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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: You Shall Never Know Security by J.R. Hamantaschen

You Shall Never Know Security by J.R. Hamantaschen

West Pigeon Press, 2011

Available:  New Paperback, Kindle edition

ISBN-13: 9781466239920

 

You Shall Never Know Security is a collection of stories that can appropriately be described as dark, weird fiction. All of the stories draw some emotional reaction from the reader. They challenge the conventional definition of horror while using the very real feelings of human sorrow, fear, and guilt to build an expectation that always delivers something.

One of my favorite stories is “A Parasite Inside Your Brain”, about a woman who struggles with depression and a spider that has settled itself in her ear, lifting her mood. Which is the real parasite feeding off of her—the spider or the depression? “College” is about a student taking part in a psychology experiment that deals with morality and moral thinking; is it really just an experiment? “There’s Always Something In the Misfortune of Our Friends That Doesn’t Displease Us” describes the experience of an entity inhabiting a man who thrives on human conflict and witnessing awkward situations; it is a commentary on humanity and our fascination with bad news when it happens to others. The novella “There Must Be Lights Burning Brighter, Somewhere” starts with a senseless attack on a bar by an alien creature, and explores the feelings of survivor’s guilt in the aftermath.

Hamantaschen’s stories are beautifully written and quite brilliant in making the reader feel uncomfortable, sympathetic, and horrified all at the same time. There isn’t a bad story in the bunch. I thoroughly enjoyed You Shall Never Know Security and its play on human weakness and emotions. Highly recommended.

Contains: adult situations and graphic violence

Reviewed by Colleen Wanglund

 

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.