Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Elizabeth by Ken Greenhall

 


Elizabeth thought that she was a young girl like any other girl - until the day that she looked into the mirror and saw the truth. Her family wouldn't have believed it even if she had told them - which she had no intention of doing. Elizabeth had far different plans for them - and only God could help them. He didn't - and Elizabeth set out to prove how hellishly far she could go.



Elizabeth is not your average 14 year old, and although she is descended from witches I'm not convinced that alone is at the heart of her actions. Elizabeth seems to have no real feelings or emotions. She is quite cold and detached from everyone, other than an apparition that observes her from the mirror.

Does Elizabeth have actual powers or is she just deluded? Does she suffer some sort of mental illness? She definitely feels no empathy but has taught herself to imitate it, much like someone with borderline personality disorder. Nothing seems to phase her, be it murder or sex acts, as she narrates the story on a very even keel whether she is telling you about a recent death or what interrupted her plans for an evening of incest.

I think Elizabeth could best be described as a cross between Carrie and Lolita, and I am at a loss of how I feel about it. 

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About the author

Ken Greenhall was born in Detroit in 1928, the son of immigrants from England. He graduated from high school at age 15, worked at a record store for a time, and was drafted into the military, serving in Germany. He earned his degree from Wayne State University and moved to New York, where he worked as an editor of reference books, first on the staff of the Encyclopedia Americana and later for the New Columbia Encyclopedia. Greenhall had a longtime interest in the supernatural and took leave from his job to write his first novel, Elizabeth (1976), a tale of witchcraft published under his mother’s maiden name, Jessica Hamilton. Several more novels followed, including Hell Hound (1977), which was published abroad as Baxter and adapted for a critically acclaimed 1989 French film under that title. Greenhall died in 2014.

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Cafe Purgatorium by Dana M. Anderson, Charles de Lint, Ray Garton

 

THREE VOICES - THREE VISIONS - THREE MOODS. "Ranging from melancholy to downright gruesome, these stories demonstrate that those of us who enjoy being frightened find that the novella length story, 80 to 90 pages, is just fine to get our fix. Following 'Cafe Purgatorium', a sad, even tender story, is 'Dr. Krusadian's Method', a real shocker by Ray Garton. Finally, love is in the air in De Lint's 'Death Leaves an Echo'




What first grabbed my attention, aside from the cover, was the name Ray Garton. I used to think I had read everything he had ever written but once in a while I come across a story that has been out of print, that I never knew existed. Such is the case with his novella in this book, Dr. Krusadian's Method. I greedily scooped up a used copy which was published back in the 90s from Tor Horror even though I've never heard of Dana Anderson.

The title story by Dana Anderson is sadly the only reason I can't give this book 5 stars unless I pretend it wasn't included. Cafe Purgatorium is about a man who hates his job, and decides against the wishes of his fiancĂ©e to quit and go into business for himself. He purchases an old building for the purpose of opening a restaurant. After the sale he discovers that the building is not as empty as it appeared. Shortly after this point I just started skimming. Maybe it was partly due to how anxious I was to get to the Ray Garton novella but Cafe Purgatorium did not hold my interest. If it was a stand alone it would have gone in my DNF pile. 

Luckily for me the other 2 novellas were both 5 star reads. 

Dr. Krusadian's Method by Ray Garton is about a little boy who has suffered abuse at the hands of his father for as long as he can remember. His mother does nothing to protect him from the horrific beatings. The father is a vile and repulsive excuse for a man who filled me with such rage that when he finally got caught I was convinced that no amount of punishment would be adequate. 

Death Leaves an Echo by Charles De Lint is about a man who awakens from one nightmare to find himself in another. His wife is gone, and it's as if she never existed. He is the only one who remembers her. Which nightmare is realty? Is he losing his mind or is something supernatural afoot?  This story was brilliant.

I found my used copy here


About the authors

Ray Garton is the author of several books, including horror novels such as LIVE GIRLS (which has a movie in the works), CRUCIFAX, E4 AUTUMN, and THE FOLKS; thrillers like TRADE SECRETS and SHACKLED; and numerous short stories and novellas. He's also written a number of movie and television tie-ins for young readers. He lives with his wife, Dawn, in California.

Charles De Lint has a Goodreads page here

I literally can find nothing for Dana Anderson, no Goodreads or amazon page or website.






Friday, February 12, 2021

Shelter for the Damned by Mike Thorn

 

While looking for a secret place to smoke cigarettes with his two best friends, troubled teenager Mark discovers a mysterious shack in a suburban field. Alienated from his parents and peers, Mark finds within the shack an escape greater than anything he has ever experienced.

