Week 272 – Weekly Horror Short Story Reviews: Butts, Stoker, Morrissette, Narnia, and Klein

Welcome to Week 272 of my horror short fiction review project! Some decent and interesting stories this week, but my favorite was Soren Narnia’s “legend,” which is an extraordinarily tense and atmospheric tale of a college student alone in an isolated bed-and-breakfast.

Dracula Unfanged, edited by Christopher Sequeira (IFWG Australia, 2022)

“The Lost Warlord” by Leverett Butts and Dacre Stoker

There was a kernel of a fun, pulpy story buried in here under the silliness. A historian named Tennessee Phillips is brought in to locate the mummified corpse of Dracula, which is going to be reunited with his severed head. Dracula is, you see, immortal, and an evil pharmaceutical company plans to use the revivified Dracula to somehow grant immortality to the human race, or something equally nefarious(?). I had some fun reading it but it was a struggle to take it seriously.

The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories, edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer (Tor, 2012)

“The Familiars” by Micaela Morrissette

An interesting story about a widowed mother and her son, and the son’s persistent imaginary friend who keeps reemerging, seemingly from the shadows under the bed. Ominous, spooky, creepy; though of course that’s how I would describe most children, with or without imaginary friends. I liked this one but didn’t love it.

Knifepoint Horror: The Transcripts, Volume 1, by Soren Narnia (self-published, 2018)

“legend”

Wow. This one felt really powerful and genuinely kept me on the edge of my seat with tension. The narrator is a college student who stays at a remote bed-and-breakfast in a dying town and promptly gets snowed in. He then realizes that there is a lot of local folklore about “the walking people,” though it is unclear who/what they might be. Then he encounters them. Very eerie and with a well-developed sense of menace. Very effective story.

Reassuring Tales: Expanded Edition, by T.E.D. Klein (Pickman’s Press, 2021)

“Magic Carpet”

An exploration of the “consensual reality” idea, that things work the way they do because we all more or less agree to them. Set aboard an aircraft. Kind of a fun story, though you can see it coming a great way off.


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Story Review from Vastarien, Volume 1, Issue 1: Ligotti, Fawver, Silverwood, and Slatsky

I’m continuing my look at all things Thomas Ligotti-related by turning now to the very first issue of Vastarien magazine, which if you haven’t yet checked out, you should. Here are my thoughts on the first four items in this issue.

Foreword to Teatro Grottesco (Okultura, 2014), essay by Thomas Ligotti

I believe this is the first English translation of a short foreword to a Polish edition of Ligotti’s Teatro Grottesco, so I very much appreciate its inclusion here. Ligotti talks about the decayed, filthy urban landscapes that he’s always been drawn to—not the bright lights and traffic and commerce of the city but the dirty rivulet of scum draining into a storm drain. Very telling, and not at all surprising to hear, but interesting nonetheless. Ligotti also talks about Lovecraft and Poe’s use of setting and place, especially the urban ones they return to, noting that one must be a true native of these places to really grok the sense of place present in their work. He also notes how Poe’s tales are set in places that are somewhat dreamlike and slightly detached from the real world, as he says his own settings are. I would firmly agree with that; not surprisingly, Ligotti manages to put his finger on one of the most unique and intriguing elements of his own settings. The rundown towns he sets much of his own work resonate in part because they are so real—I’ve been through a number of places exactly like those he describes—but also because they are also just a little off from what we’d see in our own world.

“The Gods in Their Seats, Unblinking,” play by Kurt Fawver

This is a one-act play, set within a framing device that describes the play’s single performance (shades of The King in Yellow) and how everyone involved in the play’s performance (including the audience) has allegedly disappeared. There are just two characters in the play: Mr. Krill, a psychiatric patient, and Dr. Nazir, his psychiatrist. Krill has come to believe that not only are they characters in a play and had no prior existence before the play began, but that the audience itself is observing them—he can sense this somehow—and that audience itself is being observed by another audience, and so on and so forth. By destroying the eyes and ears of the audience he imagines exists beyond the fourth wall (which he convinces Nazier to do after this revelation drives him mad), and proceeding to do the same for the other audiences in succession, they can make their way to the “author” of the play (and presumably, author of existence). This play is far more than the kind of postmodern play we’ve all seen or read that just plays with metatextuality and the fourth wall because it genuinely combines those notions with true existential horror. Very, very effective, and well worth the price of this issue of the journal alone. I’m not exaggerating, I liked this play that much.

