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The Summoning - Bentley Little
“We’re here to talk about vampires,” the mayor said. He scanned the room, waiting and prepared for a reaction, but there was none. No one smiled, no one laughed, no one spoke.
A somewhat unique take on the vampire, The Summoning takes place in the small Arizona town of Rio Verde, where a fanatical preacher speaks to Jesus and begins constructing a black church as the headquarters for the Second Coming of Christ. The bloodthirsty Jesus instructs Pastor Wheeler how the church is to be constructed and gives him 40 days to complete it by any means necessary. Wheeler, already a kind of televangelist con artist, has his persuasive powers magnified as he recruits townsfolk to help with the construction and to make the appropriate bloody sacrifices to please the Lord. You'll find Christianity a major theme throughout the work, where Mr. Little plays heavily with biblical references creating lines such as, “Jesus fed.” and “Jesus loves blood this I know. For the Bible tells me so.”
Meanwhile Sue, a young woman trying to get into college, becomes wrapped up in events and the town newspaper reporting on them as her grandmother reveals both she and Sue share the power of Li Lo Ling Gum, a kind of E.S.P. that helps them see the truth of things. Sue begins working for Rich, the head of the small newspaper, while Rich and his brother Robert, the head of the local police force, are community pillars thrust forward as the town begins tearing itself apart due to the influences of the pastor and Jesus. Sue’s grandmother is able to give tips on an ancient Chinese monster she thinks may be the cause of the town’s troubles, but who believes in monsters?
I hadn’t read a vampire tale quite like this one, and found the pacing solid and the story interesting. It’s not a short book at 544 pages for the paperback, but reads quickly anyway. Not once was I even tempted with a short story, which can happen a lot on novels that can’t be finished in a single sitting (for me - I know there are monsters on this forum who could do it in a straight shot). There are also a few moments of the more disgusting horror that can crop up in the genre, effectively used here.
It’s a good book, enjoyable from cover to cover, though I expect some of his other books to be even more effective. I promise to get to the next one soon.
”Would you call him and tell him that the next time he volunteers his time and reneges on his promise, I will personally rip his balls out by the roots and feed them to Jesus?”
3 stars
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*from the upcoming Cemetery Dance limited edition
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Tales from the Midnight Shift - Mark Allan Gunnells
“There was always the Bible in the nightstand drawer, but whoever had dubbed that the Greatest Story Ever Told had apparently never read The Stand.”
First off, this review grew to a size I wasn’t planning on. In looking over the ratings I’d given each of these stories over time, and I read this book slowly, I realized I was interested in touching on all of them and it just grew out of my control. TL/DR? It’s a damned good book.
The collection starts very strong with “God Doesn’t Follow You into the Bathroom,” about a young girl confiding in her reverend the relationship with her boyfriend who is pressuring her into her first sexual encounter.
Very good stories follow in “Jam,” about a massive freeway pileup and what happens to those trapped on the road, “Acts 19:19 Party,” dealing with book-burning, and “Playing Possum”, about a man having episodes where he sees a talking possum that attempts to help him straighten out his life.
“The Barter System” was another good story, about a quarreling couple on the road who end up at the wrong service station.
Stepping back up to great is “The Room Where No One Died”, about a man trying to figure out why one of the rooms in his house is haunted and how to free the ghost, and “The Gift Certificate”, when a man receives a certificate in the mail for a free, unknown service that was obviously meant for someone else, but his curiosity eventually gets the better of him.
“Christmas Getaway” is another very good tale as a boy is terrorized by his mentally ill father, who seems to have hit a breaking point.
“Big Dog” is excellent, one of my favorites here, about a struggling writer who upgrades his word processor to something more modern only to hit the wall of writer’s block, and the lengths he goes to trying to remedy the situation. Loved this one, and a superb ending. Only slightly less satisfying was the wonderful tale of Exclusivity Press, about the ultimate collectible book publisher, in “Collector’s Market.”
Then follows what I found to be the crowning jewel of the book, the near-perfect story “Accidents Happen” detailing a couple who is dealing with a tragedy where one of the men had accidentally killed a small boy with his vehicle and was exonerated by the courts, but is being consumed by guilt. Nasty, tragic and brilliant.