But it isn't long before the place begins revealing its strange, powerful sentience. And it wants something in exchange for the shelter it provides.

Shelter for the Damned is not only a scary, fast-paced horror novel, but also an unflinching study of suburban violence, masculine conditioning, and adolescent rage.

Cover art by Trevor Henderson.




Three boys enter a shack, and although they all seem to feel that it is more than it appears to be, one boy falls helplessly under it's control. I can't say I ever figured out exactly what the shack is or how it chooses it's victims.

Mark has always had a mean streak, a short fuse that is easily lit, and maybe that is why the shack has  latched on to him. After their initial discovery, Mark's friends don't want to revisit the shack, but Mark is compelled to return, to the point of obsession. As Mark's friendships begin to deteriorate, so too does his school and home life, making the shack feel like the only good thing in his world. I felt that one reason Mark may have been easily swayed was his own proclivity towards violence but another may have been the implied physical abuse at the hands of his father. Although one of his friends is obviously abused repeatedly at home, the shack does not have the same hold over him so my theory could be wrong. It's possible that in addition to a supernatural element Mark may have suffered some form of mental illness because there were times I was not sure if he was hallucinating things that I thought his mother should have seen, if it were real. I guess this left me with more questions than answers, as to whether this is a dark descent into murder and madness, or a supernatural entity taking control.

4 out of 5 stars

I received an advance copy for review.

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About the author

Mike Thorn is the author of the short story collection Darkest Hours and the novel Shelter for the Damned (coming soon from JournalStone). His fiction has appeared in numerous magazines, anthologies and podcasts, including VastarienDark Moon DigestThe NoSleep Podcast and Tales to TerrifyHis film criticism has been published in MUBI NotebookThe Film StageSeventh Row and Vague Visages.


Monday, February 8, 2021

Your Frightful Spirit Stayed by Matthew Cash


 




The first thing I have to say is that I don't think the brief synopsis on the back cover does this book justice. Because of it, I will admit to being a bit confused when I first started reading. I was not sure what was going on with Charlie, and I didn't like him much. I didn't know if he was haunted by real spirits or whether he was insane. I didn't know whether he was at home, or in jail or in a mental institution. I knew he was an alcoholic but not whether he was hallucinating.

It took me a couple of chapters to understand that this is sort of a coming of age tale in reverse. But not the happy kind. Charlie is suffering from PTSD and schizophrenia. He is a shell of a man. He is not the man he would have been, had he not suffered unspeakable events in his past. Gradually we work our way backwards from middle aged Charlie to young man, to teenaged years and boyhood, in what was one of the most original and unique story lines I have ever read. This is not a typical horror, but it is horrifying, shocking, and deeply disturbing. It was also heartbreaking, as the closer we get to Charlie's childhood, the more endearing he becomes and the more I wanted him to be ok. Since the book started with middle aged Charlie I knew there was to be no happy ending for him.

I am not sure when this book is being published but I will be rating it 5 stars everywhere.

I received an advance copy for review.


About the author
Matthew Cash, or Matty-Bob Cash as he is known to most, was born and raised in Suffolk; which is the setting for his debut novel Pinprick. He is compiler and editor of Death By Chocolate, a chocoholic horror Anthology and the 12Days: STOCKING FILLERS Anthology. In 2016 he launched his own publishing house Burdizzo Books and took shit-hot editor and author Em Dehaney on board to keep him in shape and together they brought into existence SPARKS: an electrical horror anthology, The Reverend Burdizzo’s Hymn Book, Under The Weather* Visions From the Void ** and The Burdizzo Mix Tape Vol. 1.
He has numerous solo releases on Kindle and several collections in paperback.
Originally with Burdizzo Books, the intention was to compile charity anthologies a few times a year but his creation has grown into something so much more powerful *insert mad laughter here*. He is currently working on numerous projects, his third novel FUR was launched in 2018.
*With Back Road Books
** With Jonathan Butcher

He has always written stories since he first learnt to write and most, although not all, tend to slip into the many layered murky depths of the Horror genre.
His influences ranged from when he first started reading to Present day are, to name but a small select few; Roald Dahl, James Herbert, Clive Barker, Stephen King, Stephen Laws, and more recently he enjoys Adam Nevill, F.R Tallis, Michael Bray, Gary Fry, William Meikle and Iain Rob Wright (who featured Matty-Bob in his famous A-Z of Horror title M is For Matty-Bob, plus Matthew wrote his own version of events which was included as a bonus).
He is a father of two, a husband of one and a zoo keeper of numerous fur babies.

You can find him here:
www.facebook.com/pinprickbymatthewcash

https://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B010MQTWKK


Www.burdizzobooks.com