Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Don't Turn Out the Lights

 
This anthology is a tribute in the frame of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. The 35 tales are mostly short. Well, they're all short, but some run a little more like a standard kids' short story while others are only a couple pages. 

The illustrator, while nothing near as creepy as the original, does a good job. 

The stories themselves are hit or miss, like any anthology. Very rarely do I come across an anthology that just knocks it out of the park with every story. 

My favorites: The Funeral Portrait, The Carved Bear, The Neighbor, and The Tall Ones.

I recommend picking it up if you like Scary Stories. It's only $6.99 on Amazon. 

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Fall Horror Part 1!

 

It is officially fall, my favorite season! I was feeling fall-ish a couple days ago and started rereading some of my favorite old horror anthologies from childhood. I've only ever written about one of them here apparently. The others were adulthood reads. 

So I thought I'd dedicate a post to these five childhood faves. These are even still my original copies. 

I'm going to mention each story and the gist of it, so if you don't want spoilers, don't read all this. 

I'm going to start with Haunted Tales. This isn't a well-known one at all. It's a skinny little book from 1989 that only has 7 stories in it. 

The opener, "Give Me My Gold," is a spin on the classic ghost coming to get whatever someone posthumously stole from it. 

"Dream Spell" is by far the best story in the book. It's always the one I remember most. Three kids wake up from nightmares where they've been tortured by an old woman, and all three have various injuries: one has burns on her legs, a second welts around his neck, and the third has three broken ribs. The doctor connects their last names and weaves a tale from 300 years ago. Three bored young girls blame a local woman to cover their asses after they've pulled some pranks on the town. It smacks of Salem and the woman is sentenced to death. Her spirit has come after these descendants. Two of them are down the line of two of the girls and the third comes from the judge's bloodline. When asked about the descendants of the third accusing girl, the doctor reveals that it's his family. As the father of one of the kids scoffs, a nurse bursts in and says the doctor's daughter has been in an accident. She looks as if she's been run over by a large wheel, which is exactly how the poor woman died 300 years earlier. If you've ever read Lois Duncan's "Gallows Hill" or watched "I've Been Waiting For You," you'll see some similarities. But this story was written 8 years before Gallows Hill. And in my opinion, did the theme better justice.

"The Crazed Camper" is your typical kid bullied at camp turns into camp ghost legend.

"The Reflection" is a decent revenge story about a self-centered judge. 

"The Ship in the Bottle" is a neat one. A young boy finds a ship in a bottle, then finds himself trapped inside it, like everyone who's opened the bottle. All the kids are forced to work on the cursed pirate ship, including the kidnapped daughter of the witch who placed the curse over a century before.

"The Wedding Feast" is okay. The wedding of a murderous couple doesn't end well. 

And "The Cry of the Cat" is about the revenge of a murdered reclusive cat lady. 

They're not the strongest stories overall, but it's worth the quick read just to check out "Dream Spell."


Oh, yes, Tales For the Midnight Hour! These were the other welll-known horror books aside from the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark series. J. B. Stamper did some excellent work. 

The initial book is actually surprisingly old. It published in 1977, so it's even older than me! 

"The Furry Collar" is an interesting twist on the murderer hiding in the house with two young female friends, but it doesn't have the most logical ending. Like how did the surviving friend live? 

"The Black Velvet Ribbon" is a version of the take off the ribbon and her head falls off story. 

"The Boarder" is creative. A boy is unnerved by his family's boarder, follows him one night, learns he's a burglar...and accidentally on purpose kills him, then grows up to become him. 

"The Ten Claws" is about a series of murders where the victims are killed by ten sharp claws stabbing them in the neck. Sort of a version of the witch hidden in plain sight ends up mutilated when she's injured in shapeshifted form, but more open-ended than other versions of this.

"The Jigsaw Puzzle" was very predictable and a bit weak.  

"The Face" is a Western tale. Not bad, but not great. 

"The Mirror" I don't care for. 

I'm sure it's no surprise, but "The Egyptian Coffin" is my favorite of the book. It's got a destructive museum night watchman getting his comeuppance, but it's just written well and I love the details. Although there were no fox-headed gods. That's a jackal, J. B. 

"The Old Plantation" and "Phobia" are okay, I guess. Not into either.

"The Train Through Transylvania" has the main girl worried about vampires and naturally she's attacked by one, but only after thinking another person was the vampire, not the one that actually turned out to be him. 

"The Attic Door" was predictable, but I liked it anyway. Mad scientist experiment stuff.