It’s impossible to follow a story like that up, but “Snuff,” about the film type, and “The More Things Change,” about a well-adjusted gay teenager singled out by a guidance counselor for help that the boy doesn’t need, are both good stories.
“Out of Print,” what I felt to be the least effective of the stories, still garners a rating of fair as it details the lengths book collectors will go to for that ‘must have’ book, taking place in online exchanges where the author even gets involved. This one I wanted to like much more than I did, but still found it a fine story.
Finally, the collection ends with, “The World’s Smallest Man.” This one was electric, and while I did like a few of the stories here more, the style here pounds you straight through to the end – somehow addictive. It’s about a dwarf in a circus freak show who is upset by the newest member of the troupe, a magician who murders small animals on stage while massive crowds cheer him on.
The writing throughout pretty much all of these is high-caliber but vulnerable. Difficult to put down stuff. Important here is the way the characters interact and support each other in terrifying circumstances. Mr. Gunnells uses a natural form of dialogue that’s about as real as it gets, and while there are the obligatory high levels of creativity throughout any good collection, what cemented this one for me were the mental and emotional wounds the characters were often operating beneath while dealing with the horrors.
And this guy can end a story.
4 stars
Tales from the Midnight Shfit.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-17-2016, 06:43 PM.
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The Reckoning - Thomas F. Monteleone
“If this is the Second Coming, then somebody was lying about something.”
Another fantastic read, this sequel doesn’t reach the levels of destruction I was expecting after the end of The Blood of the Lamb. Armageddon up to the eyeballs, I probably would have guessed, but instead we get a faced paced, fairly complex thriller drawing heavily on biblical canon and history.
Peter is now Pope, and is sweeping religious reform across the globe from his seat in the Vatican, his latest plan including legalizing marriage for the clergy. He is to set the initial example by marrying Marion as soon as this latest change is announced, but in a fit of anger he throws her out a window and kills her. Then runs downstairs and brings her back to life.
Marion has had enough of Peter and many of the church members around him have found his casual dress, unconventional wisdom and flagrant violation of tradition more than they can bear, but Peter is unconcerned. He has discovered the Vatican’s Secret Library, with over 9 miles of shelving, and is frantically searching for ‘The Secret of the Seven’ among its volumes. The book of Revelation repeatedly mentions the seven seals, which we learn are all that’s standing between Peter and ultimate victory where The Adversary arrives and has his way with the Earth. It’s a globe-spanning race to the finish as a single seal is enough to defeat the indestructible Peter, who has eventually accepted his fate as the harbinger of the end.
There are two notable scenes where Peter is confronted by The Devil, one in each book. In The Blood of the Lamb, the spirit manifests as a kind of geometric black hole in the desert and mirrors Christ’s temptations, drawing parallels between Peter’s struggle as the Christ figure in book one and that ancient scene from The New Testament. Here in the sequel he is again confronted, this time much further along the path of destruction, and this time Peter isn’t being tempted, more receiving instruction. Forces are aligning, and while the divine and the infernal cannot directly intercede, they’re present and accounted for. In a couple of books dealing with the biblical end of the world, there are surprisingly few supernatural elements across the page, but that works out about exactly as it should. This is our conflict, and we have to fight it.
I didn’t feel this story quite reached the level of the first book, but this was an excellent read with lively, likable and believable characters, a feat in itself considering Peter at the beginning of book one is significantly different than at the end of book two, though you can still see some of his core. Stakes don't really get any higher, and these two books are superb examples of biblical, end-of-the-world storytelling.
“He’d always seen the world differently and had to adjust to what other people called the real world. Still, he knew that just about everybody else was wrong and he was right.”
4+ stars
reckoning, the.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-17-2016, 06:43 PM.
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The Blood of the Lamb – Thomas F. Monteleone
We’ve got a treasure-chest of words we use when exploring things monumental. We use simpler words like excellent, amazing, gripping and powerful. We use terms like ‘show-stopping’ and ‘a masterpiece.’ Popular culture, however, has brought us to a point where words such as these have become so recognizable that they’ve lost some of their power, blunted with overuse. In the wake of these words slowly diminishing in impact, another is still present, taking their places and doesn’t seem to suffer the ill effects of its brethren. When we’re trying to portray the biggest of the big, the nastiest of the nasty, cataclysmic, world-shattering events, we use: biblical.