“The Nightmare of His Art: The Horrific Power of the Imagination in ‘The Troubles of Dr. Thoss’ and ‘Gas Station Carnivals’” essay by W. Silverwood

A non-fiction piece that discusses the theme of imagination—especially artistic imagination—in two of Ligotti’s stories. Not incredibly deep or thought-provoking, I found this one somewhat forgettable.

“Affirmation of the Spirit: Consciousness, Transformation, and the Fourth World in Film,” essay by Christopher Slatsky

Another non-fiction piece. While this one wasn’t directly about Ligotti’s work—though it does cover themes familiar to any reader of Ligotti’s work—I found it much more interesting. There are some intriguing comparisons between film and religion (both seek the transcendent) as well as reflections on free will and the idea of humans as mannequins, a concept that Ligotti explores often.


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Week 271 – Weekly Horror Short Story Reviews: Holder, Negarestani, Narnia, and Klein

Welcome to Week 271 of my horror short fiction review project! Some interesting (and odd) stories this week, but my favorite was Soren Narnia’s “lighthouse,” which features a modern-day (or maybe postmodern) wizards’ duel. I’m a sucker for those.

Dracula Unfanged, edited by Christopher Sequeira (IFWG Australia, 2022)

“The Sea Ghost” by Nancy Holder

This was a decidedly odd one. Dracula finds himself—he is uncertain how—as a kind of Neptune or Aquaman, ruler of intelligent sea creatures and traveling throughout the seas as lord of the oceans. It is also 1968 and for unstated reasons, he is waging an undeclared war against both the United States and the USSR, and attacks their forces off the coast of Vietnam. He then realizes that a descendant of the Harkers is onboard a cruise ship in the area, and interacts with her. Really, really strange and unappealing version of Dracula here. Nancy Holder is a great writer and I expected a lot more from her. I just can’t understand why she went in this direction with Dracula. Out of all the reimaginings of Dracula conceivably possible, this was not a good choice.

The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories, edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer (Tor, 2012)

“Dust Enforcer” by Reza Negarestani

A decidedly odd inclusion in the collection. My understanding is that this is merely an excerpt from a larger work; those rarely work, and the excerpts included in The Weird often simply failed to land. This is essentially an encyclopedia entry on the demon Pazuzu (if you’re familiar with some of The Exorcist’s sequels, you’ll know Pazuzu), who is a Middle Eastern demon associated with plagues and locusts. Some vague connections with Al-Hazrad for Lovecraftians. Some pseudo-non-fictional works can be very powerful, but this one was just as dry and arid as the lands bespoiled by Pazuzu and his locusts.

Knifepoint Horror: The Transcripts, Volume 1, by Soren Narnia (self-published, 2018)

“lighthouse”

Fascinating and gruesome story of a modern-day warlock duel at an abandoned lighthouse as part of an occult ritual. There are some genuinely intriguing hints at a larger (magickal) world operating alongside our more mundane reality that I’d love if Narnia revisited some day (I don’t know if he has or not, though I suspect not, as most if not all of his stories seem to be independent of all the rest). A little more magic would have been welcome, but still very interesting.

Reassuring Tales: Expanded Edition, by T.E.D. Klein (Pickman’s Press, 2021)

“Curtains for Nat Crumley”

A nebbish, deeply flawed man is taking a shower when he realizes that he has stepped into another place, a home inhabited by someone other than himself, someone very different from him. Then he realizes that in fact this other person is another version of him. Kind of an exploration of that “path less traveled” sort of thing. Interesting, but goes on a bit long for the payoff.