"The Tunnel of Terror" I enjoyed. It's a little bit comedic. 

"The Fortune Teller" is less supernatural horror and more a crime tale.

"The Stuffed Dog" makes no sense. The story clearly says the husband dies a mysterious death and the dog dies after. The wife has the dog stuffed and this year, her grandson has to help her carry the dog to the cemetery, which she visits every year so he can hang out with his former master on the anniversary of their death. The kid is terrified of the dog, so of course it comes to life after he burns it. The grandson is found dead in the same manner as the husband, but that's what doesn't make sense. Why would the living dog kill the husband and then die? And how would a living dog create a manner of death in which the victim's "arms and legs were sticking out stiff from his body?" 

"A Free Place to Sleep" is good. It's based on the famous Berkeley Square haunting. 

"The Gooney Birds" is the final tale in the book. The last tale is always an outdoorsy camping one about a group of boys. The youngest is always named Ty. This one has them devoured by giant gooney birds after one of the idiots stabs two of their eggs. 


More Tales came out ten years later in 1987. I want to say this was my first one in the series. I would have been 9, so just about the right age. I probably got the first book later on. 

"The Shortcut" is about a kid riding a bike past a cemetery and coming home with a skeleton hand dangling off the seat. 

"Trick-or-Treat" has an asshole kid getting his comeuppance on Halloween thanks to a vampire.

"The Hearse" is really well done. It's the elevator operator story. You know, "room for one more." Only this time it's a different vision, different setting that I won't spoil. 

"At Midnight" feels like it was also borrowed from legend. Girl loves a highwayman and promises to meet him at a certain time, but she's stopped from getting there until late. He's there, but he's off somehow, and takes her back home. She's left him with some token, in this case a scarf. Then she learns he was hanged at the time they were supposed to meet and when she sees his body, he's wearing the scarf. 

"The Black Mare" is a shapeshifting witch story. 

 "The Love Charm" is also about witchcraft. Simple little love potion story about why it's always important to follow directions. 

"The Mask" has a writer bringing home a souvenir mask from Africa and not heeding the warnings of the shopkeeper. This was good. 

"Right Inn" is a nice comic piece I won't spoil. 

"The Collector" is my favorite story from all four of these books. It's about a kid who's taken up collecting moths and displaying them. Against the warnings of a local old woman, he captures and kills one that's supposedly cursed. Then the moths come for him...

"A Ghost Story" is great. It's another comic piece.

"In the Lantern's Light" is really weird. I'd love to know her inspiration for this. 

"Footsteps" is a creepy take on ghostly footsteps. 

And "A Night in the Woods" has Ty and the gang dealing with a werewolf. 


Still More Tales is from 1989. 

"Cemetery Road" is a version of the kids dare the new girl to do something in the cemetery and she regrets it theme. But it's not stab into a grave and actually nail your nightgown hem and die. No, she has to get the leather collar around the neck of a cat statue. And you know the cat's gonna come get it. 

"The Wax Museum" is really good. There are a lot of detailed pranks pulled by an asshole kid, who then wants to spend the night in the museum. Naturally, he's found the next morning "and when Robbie reached out to touch him, he felt only the hard, cold smoothness...of wax." Stamper revisits this theme in "House of Horrors," her contribution to the awesome Thirteen YA horror anthology from 1991. However, "The Wax Museum" was a way better story. 

TAILYPO. Enough said. Tailypo is my favorite of the legendary supernatural stories. 

I totally took a break from this review to see if anyone made custom Tailypo plush, but none get his look quite like it is in my head. 

"Words of Warning" is a great haunted house story. Bored boy is stuck in New England with his parents who want to see the changing leaves. The gardener for the inn they're staying in warns him to stay away from an abandoned house. He doesn't get why he's warned and other boys aren't, and then again why the house doesn't affect two other boys like it does him. But he also feels a strong pull to the house, so of course he goes there...only to learn he and he alone of the boys has something in common with all the ghosts.

"The Ghost's Revenge" is a take on the wartime bride who promises not to marry if the fiancee is killed, only to break said promise so zombie fiancee has to come haul her away from her wedding. Stamper reuses the name Lucy Potter in a different story. I think in the fourth volume. 

"A Special Treat" is my second favorite of all these tales after "The Collector." (I love Tailypo a lot, so I can't just lump it in with everything else, because it's a legend and not an original Stamper story.) Lisa's husband won't eat red meat, which she enjoys, because his mom told him not to before she ran out of him and her husband. Well, what do you think Lisa does? Sneak feeds her husband red meat and outs him as a werewolf. His furry mom's instantaneous appearance after he's started to shift is great. 