And that’s what this book is dealing with.
A young catholic priest, Peter, is a kind of shining star to his parishioners. A handsome, likable man with a strong moral center, he has a way with words and a rhythm of speech that captivates his audience who cannot help but absorb his message. Father Peter makes a run to a local, New York convenience store and is mugged at gunpoint. By the time the confrontation is over Peter is spooked out of his mind, and his assailant is a charred pile of ash. A local newswoman, Marion, becomes involved in the mystery of what happened and begins her investigation. Peter was an orphan, raised by the Catholic church in Rome, but his origin story may run much deeper. As Peter comes to grips with his burgeoning power, he travels the country setting up events to help and heal people in need. As his popularity grows so does the list of his enemies, for while a nation is focused on a man who may or may not be the second coming of Christ, other religious institutions are feeling the pinch as their followers stray to Peter’s camp and are bringing the situation to a head.
This book isn’t really about healing the sick, easing peoples’ pain in a troubled world, and handing out flowers at airports. It’s horror, have no doubts, and some of the descriptions of events will have you wincing. The sequel, appropriately titled The Reckoning, is next on the hit list because while this book is fantastic by itself there is very little resolution unless you use your imagination. If you’re going to read one, you’ll probably want the other close at hand.
Mr. Monteleone shows courage tackling this subject in the way he does. Today’s black-and-white landscape makes for easily acceptable stories when the good guy is shining and upright, and the bad guy is hideous and slinking in the shadows, so when a story like this comes along where the lines aren’t fully illuminated and everyone has to figure out what’s going on, it’s risky. Not to mention the fire that could come from wingnut groups who themselves have the only, true answer to religion.
I loved this story. When talking about the possible end of our world, not in a ‘there will be but few survivors’ way, but in an ‘end of the world, period,’ way, this book isn’t just an ambitious project, it’s downright biblical.
“You don’t f*** with King Kong. Surely a corollary would be that you don’t f*** with the Son of God.”
5- stars
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Centipede Press announced they were looking into producing a limited edition of this book and its sequel, and called out to people to please advise if they’d be interested in such a production. I’ve already contacted Jerad to let him know I’d pick this up in a heartbeat. If any of you feel the same way, or have your interest piqued, please drop him a line and let him know. I'd bet we can make this happen - the book deserves it. j[email protected]Last edited by bugen; 05-17-2016, 06:42 PM.
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I'd "read" a graphic novel that was executed without any text a while ago. Called House, can't recall the artist/storyteller's name at the moment. A very interesting format, I'd love to check this out at some point.
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Gods’ Man – Lynd Ward
An entirely wordless novel, told through woodcuts alone, a young artist travels to a new city and gives his last coin to a beggar. Unable to pay for his later meal, the proprietor is about to get nasty when the artist offers a drawing in lieu of payment, which is not accepted. A stranger steps in, pays the owner for the food and sits with the artist discussing his portfolio. He offers the artist a special brush, used throughout the ages by the world’s greatest artists, in exchange for something. The artist agrees, signs a contract with the stranger, and leaves with the brush to become a popular phenomenon in short order.
This is the very beginning of the story, the whole of which is told in about 140 woodcuts, and while comfortable explaining the rest of it, at least in my interpretation, I’m going to refrain. One of the great pleasures of this book is working out the story for yourself, since it’s told with pictures only and open to (at least) limited interpretation. In fact, it’s difficult to explain how much I enjoyed getting at the story this way. You almost get a sense of accomplishment with each completed image locking into place in the narrative in your head. It might be easy to think of this format as challenging, but once you’re comfortable with your own pace, and comfortable with the unique idea of telling your own story as you study the images, this is quite an amazing experience.
There’s an introduction explaining a few things about his life and the technique from Mr. Ward, and a preface with a bit of historical perspective by woodcut artist Barry Moser, but neither are necessary to dive right in if you’d prefer. You have all the tools you need for this novel with your mind, your eyes and your heart, not to mention your own experiences. If you’ve read graphic novels or comics you’re already partway there, but that kind of background isn’t required.
