Monday, April 10, 2023

Wily Writers Presents Tales of Foreboding Edited by ES Magill and Bill Bodden

 

Foreboding—the feeling that bad, or evil, awaits us at some point in our future, distant or near.

It’s like a pressure at the back of your brain, a whisper that it can all go terribly wrong. The sense of foreboding reminds us the bad is coming—but we don’t know exactly when.

Here are 14 tales where evil is nosing the chinks in the lives of the unsuspecting, searching for a way in and ready to wreak havoc. But these are no ordinary sufferings and miseries: cults, mythical forest creatures, elder gods, psychic powers, murder, parallel universes, monsters, death, nature gone awry, zombies, ghosts, and husbands.








In these 14 tales, things don’t bode well:

 

Nature figures out how to take a sinister upper hand in Bill Bodden’s “When to Let Go.”

“Coffin” by Alison J. McKenzie asks the question ‘can you exist without being alive?’

Jennifer Brozek explores the difficulty, and danger, of trying to understand one’s own mind in “A Test of Vigilance and Will.”

In “Jenny” by Lee Call, curiosity and love possess their own perils, but when they cross paths...

Yvonne Navarro’s “Meet Me On the Other Side” delves into an alternate world and explores love and sacrifice in the face of an impending apocalypse and libidinous beasts.

Which is worse—a natural disaster, a monster, or a husband—is the question at the heart of Allie Yohn’s “In the Very Air You Breathe.”

"Frostlings" by Chris Marrs gives us the definitive answer about family and love—and mythical creatures.

“Still Life With Shattered Glass” by Loren Rhoads exposes a morbid hobby, and where it leads.

Joan De La Haye’s “Getting Rid of Charlie” examines that father-daughter bonding time is very important—and can come in an aberrant form.

In “A Spectacle of a Man” by Weston Ochse, one man finds that better living can come from the Elder Gods, but it’s not going to be pretty.

“Purgatory” by Angel Leigh McCoy warns us how one mistake can last forever and forever and forever...

S.G Browne’s “Lower Slaughter” reveals how thin the veneer of reality is—and that making the bus on time is crucial.

E.S. Magill’s “Los Necrocorridos” proves that love can exist in the most horrific conditions, even in the zombie apocalypse.
These delightfully dark tales have something to offer every fan of horror or dark fiction. Tales run the gamut from mysterious towns, supernatural storms, otherworldly creatures, sex and drugs and rock and roll. 
Among my favorites were
Lisa Morton’s High Desert in which a woman comes to regret a visit to an abandoned cult compound in the desert, S.G Browne’s Lower Slaughter in which a vacationing couple veer off the beaten path on their last day before they head home. Coffin by Alison J. McKenzie was probably the most unique story about a young man with Cotard's syndrome and the brother who mistakenly thinks he can help him snap out of it. A children's story becomes a nightmare for a grief-stricken woman in Frostlings.
There are lots of spooky moments and of course a general sense of foreboding throughout. 
4 out of 5 stars

I received a complimentary copy.




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