme Horror and Splatterpunk are not my areas of expertise and I found reviews of the likes of Edward Lee very useful, as these were authors I did not know too much about and came across as solid starting points for exploration. I also appreciated the fact that on many occasions Manzetti did not choose the most obvious example, with Kathe Koja The Cipher would be the natural selection, but instead another is highlighted. Authors such as Graham Masterton and Ramsey Campbell quite rightly made more than one appearance, and even though I have read a lot of books by both authors, again I was pleased to find that the selections were alternatives I had not read or the most glaringly obvious.


The 150 reviews are beefed up with lots of additional mini top ten interludes by the likes of Ellen Datlow, Ramsey Campbell, John Skipp, Owl Goingback, Eric J Guignard, Brian Evenson and many others. A couple of longer essay contributions are provided by Stephen Jones and Lisa Morton giving readers lots of further opinions to dig their teeth into.


One could argue that 150 Exquisite Horror Books does not do anything Ginger Nuts of Horror or any of the other best horror websites does, however, it does conveniently bring together lots of resources and ideas into a single well-presented resource. No matter how well read you are this is a very handy book to have sitting on your kindle for whenever you’re caught short or have the appetite to try something new.


Tony Jones

150 Exquisite Horror Books: Essential Guide to the Best 150 Books of Contemporary Horror Fiction

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​A guide to some of the best horror and supernatural books, as recommended by several of the biggest names in the industry.

Compiled and edited by the Bram Stoker Award-winning author Alessandro Manzetti, this is a guide to the best 150 books of modern horror, weird, and dark fantasy fiction (single author novels, novellas, and collections of short stories) published between 1986 and 2020.

This captivating book includes publication details, reading notes and ratings for each work, as well as top-ten lists contributed by well-known writers, editors, critics, and essayists,

TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

THE HORROR OF MY LIFE BY HARRISON PHILLIPS

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR FICTION REVIEWS

Hymns of Abomination: Secret Songs of Leeds (2021)

3/2/2022
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Hymns of Abomination: Secret Songs of Leeds (2021)
by Justin A. Burnett (editor)
Review by: Mark Walker


Welcome to Hymns of Abomination: Secret Songs of Leeds, an anthology of fiction compiled to celebrate the work of Matthew M. Bartlett.


“Hymns of abomination is a vivid, communal nightmare. A fitting tribute to a contemporary master of the weird.”
    Laird Barron, Author of Swift to Chase


This book is packed with weird fiction and horror writers, both established and new, who have been invited to play in Bartlett’s imaginative sandbox. Hymns of Abomination burrows deeper into nightmarish Leeds than is safe. This volume is a must for fans of Bartlett and horror fiction in general.


As the back of the book attests, Hymns of Abomination is a tribute to, and celebration of, the works of Matthew M. Bartlett, set in and around his Silent Hill-esque, hellhole of a city, Leeds.

Not being familiar with Bartlett’s work before reading this anthology, I was a little concerned that I would not ‘get’ the stories within or find myself confused, missing in-jokes and references only the truly initiated would understand.

I needn’t have worried. All the stories work without any prior knowledge of Leeds or the mind-bending, corruptive influence of the WXXT radio broadcasts that permeate every page. While I am sure I probably missed some references to previous works, I don’t feel I was at any disadvantage from this. In fact, in many ways, by the time I was through with Hymns of abomination, I wasn’t entirely sure I needed to find out more about Leeds; I was almost glad to have shaken off its oppressive air of despair and left it behind! Although, to be honest, even after you finish the book and put it on a shelf, or shut down your Kindle, Hymns of Abomination sticks to you, defying any efforts to forget the hellish journey you have just been taken on by a group of brilliant writers not afraid to disgust and delight in equal measures. However, having said all that, there is enough intrigue in Hymns to entice you back to Leeds, to explore Bartlett’s work if you haven’t already, which is exactly what the WXXT Jocks intended all along… once you pass the city limits, you are lost!

The collected tales of Leeds play out like a series of discordant notes banged out on a badly tuned piano, but to a still recognizable tune. It’s disturbing and sometimes painful to listen to, but you can’t quite manage to pull yourself away.