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Book Review: Nightfall and Other Dangers by Jacob Steven Mohr

Nightfall and Other Dangers
Jacob Steven Mohr
JournalStone Publishing (April 7, 2023)
Reviewed by Andrew Byers

While Jacob Steven Mohr has published a couple of novels and a variety of short stories, his work was new to me. I’m delighted to say that Mohr’s new collection, Nightfall and Other Dangers, assembles an eclectic set of horror and weird fiction tales that spans the breadth of the genre, from body horror to cosmicism, and ghost stories to slasher killers. Nightfall contains fifteen stories in all, ranging from a couple of very brief tales that open the collection to a full-size novella. Some of these stories are quiet and unsettling, while others are savage in their brutality—you never know what you’re going to get when you start one of them. I’m going to focus on just a handful of these stories, some of the ones that especially stuck with me.

I’ll start with “Song of the Summer,” which featured some of the strongest characterization in the entire collection. It’s only got three characters in it, but I feel like I know these people. Shanna, Cameron, and Hyde are three college friends who row out to a deserted island for a camping trip, but their love triangle and suppressed feelings prevent it from being a relaxing time away from the stress of college. An old story (an urban legend?) about another set of friends who once stayed on the island and ended their time there in an orgy of bloodshed complicates the situation. Is that tragedy going to repeat itself?

Mohr’s weird fiction game is extremely strong, perhaps best highlighted by several additional stories. In “The Panic,” an inexplicable event has led to a mass drowning in the ocean, told through a series of interviews, newspaper articles, and incident reports. Chilling and a great example of how to do modern weird fiction. In “Mister Mickenzie,” a teenager is babysitting two little girls, Max and Libby. The girls seem to have gotten involved with a being they call Mister Mickenzie. There is a great deal that is suggested or implied in this story, and I found it utterly chilling. In “A Real Likeness,” a college student is doodling while in class one day and draws a picture of a girl in his class. Then he encounters the girl’s boyfriend, who, well, uses the artist’s talent to draw a portrait of the girl that truly captures her essence. This turns out to be horrifying and mindblowing, almost in a literal sense. A reminder of just how pregnant with possibility for weird fiction the art world, and the creation of artistic works, really is.

While many of Mohr’s stories are firmly set in the modern day, he excels in unsettling historical fiction as well. I’d highlight everything from the weird western “Some Bad Luck Near Bitter Downs” to “1855,” which is about a doctor running an orphanage who encounters a boy who is far more than he seems, as is his mother. Wow.

I must also note two tales of life (and death) after the apocalypse, which nominally take place in the same setting (according to the author’s notes), but are otherwise unlinked: “Last Supper” and “The Machete at the End of the World.” In “Last Supper,” one of my favorites in the collection, Corpumond and his wife Ellisanae are gluttons beyond compare, and in fact may be the very last gluttons on Earth. Human civilization has crumbled and these two sit atop the ruins of a skyscraper devouring what may be the last members of whole species. Utterly fascinating, and disgusting on multiple levels, of course. “Machete” depicts the final confrontation between a slasher killer (a la Jason Vorhees) and the true final girl he had tormented before the apocalypse began. Very intriguing perspective and premise.

I should mention “Sometimes You Get Two,” a novella original to this collection (as well as the longest story in the book, so it’s worth discussing a bit.) Joan and Barb are friends, though their relationship is fraught, fractured by a disagreement somehow connected with Barb’s fiancée Liz. The pair has traveled to visit Barb’s grandparents, who live way out in the country. The idea is that they’ll spend a few days deer hunting and teaching Joan how to shoot. This is a slow burn, a meditation on relationships, and how even (especially) very close ones can grow attenuated over time, as well as what predawn mornings spent staring off into the forest waiting for something to emerge—a situation that will resonate with hunters and nature watchers—can be like. There is a steady sense of menace and unsettling atmosphere throughout.

Nightfall and Other Dangers is a fascinatingly eclectic collection. Jacob Steven Mohr is a genuinely gifted writer, and his unique vision comes through strongly in this collection. Definitely recommended.

This review originally appeared in Hellnotes.

