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Book Review: Double Barrel Horror, Volume 3 edited by Matthew Weber

cover image for Double Barrel Horror Volume 3

Double Barrel Horror, Volume 3 edited by Matthew Weber (  Amazon.com  )

Pint Bottle Press, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-945005-01-5

Availability: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Double Barrel Horror, Volume 3 is a 182 page collection of horror shorts by six different authors, two stories by each one.  Most of the stories clock in at around the 10-15 page mark, and the quality is all over the map.  There are some good ones, but some clunkers as well.   Or, in keeping with the “shotgun” theme of the book title, there are some good rounds of double-aught buck in here, but there is also a fair amount of birdshot and blanks mixed in.

 

Calvin Demmer is the most consistent author out of the six; his “Highway Hell” and “Motel Madness” are entertaining romps, concerning how roadkill is really removed from the highways, and what happens to a bad, but not truly evil, person when they are tossed into purgatory.  Robert Essig’s “From Unclean Spells” is a decent story of necromancy gone wrong.   If nothing else, the belch-and-barf-fest (literally) in the story is quite amusing.  Essig comes up big with “Fuel for the King of Death”, which scores high both in terms of originality and excitement.  How does a freaky little Museum of Death keep getting new video footage for the museum?  Read on and find out.  Mark Matthews adds “Goodwin”, which is an entertaining take on the joys of necrophilia, from a corpse’s point of view.  The most chilling story in the book certainly comes Glenn Rolfe.  His “The House on Mayflower Street” is a terrifying look at what happens when nosy neighborhood brats start investigating the classic “abandoned house” in a suburban neighborhood.  As the kids find out, curiosity is not only painful, it’s a lot worse than death.  This one would make a good movie; it alone is almost worth the price of admission.

 

As for the rest of the stories…meh.  They aren’t necessarily bad, but they aren’t that interesting either.  The writing quality for all of them is fine, there just really isn’t anything in the stories to capture and hold the reader.  They are okay for a quick moment, but there is nothing that will make the stories truly memorable for the reader.  If you have the money to spare, you may want to consider picking this up for the good stories it does contain.  Anyone on a limited budget, though, would be better off investing in The Third Corona Book of Horror Stories or Lost Highways: Dark Fiction From the Road.

 

 

Contains: violence, profanity, gore

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Links: Stoker Awards 2018 Final Ballot for Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection

Well, we didn’t get all reviews for every category in before the Stoker Awards were actually announced, but I finally can provide you with links to reviews to all the books nominated for the category of Superior Achievment in a Fiction Collection. The award went to Eric J. Guignard for That Which Grows Wild on Saturday, and you can check out our review of his book, as well as those of the other nominees, by clicking on the links below.  Congratulations to all the nominees, and well done, Eric!

 

That Which Grows Wild  by Eric J. Guignard

Garden of Eldritch Delights  by Lucy A. Snyder

Coyote Songs  by Gabino Iglesias

Spectral Evidence  by Gemma Files

Dark and Distant Voices  by Tim Waggoner

 

 

We still have one more review of a Stoker nominee (in the Long Fiction category) to publish, so keep your eyes peeled for that and for the links to all the reviews for the nominated titles in the category of Superior Achievement in Long Fiction.

Enjoy!

Book Review: Garden of Eldritch Delights by Lucy Snyder

Garden of Eldritch Delights by Lucy A. Snyder

Raw Dog Screaming Press, 2018

ISBN:  9781947879089
Available: Paperback, Kindle edition
Once again Lucy Snyder offers up a delightfully dark, fantastic collection of fiction morsels. Garden of Eldritch Delights has a Lovecraftian slant, pitting a number of interpretations of human against nameless, Otherland invaders. However, readers don’t need to be Lovecraft fans to find much to enjoy here. Snyder takes the themes through many interpretations, from classic horror, to science fiction and historical magical fantasy. There’s a lot to enjoy. If anything, the biggest downside is the fact that the tales within this collection are interesting and engaging enough to have spawned longer stories.
Standouts include “Fraeternal”, “Blossoms Blackened Like Dead Stars”, “A Hero of Grunjord”, and “The Warlady’s Daughter”. It’s not surprising that this collection is up for a Stoker. It engages the imagination, and language, in fascinating ways. Highly recommended, particularly for readers looking for stories outside of well-loved tropes, that will hold their fascination.
Contains: Language, violence, gore, sexual talk and situations
Reviewed by Michele Lee
Editor’s note: Garden of Eldritch Delights is a nominee on the final ballot for the 2018 Stoker Awards in the category Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection.