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Help a Reader Out: Supernatural Fiction Collection With An Orange and Yellow Cover

A reader over at Too Much Horror Fiction is looking for this one:

I am trying to identify one in particular published in the early-mid 1970s. It featured cover art with bright orange and yellow flame and background hues, with illustrations of skeletal and spirit figures with a castle. The collection was really presented as a genre study of sorts, and was very well organized around the nature of the supernatural threat: psychological threat, physical threat, etc. The collection was broad but included many classics in gothic, Victorian and early 20th century fiction.

 

Can anyone figure this one out?

 

Edit: The book has been identified. It is Ghosts, Castles and Victims Tales of Gothic Horror edited by Jack C. Wolf and Barbara H. Wolf.

Book Review: D.O.A. II: Extreme Horror Collection edited by David C. Hayes and Jack Burton


D.O.A II: Extreme Horror Collection, edited by David C. Hayes and Jack Burton

Blood Bound Books, 2013

ISBN 978-0-984978274

Availability: paperback

 

D.O.A. II continues the extreme horror begun in the first anthology … and I am an unashamed lover of extreme horror.

Some of my favorite stories included:  “If Memory Serves” by Jack Ketchum, where a therapy patient with Multiple Personality Disorder was horribly abused and tortured by her parents and the Satanic cult they belonged to; “Anointed” by Lynn Smith, about a clogged baptismal font and the hapless plumber who attempts to unclog it, only to become possessed for his trouble; “A Scalene Love Triangle” by Kerry G. S. Lipp, which deals with a love triangle that comes to a horrible end; “Slice of Life” by Thomas Pluck, about two very damaged people who meet and the results of that meeting; “One Flesh: A Cautionary Tale” by Robert Devereaux, in which a father and son reincarnated together and suffer an intriguing aftermath; and “STD” by David Bernstein about an especially nasty sexually transmitted disease.

D.O.A. II is, overall, an excellent collection of truly horrid and disturbing stories, and if that’s your thing, then I highly recommend this book. As with any anthology, however, there are a few stories that I wasn’t crazy about. They weren’t bad stories, I just found them either boring or confusing. As I said, though, I love extreme horror and there is plenty of that included here. Recommended.

 

Contains blood, gore, violence

Reviewed by Colleen Wanglund

Book Review: Burning the Middle Ground by L. Andrew Cooper


Burning the Middle Ground by L. Andrew Cooper

BlackWyrm Publishing, 2012

ISBN-13: 978-1-61318-138-6

Availability: Paperback, eBook(Kindle)

 

Ronald Glassner is a successful web journalist who runs and writes a webzine called American Sane.  Publishers have been calling him to go to the next step, and    write a book. Glassner  decides to tell the story of Brian McCullough. Five years ago Brian was a small town teenager who came home from school to find that his ten-year-old sister, Fran, had murdered their parents. Then she killed herself in front of him. Brian did not speak for a year. Ronald goes to the small town of Kenning, Georgia to investigate, and get the facts firsthand for his readers. He meets with Brian, who is still living in the family home where the murders occurred. Brian seems to be a regular young man. That evening, Ronald stumbles into a pack of dogs that attack him, and he ends up in the hospital. Concurrently, a fight between two churches emerges. One is the established First Church, headed by the mysterious Reverend Michael Cox; the challenger is the New Church, run by the rebellious Jeanne Harper. Before he knows it, Ronald is caught up in the middle of small town intrigue that is more than he and his webzine readers bargained for.

This book started out well; the suspense built steadily and kept me interested. The characters were distinct; their voices were easy to separate. The pacing was good, the descriptions were adequate, the main theme, “good vs. evil” was developed nicely, and the book was well-written, with very few typographical errors.  But halfway through the story it lost me. It just didn’t work for me anymore. The religious aspects got too thick for me personally, and I just stopped caring what happened. Possibly, other readers might be more engaged.

 

Contains: homosexuality, profanity, adult situations

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher