Halloween Book Review: The Halloween Encyclopedia, Second Edition (2011) by Lisa Morton

This is the critical reference work on the traditions, rituals, symbology, mythology, and folklore of Halloween organized in A-Z encyclopedic fashion. I did not have the pleasure of reading the first edition, but the second edition is certainly definitive.

Keep in mind that this is not the reference work for a detailed discussion of every horror film that obliquely references the holiday (though appendices begin to compile lists of key works of fiction and film on the subject); this is a detailed look at the traditional origins and customs of the holiday itself. I found it impossible to conceive of a significant element, theme, trope, or symbol related to Halloween that Morton does not discuss. (You may be able to come up with an item that Morton and I could not, but I have my doubts.) The encyclopedia also includes articles on affiliated holidays and festivals (e.g., Guy Fawkes Day/Night, the Mexican Day of the Dead, Martinmas, Devil’s Night, etc.) I should note that some of the entries in this volume seem, at first blush, to be only tangentially related to the specific Halloween holiday (e.g., entries on “fairies” and “zoos”), but Morton always does a good job of tying these items to the broader themes of Halloween. I appreciated the appendices that cover, as noted, an annotated review of key written and filmic works on the holiday, along with a thorough chronology of Halloween and a highly useful bibliography of secondary works on Halloween and its precursors.

I would actually like to see Morton undertake a third edition, or more likely, a companion volume, perhaps with a co-author, to offer a similar, detailed exploration of Halloween-related literature and films. She’s begun compiling the annotated bibliography and filmography, now I want to see her flesh these out into a full-length monograph or encyclopedia!

If you are a Halloween aficionado (as I am), you need to acquire this book. Highly recommended.


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Review copyright 2012 J. Andrew Byers

Wildside Press Coupon Codes

It’s been a while since I’ve posted any coupons or discount codes, but here are some I just received from Wildside Books. As always, they have a lot of new fiction available, including many reprints of classic works. Personally, I’m interested in several of their new ebook megapacks, which are a steal at $0.99 each.

Special Offer #1 – EBOOKS
order from http://www.wildsidepress.com

Get The Fifth Science Fiction Megapack free with any order. (Or save 99 cents on anything priced $2.00 or more.) Use coupon code FREEMEGAPACK for your discount. (This installment in the series is the best yet, with 5 Hugo and Nebula winners and nominees. Contributors include Allen Steele, Gardner Dozois, Avram Davidson, and many more.)

Special Offer #2 – PAPER BOOKS
order from http://www.wildsidebooks.com

Save $5 off $25 – use coupon code BOOKME
Save $12 off $50 – use coupon code BOOKME2
Save $30 off $100 – use coupon code BOOKME3

Special Offer #3 – Magazines, Books, AND Ebooks

With any print or ebook purchase over $10, we’ll give you a FREE 2-issue trial subscription to Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine (ebook – you must specify Kindle or Epub format). Your subscription will start with the current issue — #7. (#8 is about 2-3 weeks away.) There is no coupon for this offer, and you can combine it with the other coupons. Just write “FREE SHMM SUBSCRIPTION” (and specify Kindle or Epub editions) in the comments field. If you don’t specify, you’ll get Epub. As long as your order is $10 or more, we’ll send you the SHMM e-magazines. NOTE: This offer is for new subscribers only.

Book Review: Shady Palms by Allen Dusk

By now we’ve all become aware of the bedbug epidemic that swept through New York City and the rest of the nation over the last couple years. For a while there, some folks were reluctant to stay in hotels, sit down on movie theater seats, and so forth. I’ve never actually seen one of these tiny terrors, but bedbugs are supposed to be almost impossible to spot or get rid of. And they seem like they’re (potentially) everywhere. Heck, I even know some people who got bitten by bedbugs after they purchased what was supposed to be a brand-new mattress. But as annoying as bedbugs are, they aren’t a real danger – right? Somehow Allen Dusk has managed to make bedbugs a genuine scary threat.

Some mild plot spoilers follow.

SHADY PALMS begins almost as a kind of technothriller: one of Al Qaeda’s top agents in America is on the loose trying to steal some material for a dirty bomb in the San Diego area. He’s being tracked by a couple of gung-ho FBI special agents. This initial first third of the novel is all very well done, but the story quickly morphs into something quite different: a very successful “killer animal” story about irradiated, mutated bedbugs that begin to devour the unwitting residents of a sleazy motel. The eponymous Shady Palms motel isn’t just your ordinary sketchy motel with dirty sheets, no amenities, and over-abundance of hookers, johns, and down-on-their-luck types. Shady Palms is run by a creepy dude named Sanjay who is much more than he appears to be. Both Sanjay and his motel have grim past, and this comes back to haunt Sanjay and the motel cleaning staff as guests start disappearing at the hands…er, proboscises of a new breed of bedbugs growing ever more fearsome.

I’ve seen “killer animal” books featuring dogs, wolves, sharks, bats, rats, worms, crabs, roaches, spiders, slugs and more, but this was the first I’ve encountered featuring bedbugs as the unlikely villains of the piece. At first glance, it may seem almost a little silly for bedbugs to kill people, but Dusk is able to bring it off very successfully. These little suckers surprised me by embodying a real sense of menace.