Story Review from Thomas Ligotti’s Grimscribe: “The Library of Byzantium,” “Miss Plarr,” and “The Shadow at the Bottom of the World”

I continue my look at Thomas Ligotti’s work with the last three stories from Grimscribe.

“The Library of Byzantium”

A young boy (a budding artist) is visited one summer by a visiting priest, Father Sevich, who shows him a prayer book that seems like it is much more than a simple breviary. The boy accidentally tears out a page of the book that contains a woodcut of several demons on it. The boy later has fever dreams of Fr. Sevich. The boy ends up taking some holy water from the church and dissolves the page in the water, with smoke issuing forth from the page as it is destroyed. I liked this one, but was very surprised at how Catholic it was. I know that Ligotti was raised Catholic, but I didn’t expect that he would write any stories in that vein as an adult.

“Miss Plarr”

An eccentric young woman is hired as a housekeeper, and, later, tutor, for a child. Miss Plarr takes a special interest in his drawings, which depict an alien world. She begins teaching him some strange, dark-ish things, but nothing too overt. Then one day she asks him if he hears the haunting noises she hears, things that “sting the air” as she puts it. Some extremely evocative prose at this point in the story. The boy does not, though it becomes clear that Miss Plarr becomes increasingly deranged by the sounds she hears, or thinks she hears. After both become ill for a time, they venture out of the house one foggy day to go shopping. Miss Plarr disappears, perhaps carried off into some aerial realm by whatever had been making the sounds. Very evocative stuff here. I liked this one a lot.

“The Shadow at the Bottom of the World”

A strange rural mystery—a bit of a departure for Ligotti, who seems to typically set his tales in small towns and desolate urban areas rather than in farm country. The story begins with a scarecrow that the locals report may be moving on its own. When they tear it apart, they find a blackened skeleton, connected to a long back tendril embedded in the earth. They dig, of course, and can find no end to the tendril in sight but open what seems to be a bottomless pit. Enter Mr. Marble, a visionary traveling knife sharpener; Marble seems to function like a herald or high priest for this limitless black tendril—and the entity it is obviously connected to—which comes to demand sacrifices. Marble ends up killing himself, rather than lead an orgy of slaughter, and his corpse is thrown into the pit. An interesting one, though I think I like my Ligotti set in more urban areas personally.


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Week 270 – Weekly Horror Short Story Reviews: Sequeira, Williams, Narnia, and Klein

Welcome to Week 270 of my horror short fiction review project! We have one new collection to start working through today, Dracula Unfanged, which seems to be a collection of reimaginings of the character Dracula, not as vampire lord but as other things. Should be interesting. My favorite story of the week was probably “Prologue: Still Waters” by Christopher Sequeira, which is a story about Dracula as sorcerer and ruler of Hell.

Dracula Unfanged, edited by Christopher Sequeira (IFWG Australia, 2022)

“Prologue: Still Waters” by Christopher Sequeira

A good one. Dracula has just graduated from the Scholomance, under the tutelage of Satan, and Satan proposes that Dracula take over for him as ruler of Hell. Of course, this being Satan’s idea, it doesn’t turn out quite as Dracula had envisioned. Nice characterization and atmosphere.

The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories, edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer (Tor, 2012)

“The Hide” by Liz Williams

I have to admit that I just didn’t get a lot out of this story. Some young English people are in a bird blind in a weird marshy area. Some meditations on big subjects (like eternity and identity) but that was about it. The story just didn’t work for me, though I acknowledge its excellent sense of place and atmosphere development. Like the marsh in which it is set, this story was just too murky.

Knifepoint Horror: The Transcripts, Volume 1, by Soren Narnia (self-published, 2018)

“rehearsal”

There’s an interesting element here—possible time travel or some similar phenomenon at Ford’s Theater just prior to Lincoln’s assassination—but this one just didn’t work for me. I think the exact nature of the man who shows up at the theater is just too unclear and unfocused to be a really strong, cohesive story.

Reassuring Tales: Expanded Edition, by T.E.D. Klein (Pickman’s Press, 2021)

“Renaissance Man”

Scientists manage to invent a time machine that pulls back a scientist from the distant future to the present. He’s…not exactly what they were hoping for. Really fun.


