Monday, October 21, 2024

The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror: Volume 5 Edited by Paula Guran


 From the back cover :

This outstanding annual exploration of the year's best dark fiction journeys into the shadows to deliver nineteen tales of the haunted, weirdly surreal, evil incarnate, frightening futures, and much more.





I loved volume 4 of this anthology so I was beyond thrilled when volume 5 showed up at my door unexpectedly. 

Horror is my happy place and I have loved anthologies for as long as I can remember. I'm like a kid in a candy store any time I open one. There's just so much to choose from. There are so many delightfully dark tales here. 

If I had to pick a favorite it would be Return To Bear Creek Lodge by Tananarive Due where a family gathers as their mother is dying. It takes place in the 1970s and reminds me of how terribly afraid I was of my own grandmother. Is that an awful thing to admit? Oh well, it's done now and it takes a damned good horror story to dredge up my own past trauma.

I also loved The Dark House by A.C. Wise, partly because it takes place in my own state of Rhode Island. There's a mystery surrounding the life and death of a photographer whose many photos featured a particular house that is now abandoned but not necessarily empty. When curiosity leads people to its unlocked door some things are best left undiscovered.

A reminder of the cruelty of children, and the cruelty of being a child can be found in The Demon Lord Of Broken Concrete by Alex Irvine.

Not all of the stories in this anthology are scary but they are all wonderfully weird and creepy in their own way. 

My thanks to Pyr Books.

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Movie Review - Alien Country

 

A swarm of alien creatures has invaded the small town of “Blue River.” Now Jimmy, and his pregnant girlfriend, Everly must work together to stop the monsters, or the planet and their relationship is doomed.

If  love really conquers all, how will it stack up in a no-holds-barred arena battle against extra-terrestrial monsters?

When Jimmy Walker, a local demolition derby driver, finds out his girlfriend Everly is pregnant, he figures it's the toughest news he'll get that day. Yet, somehow, the two of them also manage to accidentally open a mysterious portal, and a horde of bio-engineered alien creatures are set loose in the small desert town of Blue River.  In a race against time, these soon-to-be parents must quickly learn to work together and stop the invasion, or their town, their planet, and their relationship will be annihilated.



I was invited to watch an early screener of this comedy/sci-fi

ALIEN COUNTRY will release on October 22 on digital and streaming platforms, including iTunes/Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Fandango at Home, Vimeo, DirecTV, Dish Network, Dish Digital, and local cable & satellite providers.


Everly has dreams of leaving her small town and becoming a singer. These hopes are interrupted when Jimmy, (her baby daddy-to-be) accidentally opens a portal that allows aliens through, and they do not come in peace.

 From there it's up to this bickering couple and a small cast of zany characters to fight them off and save the town.

What I liked:

KC Clyde and Renny Grames as the bumbling Jimmy and Everly have good on screen chemistry and their back and forth squabbling was amusing, but also made me care about whether  or not they would end up together. 

Barta Heiner as Nana, the kooky grandma was endearing and hilarious at the same time. 

What I didn't like:

The alien creatures weren't seen in much detail. In most scenes, they were just zipping by so fast that you barely get a look at them probably due to a low budget for special effects. In the only scene I recall with a close-up that lasted more than a split second the alien just didn't look that impressive.

All things considered, it was an entertaining 97 minutes that I rated 6 out of 10 stars on IMDB


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Saturday, October 19, 2024

I Believe in Mister Bones by Max Booth III

The email’s subject line reads DO YOU BELIEVE IN MISTER BONES?
 
The recipient: Daniel Addams, one half of the Texas small press known as Fiendish Books, co-run with his wife Eileen.

Despite being closed for submissions, curiosity gets the best of him and he takes a look at the anonymous author’s bizarre manuscript—only to find himself obsessed with the titular Mister Bones, a mysterious entity rumored to steal your bones as you sleep, one by one, until he's replaced your entire skeleton with an unknown substance.

But is Mister Bones real, and has Daniel unintentionally summoned him?

Or, as Eileen suspects, has he finally cracked from stress and lost his mind?

From the writer of WE NEED TO DO SOMETHING and ABNORMAL STATISTICS comes Max Booth III’s I BELIEVE IN MISTER BONES, a harrowing exploration of indie horror publishing, internet curses, and the universal terror of the human skeleton.


Daniel and his wife Eileen are small press publishers preparing to host a book festival when a weird email pops up in Daniel's inbox with the subject I Believe In Mister Bones. Since they are closed to submissions, he ignores it. Unfortunately, he is unable to stop thinking about it. He retrieves the email from his trash and soon becomes obsessed with it. Before long, he starts to believe in Mister Bones, a supernatural being that steals the bones of its victims and replaces them with an unknown substance.

This was such a fun read because it alternated between hilarious and creepy scenes. I loved the back-and-forth banter between Daniel and Eileen. I personally have anxiety over all things medical and I can relate to not having health insurance so one of my favorite parts of the book was their visit to the only doctor they could afford.

I would recommend this to any reader who enjoys a touch of satire with a splash of comedy mixed into horror.

My thanks to Book Sirens.

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Sunday, October 13, 2024

No Road Home by John Fram

 

For years, single father Toby Tucker has done his best to keep his sensitive young son, Luca, safe from the bigotry of the world. But when Toby marries Alyssa Wright—the granddaughter of a famed televangelist known for his grandiose, Old Testament preaching—he can’t imagine the world of religion, wealth, and hate that he and Luca are about to enter.

A trip to the Wright family’s compound in sun-scorched Texas soon turns hellish when Toby realizes that Alyssa and the rest of her brood might have some very strange plans for Toby and his son. The situation only grows worse when a freak storm cuts off the roads and the family patriarch is found murdered, stabbed through the heart on the roof of the family’s mansion.

Suspicion immediately turns to Toby, but when his son starts describing a spectral figure in a black suit lurking around the house with unfinished business in mind, Toby realizes this family has more than murder to be afraid of. And as the Wrights close in on Luca, no one is prepared for the lengths Toby will go in the fight to clear his name and protect his son.


After a whirlwind romance, single dad Toby marries wealthy Alyssa Wright, the granddaughter of a famous televangelist. The newlyweds along with Toby's young son Luca are headed to the Wright family compound, for what Toby thinks is Alyssa's birthday celebration. 

Before long, bigotry, cryptic messages, and a murder mystery occur and Toby realizes he needs to take Luca and escape this family's evil plan for his son, but a sudden storm and washed-out roads make leaving impossible and lack of phone or internet prevent calling for help.

The first thing I have to do is disagree with the blurb that claims Toby must "protect his queer son" Luca is a very sweet and sensitive child who has not labeled himself queer so let's not do it for him. There is a line in the book that strongly suggests he may be transgender, which does not equal queer. Not everyone who is transgender is gay.

Anyway back to the story, the Wrights are not the only ones with secrets. There are mysteries and traumas in Toby's past. Toby has unbearable memories that he tries to lock away in his mind. To repress the pain of his sister's death, the loss of his parents, his troubled childhood and the truth about Luca 's mom.

I can't say much else about the plot without spoiling it, so I will just say it is intricate and twisty and I never saw that ending coming. The author has managed to weave together a story of corruption, revenge redemption and the supernatural and kept all these plates spinning at once while never dropping one.

My thanks to Atria Books.

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