needs more demons?

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Entries Tagged as 'horror'

Cherie Priest: Boneshaker

13 Nov 2009 · No Comments

The phrase that kept coming to my mind to describe Boneshaker while I was reading it was “purely awesome.” The back cover copy gives away a little too much of the setup for my taste, but I will say that it shifts between being a steampunk adventure story and a gritty, claustrophobic zombie novel so [...]

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Tags: b-title · historical · horror · p-author · science fiction

Carrie Ryan: The Forest of Hands and Teeth

07 Jun 2009 · No Comments

The Forest of Hands and Teeth is the weirdest zombie story I’ve ever read. And it’s not just because the book never once uses the word “zombie.” It’s not even because the novel is set generations after the zombie’s victory over humanity.
The Forest of Hands and Teeth opens in a small village of humans surrounded [...]

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Tags: f-title · fantasy · horror · r-author · science fiction · young adult

Charles Stross: Missile Gap

04 Aug 2008 · No Comments

Good golly, I love libraries. I was delighted to have a chance to read Stross’s Missile Gap, a novella published in a small print run without coughing up its hefty price tag. I enjoyed Missle Gap, but truth to tell, if I’d paid the asking price, I would have been kinda bummed.
Missile Gap shares [...]

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Tags: fantasy · historical · horror · m-title · s-author · science fiction

Charles Stross: The Jennifer Morgue

07 May 2008 · No Comments

I think The Jennifer Morgue is the most successful of Charles Stross’s novels that I’ve read so far. It’s a mutant melange of genres including xenophobic Lovecraftian horror/fantasy; Dilbert-esque, geek-celebrating cubicle rat satire; modern techno espionage thriller; and old-school shaken-not-stirred James Bondage — all served up with a hefty post-modern literary twist and dark [...]

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Tags: fantasy · horror · j-title · s-author · thriller

William Browning Spencer: The Ocean and All Its Devices

24 Jan 2008 · No Comments

William Browning Spencer’s fiction often features ancient alien creatures inimical (or at best, indifferent) to humanity, and as a result I don’t think I’ve ever seen a review of his work that didn’t mention a certain author whose name isn’t quite Howard Phillips Adoreart. Like many facile comparisons, it strikes me as unfair. For one [...]

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Tags: fantasy · horror · o-title · s-author · science fiction

John Harwood: The Ghost Writer

11 Oct 2007 · No Comments

Harwood’s The Ghost Writer is a tour-de-force of the “is it a haint, or ain’t it” style of ghost(?) story, and simultaneously an impressive feat of post-modern multi-level narrative construction. Gerard Freeman keeps finding ghost stories — both whole and as tantalizing fragments — written by a mysterious relative, which the reader gets to absorb [...]

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Tags: g-title · h-author · horror

Sean Stewart: Perfect Circle

11 Oct 2007 · No Comments

I’ve been thinking about this novel for months, and I still can’t figure out out how it feels so fresh and original, even though it’s built from such familiar components. Will Kennedy is a slightly off-the-rails underachiever who could have a bit part in almost any Richard Linklater movie without sticking out. He has the [...]

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Tags: fantasy · horror · p-title · s-author