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Book Review: Ladies of Gothic Horror: A Collection of Classic Stories edited by Mitzi Szereto

Ladies of Gothic Horror: A Collection of Classic Stories edited by Mitzi Szereto

Midnight Rain Publishing, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1794556317

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Next time someone says that women can’t write horror fiction, point them to this book. In Ladies of Gothic Horror,  Mitzi Szereto has collected 17 stories by women writers of the 19th and early 20th centuries that will creep you out, chill your bones, and check the locks on your doors.  While some names may be more familiar to readers of supernatural fiction, such as Mary Shelley, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman, many of the stories are by women writers better known for other works: Edith Nesbit is chiefly known for her children’s books, Elizabeth Gaskell for her social realist novels, Edith Wharton for her novels about the American upper class, Virginia Woolf for her modernist and feminist writings, Helena Blavatsky for her theosophical and occult work. Szereto follows each of the stories with a detailed biographical note about the author, when that information is available (very little is available on Eleanor F. Lewis, who evidently wrote only two stories– it’s too bad she didn’t write more).

Many of these women were supporting their families by writing for magazines, and their writing can be dramatic, depending on stereotypical characters, but they also skillfully build suspense and atmosphere, administer retribution, and illuminate tragedy.  Standout stories include Gertrude Atherton’s “Death and the Woman”, which manages to create dread and suspense without ever having the main character leave her husband’s bedside;  Edith Nesbit’s “Man-Size in Marble”, in which a newlywed husband discovers why you should pay attention to your housekeeper; Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s “The Cold Embrace”, in which a young man learns that having your fiancee return from the grave is not actually romantic; Edith Wharton’s “Afterward”, in which an American couple discover that an English haunting is no joking matter; and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s famous “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Elia W. Peattie’s “The Room of the Evil Thought” and Eleanor F. Lewis’ “The Vengeance of a Tree” are brief, terrifying stories of strange hauntings. Helena Blavatsky’s “The Ensouled Violin” is positively gruesome. The collection ends with Virginia Woolf’s “A Haunted House”, a much lighter piece than the rest, that provides a satisfying conclusion.

Ladies of Gothic Horror does a valuable service by spotlighting supernatural and gothic works by women writers better known for other work and by introducing some of the 19th and early 20th centry women writers of supernatural fiction that can still be found in print (some, like Mary E. Wilkins Freeman’s The Wind in the Rose-bush, are even available free on Kindle).  While there are a few writers, like Eleanor F. Lewis, who may have been previously unknown, this book makes a good starting place for further investigating works by women writers of supernatural and gothic horror from the time period. There are few other anthologies similar to it that are still in print, although I expect we will see more now that people are discovering women writers of horror through the just-released Monster, She Wrote by Lisa Kroger and Melanie Anderson, which we recently reviewed.  Ladies of Gothic Horror is a great opportunity for widening your horizons and experiencing the chills, suspense, and terrors, that can be found in these women’s works. Highly recommended.

 

 

Book Review: A Love Not Deceased by Eric Kapitan

A Love Not Deceased by Eric Kapitan

Self published, expected February 2020

ISBN: 978-1-082219-35-1

Available: paperback

 

Eric Kapitan’s A Love Not Deceased is an eclectic mix of romance, sex, murder, and overall weirdness.  The story has a bit of everything, done to the right amount.  The sex isn’t too graphic, the gore isn’t over the top, every part fits together.  It’s a strange romance that will appeal to a non-romantic horror fan.  The only real drawback is the ending: it came too soon.  This story had more room to run: it’s a shame it didn’t.

Maggie, the story’s protagonist, is a wonderful study in contrast.  She’s 31, looking for True Romance, and saving herself for Mr. Right.  Casual sex and one night flings are NOT her thing.  Her current means of supporting herself, oddly enough, consists of customer service over the phone for a national sex toys company, and self-publishing erotica novels for “lonely and horny soccer moms”.  She has a deep-seated fear of losing those she loves, since she lost both her parents at an early age.  She finally meets her Mr. Right: Mike, a nice, stable, self-supporting fellow, who introduces Maggie to the world of sub/dom relationships… and she finds herself loving it.  Minor spoiler ahead: tragedy strikes when Mike unexpectedly is murdered, and Maggie begins her descent into madness,  with her actions getting  increasingly crazy and bloody.

The writing is a nice balance of exposition and dialogue, with a slightly dark overall tone.  The author shows he can write all situations equally well: the part describing Maggie losing her dad is genuinely touching, and will yank on your heartstrings.  There’s also some unexpected humor to lighten the mood.   The dialogue of some of Maggie’s conversations with her sex toy customers was hilarious, and the parts where Maggie and Mike act like excited kids over tattoos and rock concert tickets help to make them genuinely likable characters.  The first 50 pages of the story are strictly the background scenery for setting up the characters for the actual plot. However, it’s written well, and will hold your interest.  The last 40 pages are where the story cuts loose, with Maggie losing Mike, then going nuts.  Kapitan adds in a nice touch here, since a couple of the chapters are still written from Mike’s point of view, even though he’s dead… or is he?

It’s a quick story, and at 91 pages double-spaced, it’s a breeze to get through.  This brings up the only negative: the story ends just when it kicks into high gear.  Most of it is a slow buildup to  Maggie’s spiral into insanity.  Just when it hits the overload point, and it feels like the story is about take off at a breakneck pace for the finish line, it ends.  It would have been nice to see it keep going– there was a lot of potential left on the table.

 

Contains: violence, profanity, sex

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: The Bone Cutters by Renee S. DeCamillis

The Bone Cutters by Renee S. DeCamillis

Eraserhead Press, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1621052937

Available: Paperback

 

This has been a banner year for introducing stellar new horror writers to the world. Renee S. DeCamillis shows she is one of these with  her novella The Bone Cutters, one of the strangest, but coolest, entries of 2019. Fans of Gwendolyn Kiste or Cody Goodfellow will definitely want to seek this out.

The novella is a wonderful form for horror, giving the reader and author just enough time to grow into the story, fall for the characters, and then leave both with a scar on the soul. DeCamillis’ story touches on elements of the familiar, but makes it her own.

Dory, the main character, wakes up in a mental ward with no idea how she got there, but learns she has been “blue-papered”– committed without consent. In other hands than DeCamillis’, this could have turned out to be just another horror tale in a tired setting, but the story takes a hard left when Dory attends her first group meeting. The people in the group have strange scars signaling that they are  addicts of a new kind. These people are “dusters,” the titular “bone cutters”. who carve into their own– or others’ — bodies, to get high off the dust within. They dig and scrape until they procure enough of the material from the bones to give themselves  a high unknown to other addicts. Because Dory is a “freshie”– a newbie who hasn’t been dusted yet– she becomes their prime target. Dory has nobody to help her until she meets the enigmatic custodian, Tommy, whose past may tie into the patients from whom Dory is trying to escape.

To say more about the plot would give away too much. Just dive in and enjoy.

DeCamillis doesn’t mess around with frills here. Her writing is as razor sharp as the cutting tools the patients use. Not a word is wasted in this lean tale that grabs hold from the get go, and drags the reader through a surreal experience that evokes One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, if written by Clive Barker. The ending arrives way too fast, but it will leave readers jonesing for another hit of this new writer.

A recommended novella to be added to a fine 2019.

 

Reviewed by David Simms