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Book Review: Imago and Other Transformations by Erica Ruppert

Imago and Other Transformations
Erica Ruppert
Trepidatio Publishing (March 17, 2023)
Reviewed by Andrew Byers

Having had the pleasure of reviewing Ruppert’s novella Sister in Arms a couple years ago, I knew going into this new short story collection that Ruppert is a powerful and evocative wordsmith. I might compare some of her prose with that of Farah Rose Smith’s; many of the stories contained in Imago are atmospheric, intended to invoke particular emotions and attitudes rather than driving a particular plot from beginning to middle to end in a straightforward kind of way. That’s not at all to say that these stories meander or are incoherent, merely that most of these stories are not what I might describe as plot-intensive. Ruppert’s goal seems to be to suggest a kind of melancholy, a sense of loss, or sorrow, or sometimes grief for something that has been lost—a time, a place, a previous equilibrium—that is now gone and cannot be easily reacquired.

Because Imago contains twenty-one stories in all, let me focus on a handful that I found most evocative.

I would describe several of the stories in Imago as being set during quiet, slow-motion apocalypses. These aren’t fiery destructions of civilization involving world-ending asteroids, or nuclear wars, or zombie plagues. Instead, these are insidious, slow but inevitable catastrophes that depopulate the Earth and will eventually end our civilization not with a bang but with a whimper. Needless to say, that’s the perfect backdrop for Ruppert’s brand of horror. One of these stories is “Here Is Where Your Proud Waves Halt.” In this tale, the world has effectively ended, likely through some kind of blight, with those who haven’t died yet still eking out an existence in a world that is crumbling around them. Aster is one such; she sets up shop at a seashore as a kind of fortuneteller. Sylvia, a woman who desperately wants to have a baby, is one of her customers. Loss and forlorn hope loom large over this one. Another such story is “The Grave of Angels,” one of the rare stories in Imago with a male protagonist. The narrator’s dying wife Corra wants to be brought back to her family’s ancestral manor to die. What comes after Corra’s death is horrifying and fascinating and dark. Really melancholic as a tale of personal tragedy and also because the backdrop for the story, barely mentioned, is a kind of slow-motion, gentle apocalypse of an unspecified nature. “Underneath” is another such story. Here, Elena is an old woman living in a remote, postapocalyptic area after her husband Aaron has died. She’s simply trying to survive by raising her own food in her garden, where horrors grow. Really good, and understated, of course, like most of Ruppert’s fiction.

Like all the best cosmic horror, much of Ruppert’s work suggests that the nature of the universe is nowhere near as understandable and comforting—to the extent that we’re currently able to convince ourselves that the universe is both knowable and at least neutral toward humanity if not actually benign—as we have allowed ourselves to believe. When some factor changes, it throws one of Ruppert’s protagonists into turmoil, and takes the reader along for the ride. For example, in “Signals,” Estella begins to hear some mysterious, intrusive sound, perhaps the “music of the spheres” that her conspiracy theorist ex-boyfriend once hypothesized, which begins to erode her sanity and inject itself into every other aspect of her life. Really good. In “A Clockwork Muse,” Delia is an automaton, a recreation of a woman now lost tragically. Delia understands that something’s not quite right with her existence, which she comes to find unbearable. Dark and tragic. In “Chrysalis,” Sela keeps to herself and lives a private life while working in a mundane office job, taking the bus to and from work, and so forth, when several new people enter her life unexpectedly and begin to suggest that Sela and what she thinks is her normal life are not at all what she imagines. Very powerful.

Lastly, I would mention three final stories that really stood out to me; each is a little more outré than those mentioned above, but I found them remarkable, though they are all very distinct stories. In “Downstream,” Tamara once had a twin sister, Essie, attached lamprey-like to her body. Now separated from each other, they seek to reunite. Grotesque and excellent. This is as close to grossout body horror that Ruppert gets in Imago, but it demonstrates that she excels at this sub-genre too. “Strange Bodies” is set in an oceanside town with a long history of interacting with the merpeople whose bodies wash up on their beaches. Like Sisters in Arms (though not, I think, linked to that story at all), this is a story about the genealogy of a community whose roots are deeply intertwined with those who live in the sea. Chilling and excellent. And finally “Still” is set in the distant past; it is the story of a young woman who led her tribe before she was entombed as their guardian goddess, and then what came after in the long centuries that followed. Really good.