The plot is fast-moving and unrelenting; it was sufficiently action-packed that I wanted to keep going and stayed up past my bedtime on several nights finishing the book. The characters are interesting and their dialogue convincing. Sure, almost every character in the book is a deeply flawed person – some of whom have committed terrible acts – but despite all that I found myself wanting to read more about them, learn more of their secrets before they meet their grim fates. The novel’s horror elements are certainly gruesome, but creative, and leavened with plenty of dark comedy. This could have been a run-of-the-mill, forgettable story, but Dusk’s writing rises head and shoulders above his competition and makes this a horror novel that shouldn’t be missed. This was the first Allen Dusk novel I’ve read, but I genuinely hope it won’t be my last. He’s got real talent. Highly recommended, especially for those who enjoy creature features.

This review first appeared on the Hellnotes website.


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Review copyright 2012 J. Andrew Byers

Book Review: Wildside Double #25: Under the Ember Star: A Science Fantasy Novel by Charles Allen Gramlich / The Battle for Eden: The Human-Knacker War, Book Three by Mark E. Burgess

This is an outstanding collection of two short science fiction novels. Remember the old Ace Doubles each containing two separate novels, two covers, and you flipped the book over to read the second novel? The Wildside Doubles are just like that, though they are trade paperbacks rather than mass market paperbacks. Because the novels are entirely unrelated, I’ll review them separately below.

Some mild plot spoilers follow.

THE BATTLE FOR EDEN by Mark E. Burgess is the third short novel in the Human-Knacker War series. (I reviewed the omnibus edition that collects the first two novels in the series, by the late Ardath Mayhar and Robert Reginald, respectively, here.) The series is set in an indeterminately far future in which humanity has colonized a host of new worlds before encountering the implacable Knackers, a species of ravenous crustacean-like predators who conquer and devour all other species they encounter. And the Knackers are not just vicious foes; their technology is superior to that of humanity, they essentially refuse to communicate or negotiate, and they have so far been winning battle after battle in the war. Thus far, all three of the Human-Knacker War novels have focused not on the major battles and strategies of the war, but on how ordinary people become caught up in this existential conflict and must overcome their own personal circumstances to survive. While this premise could easily result in a dark, depressing tone to the books, all three have managed to strike a balance between the very real threats faced by the protagonists while still holding out hope for both the individuals involved and humanity as a whole.

THE BATTLE FOR EDEN opens with a surprisingly interesting and well-done space battle but soon shifts to the surface of the remote human colony world Eden, when a human space pilot, Major Simon Roy, is forced to crash land and throw in his lot with an extended family of colonists in the wake of a Knacker victory. Roy and the colonists must fortify and defend an isolated farmstead against the inevitable Knacker ground forces. What follows is a clever and engaging battle of wits and ingenuity as the humans must rely on smarts rather than superior technology just to stay alive. Along the way there are some nice allusions to events in the previous books (all well-explained, so that they are not confusing for readers who haven’t read those yet). THE BATTLE FOR EDEN likewise does a good job of advancing the larger plot of the series, showcasing some new developments in the larger war while retaining the charm and individual focus of the previous books. Needless to say, I am very much looking forward to the next Human-Knacker war book, as well as more fiction from Mark Burgess. This was the first book by Burgess I have read, but his characterization, dialogue, and plotting are all outstanding and I look forward to reading much more of his work.

UNDER THE EMBER STAR by Charles Allen Gramlich is a rousing science fiction tale of a streetwise young woman named Ginn who was left to her own devices at a young age when her archaeologist father was killed. She lives on Kelmer, a distant human colony world, which features a native humanoid species, hostile terrain, an enigmatic past, and a cooling sun that promises to slowly worsen the planet’s climate. Ginn is hired by an inscrutable member of the native species for a job that will take her into Kelmer’s wilderness, battling human and alien foes who seek to stop their quest, in an effort to learn more about the planet’s origins and the involvement of a long-lost alien species. Gramlich’s worldbuilding is superb; Kemler never ceases to seem like a real place, and Gramlich’s construction of a relatively primitive alien culture in a tense but not entirely antagonistic relationship with human colonists is some of the best I’ve seen in years. This fast-moving, well-written adventure yarn is an exceptional science fiction story.

I actually found UNDER THE EMBER STAR’s subtitle – “A Science Fantasy Novel” – to be a little misleading, as there aren’t really any “fantasy” elements I could point to. This isn’t a “hard” science fiction novel by any means, but there’s certainly no mix of magic with rayguns and starships, as I typically think of “science fantasy” stories. I certainly hope we see a follow-up to UNDER THE EMBER STAR soon. The protagonist Ginn and the planet of Kelmer both have a lot more depth to explore. In many ways, while the novel is certainly complete and self-contained, the climax of the story left me wanting to know what happens next (always a sign of a good thing, I suppose).

This short novel compilation is highly recommended for fans of science fiction, especially those interested in the human dimension, rather than the technological, of science fiction. I genuinely enjoyed both books, even more than I thought I might from their initial descriptions, largely because of the strength of both authors’ writing. No prior knowledge of the first two Human-Knacker War books is required to fully understand and enjoy Burgess’ tale, so don’t let that deter you from picking it up. Burgess and Gramlich both know how to tell engaging, fast-moving science fiction adventures and I hope to see their work receive much more attention in the future.


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Review copyright 2012 J. Andrew Byers