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Book Review: Christmas Horror, Vol. 1, edited by Chris Morey and illustrated by Zach McCain


Christmas Horror, Vol. 1  edited by Chris Morey and illustrated by Zach McCain

Dark Regions Press, 2015

ISBN-13: 978-1-62641-118-0

Available: ebook, paperback, hardcover deluxe signed and numbered edition available through Dark Regions Press (with an additional story by William Meikle)

 

Dark Regions Press has put out yet another great anthology. This collection of eight stories focus on, as the title indicates, the Christmas holiday, and the horror that can lurk around every corner. It’s not all carols, mistletoe, and peace on earth in these tales of horror.

“Red Rage” by Stephen Mark Rainey flips back and forth between the present day story of the Worshams, a family preparing to celebrate their first Christmas in their new home, and the events of a previous holiday season held in the house, shared by a husband and wife with a strained relationship. At the center of both storylines is an ornament on the tree that exudes rage– and anyone who looks into it feels that rage, until it consumes them. Can the Worshams survive their holiday, or will the shadow come for them, too?

I’ve been a fan of Jeff Strand’s work for some time, and his short story, “Pointy Canes,” doesn’t disappoint. Uncle Jack’s thirty year ritual of sucking on candy canes to fine points and collecting them in a box has come to completion, and he wants those closest to him join in a special event. His family is incredulous to what he suggests, but after one of them dares to argue, the rest of the family decides to go through with the candy cane ritual.

Shane McKenzie’s “Naughty” was really hard to get through because of the content. A group of teenagers sexually assault and murder a disabled girl. Two of the boys are unwilling to go through with the rape, but the eldest uses violence to influence them to continue. Five years later, the youngest is in a relationship that has culminated in his girlfriend’s pregnancy. It’s Christmas Eve, and he’s sitting in front of the fireplace waiting for…something. He’s convinced he will be the last to go. After all, the others who attacked that young girl have been found dead in the most gruesome of ways, his brother possibly being the most disturbing. What will happen to the last survivor?

“Krampusnacht in Cell Block J”, by Cody Goodfellow, is set in a corrupt juvenile detention system where the inmates are celebrating Christmas by indulging in activities and substances that ensure distraction from how the guards will celebrate in their own way. One of them dresses as Krampus and inflicts abuse on those lost in their pleasures. It’s carried on this way for years, but this time is different. The new inmate doesn’t know the drill, and accidentally summons the real Krampus. Those involved in the corrupt justice system have been very bad, and the new inmate wants them to pay.

The other stories in the anthology are also fantastic. In John Skipp’s “The Shittiest Guy in the World (A Christmas Fable)” we meet the most unexpected sin eaters. In “Belsnickel” by J.F. Gonzalez, Amy’s Uncle Floyd comes to visit to continue an old family tradition. What will she find under the tree when he is done? Joe R. Lansdale’s “Santa Explains” is the story of a down-and-out Santa explaining to his family that this year will be different, that they won’t have to be disappointed in him, ever again. He has the perfect solution to all of their problems. Black Friday can be tough, and “The Endless Black of Friday” by Nate Southard shows what happens when the blackness of the night or early morning spread swallows the world as it comes.

If you need a little bit of the grotesque and macabre for your holiday season, pick up Christmas Horror, Vol. 1. You won’t be disappointed. Each story delivers its own message of Christmas fear in their pages, and is accompanied by a full color illustration to set the mood. Highly recommended.

Contains: blood, gore, sexual abuse

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker


Ebook Bundles on Weird and Lovecraftian Fiction

 

Cthuhlu_Creature

I wish I’d seen this days ago! I just love ebook bundles, and I apparently missed that Dark Regions Press has released a Cthulu Mythos ebook bundle with some GREAT books, including Lovecraft scholar S.T. Joshi’s two-volume set on Lovecraft, a complete collection of Lovecraft’s fiction and poetry (yikes), and recently released collection Dreams from the Witch House (and I promise I will get our review of that up ASAP), for only $15. Go look for yourself. You do have to do a direct download from Dark Regions Press, but if you want to carry substanial amounts of Lovecraft’s work and Lovecraftian fiction easily, their DRM-free ebooks make that possible. I don’t know how long Dark Regions plans to make this available, so if you are interested, jump on it.

Also, StoryBundle currently has an ebook bundle of weird fiction. If you aren’t familiar with StoryBundle, they choose books on a theme, bundle them together, and make the bundle available for a short time. You pay what you want for the collection and decide how much should go to the author, the company, or a charity. If you pay at least $14, you get bonus books. Through StoryBundle and HumbleBundle, I have discovered authors I had never tried before. It’s a really cool way to try out new things and also get favorites you’ve been wanting to get around to.

Enjoy!

 

 

 

Book Review: The Booking by Ramsey Campbell

The Booking by Ramsey Campbell, illustrated by Santiago Caruso
Dark Regions Press, 2016
ISBN-13: 978-1-62641-139-5
Available: Trade paperback, ebook edition.

The Booking is a book collector’s nightmare. Kiefer, an unemployed librarian, finds work creating a website for the proprietor of a bookshop selling rare (or at least old) books, called Books Are Life. This isn’t a well organized, pleasant place to work: it’s dark and dusty, and the owner, Brookes, is abrasive, secretive, and paranoid. Kiefer is expected to describe the books in a way that misrepresents their condition and post the descriptions online, and to work his way through the piles of disorganized books quickly. Brookes, mistrustful of technology, insists that Kiefer turn off the camera to his laptop, making communication difficult, especially after his living arrangements are disrupted and he is forced to move into the shop. Kiefer becomes obsessed with cataloging the books, rarely sleeping or leaving the store, and the atmosphere becomes more and more claustrophobic. Cut off from the outside world, he begins to buy into Brookes’ paranoid belief that he is being spied on through a chip secretly installed in his head. As the story progresses, the shop seems bigger and more crowded, a maze crowded with books that are closing in on Kiefer, finally trapped, alone, in the shop.

As a book lover who is surrounded by books, I found this to be profoundly unsettling. The treatment of the books, which are neglected, misrepresented, and disorganized, is disturbing. The atmosphere of the bookshop is closed-in, crowded, and labyrinthine; it takes a setting and activity I typically find enjoyable and transforms it into an extremely uncomfortable situation that makes me want to get as far away from crowded bookshelves as possible. Those who aren’t avid readers still will experience the creeping dread that accompanies Kiefer’s growing paranoia and isolation, but people who surround themselves with books will feel the impact the most. Highly recommended for lovers of psychological horror and of books.

Note: The Booking is the third novella from the Black Labyrinth imprint of Dark Regions Press. The Black Labyrinth imprint is a series of psychological horror novellas, illustrated by artist Santiago Caruso. The copy I reviewed is an advance copy that did not include the artwork. However, based on Caruso’s previous work, I am sure it will make an excellent complement to the story.