Ruppert is a skilled prose stylist who excels in quiet, understated horror that nevertheless manages to unsettle effortlessly. Her characterization is a real strength and lends a sense of verisimilitude to all her work. Imago and Other Transformations is an excellent collection, definitely recommended.

This review originally appeared in Hellnotes.

Story Review from Thomas Ligotti’s Grimscribe: “The Night School” and “The Glamour”

Continuing my look at Thomas Ligotti’s work with the next two stories from Grimscribe.

“The Night School”

The narrator is a former student of Instructor Carniero, who has left teaching, purportedly, because he contracted some terrible disease. While taking a short cut across campus, the narrator learns that Carniero is back teaching and ventures into the school to sit for Carniero’s class. He talks with several other students there in the building, one of whom alludes to something he learned from Carniero: that time is a product of cosmic sewage. This spurs reflections on the meaninglessness of existence and existence as a kind of filth. Though apparently back to teaching elsewhere in the building, it seems that Carniero may have died—perhaps he is afflicted with some kind of undeath or unlife?—and is clearly imparting secret knowledge to his students, perhaps via occult formulas, or by marrying the occult with science. Some intriguing ideas here.

“The Glamour”

Wandering around a city at night, the unnamed narrator comes upon a condemned theater that, according to a sign on the theater’s side entrance, has just reopened under new management. He has some curious conversations with regulars—similar to the narrator’s experience in “The Night School”—and becomes disconcerted by both the theater itself and the film that is being screened. The film itself depicts some nightmarish world; the theater is covered in fine, hair-like tendrils and cobwebs everywhere. It soon becomes clear that the theater patrons and workers are being restrained by the tendrils and will be operated on or otherwise tortured by the malevolent old woman—the “new management”—whose presence seems to haunt the cinema. Her presence may have even begun taking over the whole block, which the narrator begins to realize after escaping. Possibly more approachable than some other Ligotti stories.


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Week 269 – Weekly Horror Short Story Reviews: MacCreagh, Barron, Narnia, and Klein

Welcome to Week 269 of my horror short fiction review project! We bid farewell to one of our collections this week: The Black Magic Omnibus, which has had a real mix of hits and misses. Next week that one is going to be replaced by Dracula Unfanged in our line-up. While I really appreciated the philosophical underpinnings of Klein’s “Ladder,” my favorite story of the week was probably Soren Narnia’s “tunnel,” perhaps because I ride the subway in DC many times a week so the premise really gets me.

The Black Magic Omnibus, edited by Peter Haining (Taplinger, 1976)

“Dr. Muncing, Exorcist” by Gordon MacCreagh

Muncing is a secular exorcist/occultist who is brought in to deal with a family in which the wife has accidentally summoned up what they believe may be an elemental, who is sapping the life force from her inform brother. Interesting take on the supernatural.

The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories, edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer (Tor, 2012)

“The Forest” by Laird Barron

I have genuinely loved almost everything I’ve ever read by Barron. But I didn’t care for this one. It seems so vague and diffuse; I find it very different than the rest of Barron’s fiction, which is usually so pointed, with a real story to tell. This one…not so much. It’s an early work and that might explain it. I find it so odd that this would be the one Laird Barron story that the VanderMeers selected for inclusion; it’s practically the last Barron story I would have included had I been editing the thing. This is a tale of the reunion of a film maker named Partridge and some of his former associates, one of whom has learned how to communicate with a hyperintelligent insect colony. That premise would normally be right up my alley, but not so here.