 "The Magic Vanishing Box" is about another dangerous find in an antique shop. You know these characters are all like horror movie white people. Don't catch your hand in the box. Oh, too bad.

"Wait Til Max Comes" has the successively larger talking cats. It was Martin in Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. S. E. Schlosser has it as Emmet. I always enjoy this one.

"The Old Beggar Woman" is the rich woman who won't share her wealth and says the old "just as long as this ring will never return from the sea." Then it's in a fish and boom, she's cursed. 

"The Masked Ball" has another (equally predictable) vampire red herring.   

"Skin-and-Bones" is the deadly hitchhiker theme. Not the vanishing one, but the murdering one. A bit of the hook urban legend, too, with her hand hanging off the carriage's hook at the end. 

"The Snake Charmer" is a bore white girl in India who is being driven insane by the music of a snake charmer who won't go away from his place outside her house. When he asks for a lock of hair, she gives it, which horrifies her parents when they return. They race into her room and find the charmer's snake trying to kill the doll the girl cut the hair from. 

"The Snipe Hunt" has the boys enduring a snipe hunt test. Only Ty wins when he actually brings one back to the campsite...or does he?

I think this is the strongest book in the series overall. 


And finally, we have Even More Tales. I honestly cannot remember if I had this in childhood. I know the first three are my original copies, but this one? I'm not sure. I want to say no, because the condition is worse than the other books and I kept my things pretty nice. So who knows when I found out this existed? It came out in 1991.

"Voices" is about a girl plagued with voices that tell her bad things are going to happen. The point of view is actually her friend...who she ends up passing the voices to. 

"The Gecko" has a city dweller buy a gecko to let it loose in his apartment and eat up all the roaches. But what does the ever-growing gecko eat when he gets all the bugs?

"The Head" is an odd story that seems like a ghost story, but I'm not sure what it's actually supposed to be. City girl that just moved to the country isn't taken seriously by her parents when she keeps seeing a headless woman outside. Then they meet a lady who agrees to stay with the girl while the parents are at a school parent night...only for that lady to be the headless woman. 

"Better Late Than Never" has a guy not knowing he's dead. 

"The Golden Arm" is the famous legend. 

"Dead Man's Cave" is a stupid kid going in a haunted cave while his younger brother tries and fails to stop him. 

"The Midnight Feeding." When you babysit a vampire. 

"When Darkness Comes" is about a painting showing a dark castle with one single light in the tower. And when the light goes dark, you've got problems. I swear I know this story and it could be tied to Glamis Castle, but I could also think I know this story from this book. 

"King of the Cats." You guys know this one. I love it. "Then I'm King of the Cats!"

"The White Dove" is the dying wife who makes her husband promise not to remarry. Similar theme as the dead soldier coming back for his fiancee, only the dove actually lets the newer couple get married and then plagues them. She's typically shot at by the husband. 

"Cemetery Hill" has kids stretching a wire across a road to yank off men's hats and scare them. But, as you can guess, they aim a little too low once...

"Claustophobia" is about a boy who is forced by his aunt to climb into the chimney and retrieve the hidden diamonds she stole years ago. He's angry when she dies and leaves him useless furniture, so he has a plan to steal the jewels off her corpse, which comes alive long enough to make sure he's trapped in the coffin with her. 

"The Island of Fear" is the last tale of poor Ty. Stuck alone on a small island this time. Another camper appears and he's relieved, only to eventually realize this kid is the shapeshifter on the island that he was warned about. It's a werewolf again. Just say werewolf, Stamper. 

Even More is the weakest of the lot for me. The best stories are the ones based on old legends.

So there's the first installment of my fall spooky story time!

Sunday, December 16, 2018

ASK THE BONES

Like the previous book, these were on the list recommended for fans of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

Ask the Bones and its sequel, More Bones, both are short anthologies of "scary stories from around the world."

Sound familiar?

Yeah, it's the same as Robert D. San Souci's Short and Shivery series and I believe several of the tales repeat from there. I don't have them in front of me to verify, but I've definitely read some of these before.

I zipped through Ask the Bones when I got it and honestly wasn't very impressed. The only story I really liked was "Ask the Bones" itself. The opening tale "The Haunted Forest" doesn't even finish. It's one of those "you decide" stories, which I hate, because a story's literal job is to tell me what happened. The other stories either just didn't stand out to me or had endings on the down side, which gets tiresome after a while.