The book is quite highly recommended. Having no experience in the medium I’m not sure about things like subsequent reading, though to me a book using art to tell a story is more appealing than a book filled with art to not tell a story. If you keep this on your coffee table and allow guests to open it up, be prepared to explain a few things and leave them alone for a bit while they read. It’s compelling.
No quotes for this book, so I'll leave you with an engraving approximating how I feel about it:
Spoiler!
4+ stars
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First Blood - David Morrell
“If I thought there was the slightest chance of your beating them, I’d gladly tell you to keep on the move. But I know you can’t get away. Believe me. I know it. Please. While you still can, give up and get out of this alive. There’s nothing you can do.”
“Watch me.”
A drifter wanders into a remote town and is immediately noticed by the Chief of Police, Teasle, who takes it upon himself to keep his town quiet and escort the drifter out. Meanwhile the drifter, Rambo, has felt mistreated in the last fifteen towns he has visited, and had finally had enough of being run out on a rail. Both are ex-military, with Teasle honored for service in the Korean War, and Rambo for Vietnam. The result is a battle between two war machines with the rest of the world in the way.
First, Rambo is not the sympathetic character from the movie, and Chief Teasle is not the pig-headed, my way or no way cop from the movie either. They are both sympathetic, they are both hard-headed, and they are both responsible for the fallout that cuts a good deal deeper than the film. It’s a spectacular fight, ranging from the town to remote wilderness, and the story is told from both perspectives so we get to see everything unfold from the alternating points of view of our two main characters.
Second, the story had to change for film. In the U.S. we are not much of a grey-area viewing public, and though the rules seems to loosen a bit in the rest of the world, it probably wouldn’t play out too well anywhere else either. There is no hero, and there is no bad guy. Or rather, there are two of each. It’s not clear who to root for, so audiences would be confused. Each of these men carries attributes we can identify with and envy, while each also carries the personality that allows an extended and deadly confrontation like this to occur.
Finally, while I have a respect for the film and it’s iconic portrayal of the 80’s action hero, this book is a far better story. So much so that I’m going to check out the film again, hopefully this evening, and bet that I’ll enjoy it more than I ever have. Here we have balance, with a reality that exists right outside of our doors, concerning people that really walk the world, and dealing with feelings we all feel, at least when pushed to the limit.
As you’ve heard, the original end of the story differs from the film. This one's better. It’s is a super-fast, action-packed, ultra-violent read that will be over before you know it, and you’ll be out of breath and gasping.
Shamelessly borrowing an excellent line, because I've never seen it more applicable, this is what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
5 stars
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SAM_4057.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 10:14 AM.
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The Castle of Otranto - Horace Walpole
"It is sinful," replied the Friar, "to cherish those whom heaven has doomed to destruction."
Generally accepted to be the first gothic novel ever written, The Castle of Otranto is an important bookfor those looking deeply into horror and it's history, remaining highly enjoyable at the same time.
A headstrong prince, Manfred, of a third generation ruling family come into power when the previous ruler expired without an heir, has contrived a marriage between his sickly son Conrad and Isabella, the daughter of a foreign prince, to strengthen his hold over the province as he doesn't want his daughter, Matilda, involved with the kingdom. Conrad is killed suddenly by a giant-sized helmet falling from the sky, invoking a legend that when the true owner grows too large to inhabit the castle the current ruler will fall, and Manfred launches into a desperate bid to divorce his barren wife and forcefully take Isabella for his own wife and produce an heir. Isabella, scared out of her wits, flees the castle with the help of a mysterious peasant whom Manfred captures.
Jerome, the local priest, learns of Isabella's plight and intercedes on her behalf, and eventually learns the nature of the boy who helped her, all further angering the prince. When three knights from another kingdom appear, the leader reveals himself as Isabella's father, and from this point everyone starts falling in love with everyone else and a tangled mess of relationships becomes the focus of the story as the Prince Manfred tries to force his will on them all.
