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Halloween Reviews

Happy Halloween everyone!

We have more reviews for your Halloween reading.
In our Horror Anthologies section:
David Agranoff reviews Harry Shannon’s A Host of Shadows.  Colleen Wanglund reviews Necro Files: Two Decades of Extreme Horror edited by Cheryl Muellenax.

In our adult Supernatural Horrors section:
Rhonda Wilson reviews The Watching by Paul Melniczek,  The Samhanach by Lisa Morton, and  Smile No More by James A. Moore. Colleen Wanglund reviews Eternal Unrest: A Tale of Mummy Terror by Lorne Dixon and  A View from the Lake by Greg F. Gifune.  Jennifer Lawrence reviews Harbor by John Ajvide Lindqvist, Black Light by Patrick Melton, Marcus Dunstan, and Stephen Romano, and The Pumpkin Man by John Everson.

In the adult Urban Fantasy/ Horror Adventure section:
Hannah Kate reviews The Last Seal by Richard Denning.  Michele Lee reviews The Fatal Circle by Linda Robinson and Death Sword by Pamela Turner.

In the adult Zombies section:
Michele Lee reviews Asylum by Mark Allen Gunnells.

In the  young adult Vampire fiction section:
Rhonda Wilson reviews Drink, Slay, Love by  Sarah Beth Durst.

In the Scary Books for Kids section:
Rhonda Wilson reviews The Stoker Legacy Book 1: I was a Seventh Grade Monster Hunter by A.G. Kent. Kirsten Kowalewski reviews Little Goblins Ten by Pamela Jane.  Michele  Lee reviews Beware the Snallygaster by Patrick Boyton.

Keep reading!

The Monster Librarian

 

The Walking Dead and Your Zombie Collection

In case you might have missed it, zombies have been the monster du jour for the past several years. They have been shambling their way through horror movies, video games, books, and graphic novels. They have even can be found in other genres such as paranormal romance (who knew!). The TV station American Movie Classics (AMC) has brought the graphic novel The Walking Dead by Robert Kirkman to the little screen. With high production values, the show has become popular. What does this mean for libraries? We here at Monster Librarian feel that the different media that horror that the genre is found in provides an excellent opportunity to promote leisure reading by tying books to other media, like tv shows, movies, and video games, being promoted in mass media. There have been a plethora of zombie titles that have come out in the past few years, and this is a great time to put some on display!

Some notable titles we suggest for library collections:

Zombies: Encounters with the Hungry Dead edited by John Skipp

Dying to Live and Dying to Live: Life Sentence by Kim Paffenroth

Dead Sea by Brian Keene

Day by Day Armageddon by J.L. Bourne

World War Z; An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brook

Bits of the Dead by Keith Gouveia

History is Dead by Kim Paffenroth

The World is Dead edited by Kim Paffernoth

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance – Now With Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem! by Seth Grahame-Smith and Jane Austen

The Zombie Survival Guide by Max Brooks

Happy reading!