More Bones arrived yesterday and once again, I read it quickly. These stories were far better than those in the first book and held my attention a lot more. "The Prince's Fate" from Egypt was the best, being something Egyptian I've actually never read. (Minor points off for the use of "hieroglyphics" though.) A lot of them are also repeats from other books, but they're told enjoyably, so I didn't mind. 

Neither of these books are the best of their type. I recommend the Short and Shivery series far more than these, but if you have read all the Short and Shiverys and want something more, try these out.

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Slasher Girls & Monster Boys

I read a list online of suggested books for fans of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark and this was on it. I remember almost buying it in Booksamillion months ago, but I put it back in favor of a plush Niffler. But seeing it on that list made me order it and a few others that were suggested.

I'm not going to go too into detail, but this is a YA anthology of horror thrillers. Each was inspired by movies, TV shows, even songs and those inspirations are printed upsidedown at the end of each tale. There wasn't a single story I fully disliked, although don't expect a lot of happy endings. I do love a good revenge tale, so those were mostly my favorites, but my #1 was "Hide-and-Seek," which used "The Crow" as one of its inspirations.

If you loved 90s YA horror thrillers, you'll like these stories. They take things up a notch, I think. Even if you prefer straight-up adult horror, I think you'll enjoy these.

Saturday, March 31, 2018

HAUNTED NIGHTS

If you're in the mood for a good horror anthology, this is it. I zipped through it in two days. Would have been less if I hadn't had to work. Considering I've been poking through a Tanith Lee vampire anthology for like a month now, speed-reading is clearly the sign of a good anthology.

All the stories are either Halloween-themed or similar holidays. Not one is bad, although some are better than others. The standouts were:
"A Small Taste of the Old Country" by Jonathan Maberry
"Sisters" by Brian Evenson
"All Through the Night" by Elise Forier Edie
"A Kingdom of Sugar Skulls and Marigolds" by Eric J. Guignard
"The Turn" by Paul Kane
"Lost in the Dark" by John Langan

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

MORE GRAHAM MASTERTON

I've been working on getting through this samurai detective series so I can mass review the whole set of seven and then I got totally sidetracked and I've been on a Graham Masterton kick lately, hence my lack of updates. But here's what I've read from Masterton and hopefully I can get back to the samurai detective soon and get that finished.

Death Mask is one of the Sissy Sawyer mysteries. When I got it on Paperback Swap, I had no idea it was the second one. It reads fine standalone, so you could easily pick it up without having read the first one, which is called Touchy and Feely. I actually ordered that one off Amazon and the seller marked it as shipped, but then a few days after that, they refunded my money. But the order is still open and marked as shipped, so I have no clue if the book is coming or not. I need to write them. Anyway, Death Mask is a typical Masterton crime novel: horrible crimes with a supernatural twist. But this one has a couple interesting female characters taking the main roles and the supernatural element is quite different than his usual fare. That's all I can say without spoiling, but I do recommend this one.

I also highly recommend The Doorkeepers. This is my favorite Masterton novel that I've read yet, though I still prefer a lot of his short stories to it. It feels like what if you combined Neil Gaiman and Stephen King. Several characters have a Gaiman feel, or rather specifically a Neverwhere feel, and there's the Stephen King element of a more complex plot rather than an out and out demon that needs to be stopped, which is what the next books on my list all have in common. The main plot element is that there are six doors in London that lead to different worlds and we've got a murder involved. I like all the world-hopping. It's sort of like time travel, but there's a less complicated way to get back to where you came from, although the characters having to deal with it doesn't make it easy for them, but there's no threat of "OMG, how do we get back to our world? I don't knooooooow!" It's good though. Really good.



Master of Lies is not for the faint-hearted. It opens with a really gruesome killing scene and then just keeps going. There's a ritualistic serial killer trying to invoke the Master of Lies, Belial. I love Masterton's Belial. I love it when authors make angels, even fallen ones not demonic but beautiful. This one's more on the gory side, but I do recommend it to those that like some supernatural, demonic crime reading.