Written in 1764, the novel has somewhat of a language barrier but isn't prohibitive to the story. Interestingly, upon initial publication the author stated he didn't write the book, but instead found it (this preface is intact on the free Kindle version), and thought it to have been written hundreds of years earlier. The nature of the story, along with the idea that stories of this type weren't told in that present day, let alone hundreds of years previously, helped the book's success. The following year, when a subsequent edition of the work was to be published, Walpole came clean that he had actually written the story, not found it, but by then the popularity was cemented and the gothic novel train had departed the station. A couple of decades later the second gothic novel, Vathek, would be published, to be followed many years later by major early gothic novels like The Monk (1796), Frankenstein (1818) and Dracula (1897).
The Castle of Otranto is a short book, but the language does seem to intensify somewhat in the second half so that it's not a lightning read. Still the action moves quickly, and the story is never in jeopardy of derailing. Its place in history as the first gothic novel doesn't affect the book's rating here, but who's to say what the landscape of horror would look like without it? Recommended.
3 stars
Gothic novel #1:
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SAM_4103.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 10:03 AM.
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Snow Crash – Neal Stephenson
“You don’t respect those people very much, Y.T., because you’re young and arrogant. But I don’t respect them much either, because I’m old and wise.”
Snow Crash is a cyberpunk story, set it a futuristic world where countries have collapsed into region-states, and the government of each region is left to whatever system of order the region prefers. There is Mafia-town, Fed-town, etc, along with a virtual (augmented) reality overlay called the Metaverse that our main character Hiro helped build and is an expert navigating. Hiro Protagonist is a hacker and swordsman who finds himself working against a massive plan to forever alter modern man, related to the biblical story of The Tower of Babel, where God forced man to speak in differing tongues so communication became nearly impossible and construction on the tower to Heaven halted. Hiro is beset on all sides, including by the murderous, unstoppable villain Raven, as he struggles to understand and interrupt the plan.
It’s a fairly large book but moves at a quick pace, and made a splash in the 90’s running with themes like the internet (Metaverse) and all-encompassing virtual reality. The book contains a decent amount of complex philosophy, ramping up towards the end, and this actually adds a great deal of interesting information to the story instead of bogging it down. At no point did I find myself becoming attached to these characters or even caring too much what happened to them, and this I felt to be the major weakness of the work. It’s not until near the end, when the philosophy becomes much heavier, where the readers’ interests become truly piqued, and this is less about any character and more about the intelligent, critical mind the author brings to bear on ancient history. Sumerian culture is explored and Mr. Stephenson takes multiple stabs at some of the mysteries surrounding that period. There was a lot of great food for thought in this one, and in a book where the characters seem fairly flat, expanding even more on the philosophy might have been an even better thing.
Those with a special penchant for cyberpunk could easily have a more favorable reaction. One of the best things about the genre, and even science fiction in general, is it allows authors to magnify and examine issues we have today by exaggerating them in a future-tense, and there’s a good deal of that here. The cyberpunk author William Gibson kept coming up when researching this book, so fans of his writing might enjoy as well.
Despite being a bit flat on characters, overall it was enjoyable through quick pacing, a rather unapologetic look at the future of humanity, and thought-provoking themes of ancient history.
“In the real world-planet Earth, Reality, there are somewhere between six and ten billion people. At any given time, most of them are making mud bricks or field-stripping their AK-47s.”
3- stars
snow crash.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 09:43 AM.
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Dark Screams Vol. 4 - Richard Chizmar, Brian James Freeman (Ed.)
“If she could have plunged back into life to change one thing she would have left the broken romances in pieces and gone to her six-year-old son, Finn, to say: Trust your dreams, and take the world lightly, for it means nothing, even in the losing.”
-Clive Barker
'The Departed' – Barker tells an excellent story about a man and a woman who have passed into the afterlife and are lingering around the woman’s son. Her estranged husband has returned to claim the boy and as Halloween approaches the mother and her friend, although invisible, don clothing to make themselves seen, so she can interact with her son one more time.