There is an oft discussed fallacy about authors; that you are what you write. People think that, just because you write murder, you must be a murderer. We all know this is patently rubbish, but that will come as a big relief and reassurance with this lot of twisted minds! There is a wealth of talent on show in Hymns and an incredible array of fevered imaginations eager to share their nightmares with you; nightmares that include witches, doppelgängers, ghosts, creepy kids, sacrifice, and meat leeches. Yep, leeches… made of meet… with teeth. If you think the Milkman is creepy, wait until you get a load of the Meatman.

The stories are all connected to the (hopefully fictional) city of Leeds, a character itself, looming large and toying with the lives of the unfortunates caught in its shadow. There is something about the city that pulls people in and won’t let them leave, that twists their minds and perception, pushing them to the very edge of sanity and despair. Residents and visitors alike find themselves caught by the hypnotic words floating over the airwaves from the hard to find, but difficult to ignore, WXXT radio station; another shared motif across many of the stories.

As with any anthology, and especially one with so many tales, not every story is going to land with the reader. A couple didn’t quite grab me as much as the others, but that is a personal thing, there is nothing wrong with the stories themselves, I just didn’t “get” then in the same way as others. Your Mileage May Vary! To critique every part of Hymns would make for a very long review and I like to treat anthologies as a whole, but rest assured, in this case, the sum of the parts make up an impressive whole. There is something for everyone in Leeds and I don’t want to risk spoiling anything by working through an extensive account of each tale.

However, I will say that Uncle Bart’s Map, the final story in the collection, was my favourite. I enjoyed the way it was written and how it recounted the protagonist’s history and relationship with Uncle Bart, slowly introducing questions about the uncle’s mysterious life and the titular map. It takes us on a journey through strange alleyways and worlds before leaving us on a fantastic cliff-hanger. It gives us few answers but delivers just enough information to intrigue and fascinate. I think it was the longest story in the collection and, although it takes its time, it does so with style.

Every other story deserves to be in there and they will all find an audience, but Uncle Bart’s Map stood out for me. Thinking about it, as also probably the least grimy account of Leeds in the book, perhaps it was the feeling of relief as I knew I was finally going to escape that damned city!

Nestled between many of the stories is a series of short adverts for “Anne Gare’s Rare and Import Video Catalogue” written, this time, by the editor Johnathan Raab. These sections offer a fleeting break between the disturbing visions of Leeds and the people that live(d) there. Each entry describes a suitably odd recording/film/DVD that is available for purchase, highlighting a wide array of strange and disturbing images and events. The sorts of things that you might hear about in whispered conversations and tell yourself you would never watch but can’t help Googling when you are alone. Anne Gare will no doubt have a physical store somewhere down a grubby back alley in Leeds – I wouldn’t recommend a visit.
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Hymns is a dirty, grimy collection of disturbing people, situations, murder, sacrifice, depravity, and violence. Some of it is unpleasant, and much of it will leave a lasting impression – the impression that if you were driving down a lonely road one night, lost and confused, when you come to the road sign that points left for Leeds and right to Castle Rock… for God’s sake turn right. TURN RIGHT!

Hymns of Abomination: Secret Songs of Leeds Paperback – 
by Justin A. Burnett 

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"Hymns of Abomination is a vivid, communal nightmare. A fitting tribute to a contemporary master of the weird."
Laird Barron, author of Swift to Chase


Welcome to Hymns of Abomination: Secret Songs of Leeds, an anthology of fiction compiled to celebrate the work of Matthew M. Bartlett.


Bartlett is a beloved voice in contemporary weird fiction known for his richly nightmarish tales of Leeds, a fictionalized version of a village that's part of Northampton, MA. What began as Livejournal posts circulated among friends in the early 2000's, Bartlett's short, macabre, and imaginative yarns found their way into Gateways to Abomination, a collection that swept the small world of weird fiction into giddy delirium. Since then, Bartlett has continued to influence writers and readers alike with his dark, grotesque, and tantalizing tales.


This book is packed with weird fiction and horror writers, both established and new, who have been invited to play in Bartlett's imaginative sandbox. Featuring all original tales from John Langan, Gemma Files, Brian Evenson, S.P. Miskowski, and many more, Hymns of Abomination burrows deeper into nightmarish Leeds than is safe. This volume is a must for fans of Bartlett and horror fiction in general.  


TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE ​

FILM GUTTER REVIEWS: SNAKE DICK (2020)

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR FICTION REVIEWS

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