Knifepoint Horror: The Transcripts, Volume 1, by Soren Narnia (self-published, 2018)

“tunnel”

As someone who rides the Washington DC subway system—where this story is set—about ten times a week during a normal work week, this one meant something to me. I can certainly see that a claustrophobe would find being stuck in a dark tunnel with no explanation pretty scary. I have been in a similar situation several times, though fortunately I did not encounter the terror of a ghost train car. Well done.

Reassuring Tales: Expanded Edition, by T.E.D. Klein (Pickman’s Press, 2021)

“Ladder”

A man is born of modest means on a Scottish sheep farm. After suffering a series of tragedies in his life, he comes to believe that God has a plan for him and that he is do something, to take action, or be present at some critical moment to carry out God’s plan, but he has no idea what that might be. He learns, or at least muses on, the nature of the universe, and God. This was a really thoughtful one, I liked it a lot.


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Book Review: Something Blue and Other Colorful Deaths by L.L. Soares

Something Blue and Other Colorful Deaths
L.L. Soares
Trepidatio Publishing (March 31, 2023)
Reviewed by Andrew Byers

In Something Blue and Other Colorful Deaths, L. L. Soares writes about the monstrous: monstrous intrusions into our reality, transformations of the self and the world around us, and the kind of body horror that results when one’s flesh is suddenly changed into the other, something loathsome and unwelcome. Soares terrifies by asking the reader: what happens when you discover that the world around you isn’t what you thought it was, when you realize that it’s not comfortable and familiar at all, but something alien and awful? And perhaps you are too.

Though Soares is a Bram Stoker Award winner, this was my first exposure to his work. I’m delighted to say that I very much enjoyed the breadth and themes of the short fiction in this collection. With seventeen stories of varying length, there’s a lot going on here, so I’ll focus on some of my favorites.

Soares writes about sad people trapped in awful lives whose fortunes go downhill fast very, very well. The first tale in the collection, “Something Blue,” is such a story. Two nice little children with crappy families, Jude and Shirley, find a strange blue creature hidden in the tall grass near their homes one day, and tragedy ensues. Grim, poignant, sad, and very, very good. “The Click of an Unhinged Jaw” was another such story. Told for the perspective of a precocious eleven year old girl who is trying to make sense of her older sister’s gruesome death and solve the crime. She uncovers a great deal more than she imagined at the outset. A nice piece that blends cosmic horror with traditional folklore.

“Sometimes the Good Witch Sings to Me” was an extraordinarily grim tale that has stuck with me. Jerry, a lonely and isolated man grappling with the loss of all of his closest personal relationships, seems to have been selected by Glinda the Good Witch (of Oz, you know the one) to kill evil witches, who happen to look like homeless women living in the alleys and byways of his town. Jerry slowly crumples under the strain of this compulsion.

In “Still Life with Soul Juice,” Carlos is an artist who meets his muse. Unfortunately the muse turns out to be a monstrous, insectile entity that wants to devour the “soul juice” contained in his (or other people’s) blood. Carlos has got to decide if his art career is worth forging a pact with this thing.

One of my favorites was “City Slayer,” which is about a man named Abercrombie who reveres a saint who seems to be the patron of killing entire cities (as in Sodom and Gomorrah). And that saint has imbued Abercrombie with the ability to kill all of the inhabitants of a city in a single night. Really powerful stuff. In a different kind of apocalyptic tale, “Necropolis,” Fred Harrison is an ordinary guy living in a world in which, one day, with no warning, almost every other person on the planet (except Fred) decides to commit suicide. I really, really liked this one.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t talk about two linked stories that I found especially strong (I think these are the only stories in the collection that have ties with other stories): “Second Chances” and “Holiday House.” Both are set in the beach community of Blue Clay, Massachusetts. It’s an unsettling place that features an unpleasant sounding shore area, some deep dark secrets, and some extremely damaged people. These stories are those perfect examples of weird fiction where the central puzzling elements are left unexplained but are nevertheless entirely satisfying as stories. That’s hard to do, but Soares does it well.

That brief overview doesn’t begin to cover the breadth of Soares’ distinct visions across the contents of Something Blue and Other Colorful Deaths. These are powerful tales. Definitely recommended.

This review originally appeared in Hellnotes.