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Book Review: Estate Sale by Mia Dalia

Estate Sale by Mia Dalia cover art

Estate Sale by Mia Dalia

Lethe Press, 2025

ISBN-13: 9781590215579

Available: Paperback, Kindle ebook

 

After the passing of Lady Koshmaroff, an estate sale draws the attention of the community, who knew very little about her and her late husband. Once the locals start buying the everyday objects from the house, strange things start happening to the new owners of these possessions. A writer buys a rocking chair and, after a long stint of writer’s block, he begins to write…and write…and write. A teenager, aspiring to be a comic artist, finds the quill her grandfather bought at an estate sale before he died holds an amazing secret that frees her from the confines of an uncaring mother and a stepfather whose recent medical condition she feels guilty about… maybe. A man returns to his hometown after an adventurous life, and caters the wedding of the man who was his first kiss, leading to rekindled, conflicting feelings, that end with a dark secret revealed and a mysterious engraved cup. A wife purchases a magnifying glass for her discredited investigator husband in the hopes it will give him some confidence, which leads to obsession over his most recent case. These are only a fraction of the objects purchased from the estate.

 

Between tales of the objects and their buyers is the strange history of Russian couple Ana and Pavel Koshmaroff, who managed to escape numerous atrocities in Europe in the early 20th century, finally settling in the United States. Throughout their story, Pavel introduces Ana to friends made across the world, including the infamous Aleister Crowley and other practitioners of magick. He also collects a seemingly eclectic assortment of objects, which she inherits at Pavel’s death.

 

Dalia expertly weaves the couple’s travels through history with the stories of the buyers of objects from the estate sale. Her ability to turn what seems like an everyday object into something sinister, or a strange comfort, added to the suspense and mystery of the Koshmaroff line. Although there is a large cast of characters, Dalia provides each of them a distinct voice and personality, and sometimes they cross paths with each other. This effect makes the setting feel small, despite the fact that some characters have moved out the of community, only to be pulled back for various reasons, to come across the estate sale at the center of the book.

 

Estate Sale would be a great recommendation for readers who like historical horror, gothic horror, short story collections, and intricate yet simple world building. Highly recommended.

 

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Book Review: Acquired Taste by Clay McLeod Chapman

Acquired Taste by Clay McLeod Chapman

Titan Books, 2025

ISBN-13: 9781835410783

Available: Hardcover, audiobook, Kindle edition

Buy: Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

 

I attended a great panel at the 2025 American Library Association Annual Conference in June titled “Crossing Thresholds: The Rise of Transgressive Horror,” moderated by the amazing Becky Siegel Spratford with Clay McLeod Chapman, Eric LaRocca, and Hailey Piper at the 2025 ALA Conference. They discussed how their stories subvert genre norms and push boundaries, their creative processes, and future projects. Shortly afterward, the Titan Books reps ushered attendees to their booth in the exhibit hall for signed copies and to meet the authors. After devouring all their books, I felt compelled to write reviews for each of them.

 

Clay McLeod Chapman’s Acquired Taste is a collection of 24 previously published short stories and 1 novelette, each with strong characters and themes.

 

In “The Fireplace,” a family moves into a new home, and the hearth beckons to the man of the house. In “Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Key”, a pastor gets his reward after leading some Boy Scouts to a book burning. In “The Spew of News,” people are becoming something else after their obsessive viewing of a popular right-wing news channel, and a son finds his parents have fallen victim to its influence. “Baby Carrots” will leave the reader wondering about the bag in their own refrigerator. In “Fairy Ring,” a son visits his elderly mother, who has been afflicted with some kind of fungal infection, in the hospital. In “Pump and Dump”, a new father finds a breast pump for his wife at a garage sale but really needs to test it to make sure it works. Strange stuffed toys in “Knockoff” show the obsession and materialism of viral media toys.

 

These are only a fraction of what the reader will encounter. Rest assured, all the short stories in this collection will live in your brain well after you have finished them. If you are looking to add short horror story collections to your library, pick this up. Highly recommended.

 

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

 

Book Review: The Empire of the Moon and Stars and Other Stories by Simon Bleaken

cover art for Empire of the Moon and Stars and Other Stories by Simon Bleaken

The Empire of the Moon and Stars and Other Stories by Simon Bleaken
Independently published, 2025
ISBN 979-8343998535
Available: Paperback, Kindle edition
Buy:  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

The Empire of the Moon and Stars is an interesting mix between horror and science fiction, independently published by a writer who is definitely worth watching – and reading.

 

The title story “The Empire of the Moon” is a fine example of what I mentioned above, namely an extremely disquieting mix of horror and science fiction. Another standout is “Anarred Asylum”, a very dark story where madness and supernatural merge. Admittedly, suspension of disbelief is hard to maintain throughout the whole tale: however, it remains a powerful journey into horror. “Ocean Song” is yet another strong, quite horrific piece, revolving around the invasion of deadly parasites coming from the sea.

 

I won’t even try to describe what happens in “A World Behind Glass”. It will suffice to say that it has all the features of a nightmare, where anything bad can happen and no explanations are required.

 

“Final Words” is an atmospheric piece, revisiting the secrets surrounding the elusive Robert Chambers book, The King in Yellow, while “The Breath of the God” is a claustrophobic example of “archaeological” horror.

 

The final section of the volume, called “Echoes of the Future”, is extremely oriented toward science fiction. Readers looking for an author who can write both horror and science fiction will want to check this collection of stories out.

 

 

Reviewed by Mario Guslandi