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Book Review: I Know What UFO Did Last Summer by Kevin Garone

cover art for I Know What UFO Did Last Summer

I Know What UFO Did Last Summer by Kevin Garone

Temor Press, April 2025 (not yet released)

ISBN: 9798991328401

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

Buy: Bookshop.org

 

Part adventure, part sci-fi, and all childlike charm, this book is for young readers, but perfect for young-at-heart adults.  With its irresistible characters, it’s a reminder of a time when you were young and could believe in anything with all your heart, no matter how outlandish it might have been.  Simply put, this is magic.

 

It’s the three pre-teen lead characters, Marvin (code name: Gold Leader), Jace (code name: Baller One) and Nora (code name: Space Cadet) that make the story such a joy.  The author clearly knows kids and how to write them. His insights are so good, you’ll wonder if the book was written by a teen with advanced writing skills.  The main character, Marvin, truly believes aliens will one day infiltrate the earth, so he spends his spare time searching and preparing for them, along with his less enthusiastic friends.  Jace and Nora don’t really buy into Marvin’s obsession, but searching the night sky during campouts and building an anti-UFO catapult is fun for them.  That’s what buddies do: go along with the ideas of each other, in the name of friendship.

 

Things change when the three of them do find something unusual in the woods. It isn’t actual aliens, but it does somewhat fit into Marvin’s beliefs.  The author wisely doesn’t hide the fact that it isn’t an extraterrestrial invasion, but he has Marvin play his role to the end, and that’s where a lot of the story’s charm comes from.  It’s hilarious when adults in the book occasionally ask “what’s wrong with this kid?”” when Marvin accuses them of being from another planet.  The answer is, nothing at all.  He isn’t written as crazy or stupid, but as a kid who believes, wholeheartedly, in aliens coming to earth.  It makes the character interactions between the three kids more powerful than a laser bolt from Han Solo’s blaster, as Jace and Nora are perfect foils to Marvin.  Jace has fun with the whole alien thing, but would rather play basketball, while Nora is new and town and just needs a friend.

 

The storyline is quite good: call it sci-fi light.  There are a few weird creatures and a bit of teleporting, plus, of course, an EEEEVIL mastermind behind it all.  There are some stock elements, but they are used extremely well.  A few characters do get chomped by something, but nothing messy.  This book is perfect for grades four through seven, roughly. (I’m basing that on my teaching experience)

 

However, since this review is mainly for adults, the bottom line is, this is perfect for those who haven’t let the world dampen the joy of imagination.  It’s a good reminder that magic of a sort still does exist, if you still believe.  Often, that magic is found in the friendships you make, as the book’s characters discover during their adventure.   Most definitely recommended!

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

 

Book Review: The Rack: Stories Inspired by Vintage Horror Paperbacks edited by Tom Deady

Cover art for The Rack edited by Tom Deady

The Rack: Stories Inspired by Vintage Horror Paperbacks, by various authors

Greymore Publishing, 2024

ISBN: 9780990632771

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

Buy: Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

The Rack is a mixed bag.  That’s surprising, considering the pedigree of the authors involved, many whom I’ve read before.  There are some really good ones, but when the best one is a Stephen King one borrowed from his ’80s collection Skeleton Crew, that tells you something.  If you really want good ’80s style horror stories, track down the original ones from that era on Ebay,

 

The reason it’s a bit of a disappointment is that for the five or six really good ones, there are an equal number of clunkers.  The rest are somewhere in the middle: they provide some entertainment, but nothing you are likely to read again. The writing and ideas are fine, but most of them just don’t have any real “grab” to them.  Still, there are some that have plenty of zip,

 

“White Pages” is one of the best and most creative stories, illustrating how prank calling could go horribly wrong in the old days of rotary phones.  “Fuzzy Slippers” is straight, messy, ’80s-inspired lunacy, with yes, killer slippers, and a great twist at the end.  This one really captures the feel of the gory, free-for-all stories that marked some of the best ’80s horror.  “Blood of my Blood” may be the most unusual, with its blood-drinking health zealots.  Mixi them into a marriage ceremony with a groom who has no idea what type of family he’s marrying into, and you have a wonderfully dark humored story.  “The Keeper of Taswomet” and “Lips Like a Scythe” are solid, vintage-inspired monster mashups, with enough character interactions to keep the story humming. They’re not just focused on the monsters and carnage, although there is plenty of that too!  The best story, King’s “The Raft”, is one that doesn’t need to be mentioned; you already know how good it is.

 

As for the rest…again, this is strictly opinion.  There’s nothing lacking in how the stories are written, they just really aren’t page turners, which is my main requirement for a good short story.  Other readers may feel differently..

 

Bottom line?  If you want to read the best ’80s shorts, go back to the originals: they truly hit the mark.  King’s Night Shift or Skeleton Crew, Robert McCammon’s Blue World, or Clive Barker’s Books of Blood are all prime examples of what made the ’80s such a fertile period for creativity in the horror field.

 

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: Uncertainties 7 edited by Carly Holmes

Cover art for Uncertainties 7 edited by Carly Holmes

Uncertainties 7 edited by Carly Holmes

Swan River Press 2024

ISBN: 0781783800506

Available: Hardcover

Buy: Swan River Press

 

This is the seventh volume in the ongoing anthology series published by the excellent Irish imprint Swan River Press, collecting “strange”, unsettling stories penned by writers from the UK, Europe and USA.

 

The first, successful, six volumes have assembled a number of noteworthy authors and editors, trying their hand at every possible subgenre of speculative fiction: ghost stories, horror tales, science fiction, fantasy and more.

 

And since it’s normal that not everything pleases everybody, I will point out the stories which, in my opinion,are the best in the present volume.

 

In the intriguing and sinister “Pond Scum” by Tyler Keevil, two brothers vacationing in Tuscany are involved in a scary paranormal experience revolving around an unusual pond. This is one of the very few cases of fiction in English  where sentences in Italian are reproduced  and spelled correctly…

 

“Sad Face”, by the prolific Mark Morris, is a disturbing, atmospheric piece where a widower searching for peace in a wild and secluded resort place ends up being literally engulfed in an unwanted embrace.

 

“The Winding of the Willows” by Steve Toase is an effective mix of horror and SF, depicting how the water of a stream brings about disease and death in a small village.

 

“The Good Old Days” by Craig Rosenberg is a kind of neat “ Twilight Zone” story, in which an Aussie man relocated to the USA has to face the past while taking a vacation back in his hometown.

 

I am looking forward to volume number 8.

 

 

Reviewed by Mario Guslandi