'The New War' – This one ranks slightly better than the excellent Barker tale, written by Lisa Morton about an elderly man recovering from a hip surgery while hospital-bound with a mind that’s playing tricks on him. A mysterious black thing is sometimes seen sitting on the chests of other patients at the hospital, and by the next morning another death has occurred. The man tries recruiting help dealing with the black thing but his own mental struggles only complicate this new fight.
'Sammy Comes Home' – Ray Garton ups the ante in a collection that started strong and keeps getting stronger. Jeremy is the father of the quiet, introspective 8-year-old Bryan, whose dog ran away about a week earlier, along with other pets from the neighborhood that have been disappearing lately. The family has company when a scream is heard from the front porch by the visiting Monica, and Sammy’s back. But he’s hurt badly and a trip is thrown together to get him to the vet asap, only to discover there’s a very real danger in town. Loved the ending here!
'The Brasher Girl' – By far the longest story of the book, Ed Gorman whips up serious tension by lashing us to a main character who's still dealing with the emotional baggage of being discarded by the love of his life. A 23-year-old soldier is adapting to civilian life and has returned to his home town where he meets and pursues the gorgeous 17-year-old Cindy. But Cindy’s got a boyfriend, and a ‘secret’ friend, and our hero has to deal with them both while living down a traumatic separation he suffered when he was 17. Solid, troubling storytelling.
'Creature Feature' – Closing out the book is Heather Graham’s horror-house story where a special-effects crew has prepared all manner of monsters for display, including Jack the Ripper. When a friend stops by to see the display the night before the show is to open her instincts tell her something is not quite right…
For a quick recap of the series so far, we had a very strong start with Volume 1, and while Volume 2 was still good it took a step back. Volume 3 was my favorite when it arrived, showcasing a smooth storytelling that had nearly every story flowing like silk. Then Volume 4, every bit the masterful volume that Volume 3 was.
Fast, smart horror here, and it flows much like Volume 3 did. With the exception of the final tale, which was my least favorite but still enjoyable with a ‘fair’ rating, all stories here were exemplary in the horror field. I give the top slot to Ray Garton, partly because of his all-too-human ending, but he barely edges out Lisa Morton and Ed Gorman, who barely edge out the inestimable Barker. This is where it’s at, and if you’re only going to check out one of these books, or haven’t yet read any, this one is an excellent choice.
I can’t wait to see how these guys end it out with Volume 5. From what I can tell, they're accelerating.
4 stars
ds4.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 09:30 AM.
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Voice of the Fire – Alan Moore
“Beware, ye that are loath to make commotion! Shudder, ye who would not bring attention on thyself, and see what shyness brought me, with even my gizzard now become a public spectacle. Behold, ye meek: this prong of iron is all the Earth ye shall inherit.”
All of the following stories take place on the same piece of land, Alan Moore’s home, throughout history. But make no mistake, versions of these events quite easily could have (and did) happen on the site of your dwelling as well, so that makes this book about our homes. The stories build upon each other, so when a particular man, creature or event is established in one story, you may expect it to surface again as myth or legend in subsequent stories as the world moves on.
'Hob’s Hog' (4000 BC) – The ridiculously challenging study of a prehistoric man and his extremely limited vocabulary attempting to impart the complexity of his life, in regards to the supernatural entity he believes exists and his own injuries as he’s betrayed by other persons in the story. A biting tale that deals with our treacherous natures right out of the gate, and opens up the mystery of what you’re about to read. DO NOT SKIM THIS. Doing so might be tempting considering the work that goes into reading this one, but you will miss its greatness and probably miss its echoes throughout the later tales. Embrace the challenge and you’ll be rewarded, I assure you. An amazing read.
'The Cremation Fields' (2500 BC) – Another excellent story, using a much friendlier vocabulary, this is the tale of an unscrupulous man who converses with then murders the estranged daughter of a village cunning-man (a witch was also called a cunning man back in the day) and hatches a plan to take her place as the cunning-man’s descendent to inherit his vast wealth as he nears death.
'In the Drowings' – (AD 43) A very strong story, this is a tale of a man who, angered with his wife, storms out of the house for a remote hunting trip where he can calm down in peace. When he returns, things are not as he left them, and in his sorrow he adapts to his new situation in a very human way.
'The Head of Diocletian' (AD 290) – The tale of a man investigating the forgery of Rome’s currency, only to discover the world isn’t as it seems. A masterful story that really underlines the fact regardless of which position we view the world, which perspective we’ve adopted, we probably have little idea of what’s really going on. And perhaps that’s a good thing.
'November Saints' (AD 1064) – Finally, a comparatively weak story, where the tomb of a saint is discovered as narrated by a beggar outside the church, but it’s still good. It’s just that the others are even better.
'Limping to Jerusalem' (AD 1100) – The lowest rated of the bunch - the only story to plumb the depths of ‘fair’, this is the tale of a knight constructing a ‘round’ church so that the devil may not have a place to hide. This one was more difficult to follow.
'Confessions of a Mask' (AD 1607) – The story of a mask, dead at least two years but still conscious, hung in its cage by the side of the road as a warning against transgressions. As the mask laments his lot in life he is joined by another death, this one also conscious as they keep each other company. Hilarious and poignant, another highlight.
'Angel Language' (AD 1705) – The story of a lascivious judge visiting a town to pronounce his sentence upon a local thief, and the women he seduces on his journey there, this is another highlight.
'Partners in Knitting' (AD 1705) – A story of two witches being burned while one reminisces about their lives and work together. This one handles witchcraft like an enchanted sword, cutting the story to ribbons around the reader while you ingest the falling confetti. A major highlight in a book with far more than its share of highlights.
'The Sun Looks Pale Upon the Wall' (AD 1841) – Another of the more challenging stories here, this one is told by a half-mad man and uses no punctuation. It’s difficult to tell what is reality and what is imaginary here, as we follow the narrative of the man as he is with his second wife, constantly thinking back to his first wife, who may not have entered into matrimony with him except in his own mind.
'I Travel in Suspenders' (AD 1931) - About a traveling salesman whose penchant for women has him in two separate marriages with girlfriends on the side, and he is always looking for ways into the affections of the next girl. His proclivities get him in all manner of trouble where he uses his verbal skills as a salesman to spin lies and escape trouble, but has been spinning so long it doesn’t take much for him to get confused as to which statements were made to whom. When his car is found burned in a field with a body inside the hapless salesman has some explaining to do.
'Phipps’ Fire Escape' (AD 1995) – I’m not even going to touch this one in order to maintain the mystique. You’ll see.
As a whole this book is far from your typical read. It's filled to the brim with occult, mystical reference, has a good amount of mystery and a concentrated style of prose that means it's nearly impossible to grasp these stories when you're only half-paying attention, watching the kids play in the park. The book demands your full attention, and giving it any less means you've either got a T-1000 terminator processor or you've missed the story.
Challenging and brilliant, handling the supernatural in our past with a seasoned instructor's patience while giving us plenty of warnings about paying too much attention to history, The Voice of the Fire is complicated enough to give no illusions about catching everything on the initial read. It’s complexity, however, is a wonderful reason to pull it back off the shelf in the future. There are secrets here, to those who would find.
“All that remains in question is whose map we choose, whether we live within the world’s insistent texts or else replace them with a stronger language of our own.”
5- stars
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An excellent production as usual Subterranean, but I did end up asking myself why this yellow/red lettering was used for the traycase. I understand the theme and the font but it just seemed slightly…off.
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Here’s why:
Spoiler!
It’s on fire… a burning ember. I had a hard time capturing this on camera but you get the idea as the lights go down. The eye picks it up much better in the right environment.
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Last edited by bugen; 02-17-2016, 06:33 AM.
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The Vampire Tapestry – Suzy McKee Charnas
“Extraordinary, he thought: I provide their nightmares, and they provide mine.”
Dr. Weyland, a successful and aloof professor at a small but respectable college has been experimenting on students for his sleep program, studying dreams, when a staff member who’s slowly become enamored with the standoffish professor is approached to join in the study. Uneducated compared to those around her, she had already quickly jumped to superstition and begun to worry the professor was a vampire, feeding off his subjects, and had armed herself against both the vampire and a rapist that had been terrorizing the campus lately. At the approach, the professor becomes forceful with the girl, reveals he IS a vampire and means to feed on her, and she shoots him twice in retaliation.