This omnibus is so fat, it was actually a bit hard to read. All of these are older Masterton stories and you can tell. They have nowhere near the craft of Doorkeepers. Charnel House and Devils of D-Day were 1978, Tengu 1983 and Mirror 1988. They're shorter novels, as you can imagine, being combined into one paperback that's typical paperback size but really damn thick. Tengu is pretty good. It's got men being possessed by Japanese demons to carry out a revenge plot. I like a lot of the characters here, but can't say anything else for fear of spoilers. Devils of D-Day was the other good one. The army used thirteen demons to fight battles and this is what happens when one that was abandoned is freed and forces the idiot humans who freed it (knowing what it was even) to reunite it with its twelve brethren. This could have easily been a much longer novel with the humans going on a Da Vinci Code style quest with lots of locations for each demon. I was annoyed all twelve were in one place. The demon threatening them to move faster and how easy it was to bring them all together again felt rushed, like he wanted to just get the story over with. But it's still a fun read. It's just a shame because it really could have been something bigger and better. Mirror was boring. It went on for way too long. The concept was interesting, but then it just dragged and I almost didn't care anymore. It's another demon story, this one more centered on Satan himself. Charnel House had interesting pieces, but also eventually bored me. I feel like everything was resolved a little too easily. They're fighting against Coyote, which is more intriguing than your typical Christian demons, because you don't see it as often, but it just got dull. This is the only one of these four books that I listed on Paperback Swap. I'm actually keeping the other three, which I haven't been doing a lot of while reading through Masterton's bibliography.

All right! Hopefully I'll be back soon with the samurai detective series. I need to read the second Descendants book, too!

Monday, April 11, 2016

TWILIGHT ZONE Anthologies

Thanks to Paperback Swap, I discovered that 1993, 1994 and 1995 gave us three anthologies inspired by The Twilight Zone. I love me some twist endings and most of these stories were awesome. I'm going to list off my faves from each book and not go into detail, because I'm not spoiling anything.

Journeys to the Twilight Zone (1993): Good Boy (my fave), Another Kind of Enchanted Cottage, Outside the Windows (this one is sad but good), Coming of Age

Return to the Twilight Zone (1994): Night of the Living Bra (hilarious), The Kaleidoscope, The Midnight El, Maybe Tomorrow, Gordie's Pets, Lady in Cream-Colored Chiffon, The Duke of Demolition Goes to Hell (interesting idea here that I haven't seen before), The Sole Survivor

Adventures in the Twilight Zone (1995): The Repossessed, Ballad of the Outer Life, The Sacrifice of Shadows, Dead and Naked, My Mother and I Go Shopping, Peace on Earth, My Wiccan, Wiccan Ways, Marticora, Mittens and Hotfoot.  

Thursday, January 28, 2016

MISC HORROR

The Hot Blood series is an old favorite of mine. I love horror anthologies, so I picked up a volume from the middle of the series in a bookstore, then had to get them all. The stories are all horror erotica, some quite graphic, so they're not for kids or the faint of heart.

There are, appropriately, thirteen total volumes that were published between 1989-2007. I reread them every few years and they work well for that, even though I know the endings of the stories.

During my current reread, I noticed my favorite story from multiple volumes was usually the one by Graham Masterton. I don't know how I never noticed it before or got into Masterton's writing before now. He's been at it since almost the same time as Stephen King, who's a childhood favorite. Carrie was published in 1974 and The Manitou, Masterton's first, was in 1976. So I decided to start picking up some Masterton novels and short story collections.

I ordered a few off Abebooks, which is where I typically get the best deals on used books. Masterton sadly did not take off in the US like Stephen King, so I couldn't just jump on ebay and buy a lot of 20 used books. While waiting for the ones I ordered to arrive, I stopped in the used bookstore downtown and was pleasantly surprised to find several books, some of course being ones I'd just ordered. But I purchased three.

I figured I'd start with The Manitou. Honestly, I wasn't impressed with it much. It's a good first novel, but you can tell it's a first novel. It's kind of like Carrie is far from my favorite King book. Some of the characters are interesting, but some with potential die too quickly to be developed. The final battle is really drawn out and ends up being a bit on the sci-fi side instead of horror. I won't go into more details so as not to spoil, but yeah, I didn't much care for it. Not sure I'm going to continue reading The Manitou series or not, but if I do pick it up, it won't be until I've read a lot of his other books first.

Picture of Evil I enjoyed much more. This one was also published as Family Portrait, which I actually think is a better name, being the title of the portrait that's the source of all the trouble in the story. You see, this is based on Dorian Gray. The characters here get to be much more developed and interesting. Unfortunately, I had a problem with the ending again, but up until that point, I really enjoyed it. I'll skip dissecting it, because I don't like to go into too much detail on horror. Part of the fun is finding things out for yourself, like with mysteries.

I will definitely be talking about more Masterton books here as I read them. I just started The 5th Witch today.