He manages to flee the scene, severely injured, but falls into the hands of an unscrupulous youth who eventually recognizes the professor as a monster and begins to exploit his capture, including inviting a dangerous Satanist to the cell where the vampire is held. Reese, the cult leader, convinces the captors to starve the vampire for 1 week after which he’ll perform a ceremony that will solve everything. The youngest of the captors, Mark, is the main one to care for the vampire in captivity and becomes attached to the professor, trapped like an animal and weakening daily, and eventually is manipulated into aiding his escape. Weyland moves to a University in New Mexico and begins psychological treatment, stating he believes he’s a vampire and needs help. A letter of recommendation from the psychologist after successful treatment will get him reinstated after the ‘mental breakdown’ he suffered at the first college where he can resume his experiments.
A large portion of the book takes place in therapy, as the nature of predator and prey is studied in depth. Weyland believes he isn’t human, and doesn’t inherently recognize the emotional range we take for granted. He recognizes survival, as any predator would, and anything that threatens his survival is mercilessly cut from his life. Yes, he’s dangerous; he’s the most advanced predator on the planet. No, he’s not a monster any more than a tiger is for bringing down a gazelle.
It’s a bizarre melding of the traditional, powerful and angry monster, and the recent, sympathetic one, but again, when a bear mauls a human it’s not exactly Jack the Ripper. It’s Nature, and the book never deviates from this refreshing viewpoint. We can be sympathetic to the grizzly, but that doesn’t extend to wanting to be close to one. It can kill you and not feel the slightest tinge of regret or shame.
An extremely insightful look into what the realities of the creature might actually be, should it exist in our world. It’s superbly written and in an environment still saturated by ridiculous teen monster-romance, it stands tall and alone for its intellectual take on the subject.
“To have someone spring on you like a tiger and suck your blood with savage and single-minded intensity—how could anybody imagine that was sexy?”
I have never read a clinical deconstruction of the vampire to compare to what is written here, heavy on psychology and a good bit of biology attempting to explain Weyland’s characteristics. There is nothing supernatural about this very real, very dangerous creature. This is a must read, even if you’re sick of the vampire story, mostly because that’s not what this is. It’s the story of a grizzly that looks like us, acts like us, but is not subject to normal human emotion and has evolved into the ultimate, real-world predator just trying to survive.
5- stars
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P.S. And Centipede is currently designing their limited release.Last edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 09:23 AM.
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Vathek - William Beckford
“The condition appointed to man is to be ignorant and humble.”
Reputed as one of the first gothic horror novels ever written (1782, published in 1786), and as far as I can tell beaten only by The Castle of Otranto (1764) which I haven’t read yet, this is a kind of Arabian Nights journey into Hell.
Vathek is the story of a Caliph, THE Caliph, who rules all, takes whatever he wants, and lives his life fulfilling every imaginable pleasure, wielding extensive knowledge and cravings for the finest food and exotic women. A merchant passes through with some unusual items, including swords marked with text no one can read. The Caliph is enamored with the swords and claims them, and spends some time tracking down someone who can read the writing on the blades.
Eventually the message is translated, but turns out to change every day. While first promising unlimited knowledge, it now reads of death. Vathek packs up his entourage and travels to the mountains to quench his thirst and there is met by the merchant who originally sold the swords. The Caliph is treated to a vision of the halls of Eblis (Hell), where he is to be granted ultimate knowledge should he brave the journey. Rules must be followed, sacrifices must be made, and Vathek will stop at nothing to attain this power and begins his journey. It has no small helping of the occult, and as the Caliph approaches his destination there are enchanted items, sorcery and djinn all over the place.
Now that I’m reading this over the book actually sounds pretty damned good.
An issue with the story, while still respecting its place in history, is there are few redeeming character qualities presented here. It’s told in an almost biblical, parable style without any real moral except, “don’t do this.” Because there is difficulty in gathering sympathy for the characters it’s harder to become invested despite the book’s value in helping create a genre. Even so, it’s well worth a read, if for nothing else then for its historical context.
3- stars
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SAM_3851.jpgLast edited by bugen; 05-14-2016, 09:25 AM.
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