Brian James Lewis gives a first-rate review of Benjamin Blake's poetry
collection, Standing on the Threshold of Madness, on the hellnotes
website.
"I don’t think there’s much
question as to how I feel about Standing on the Threshold of Madness by
Benjamin Blake. But let me just confirm that I really enjoyed reading
this awesome collection of poems. In fact, I keep it nearby so that I
can dip into the pages occasionally for a fix. If you groove on
speculative fiction, the weird, the dark places – you’re going to dig
this collection! The flow is great and the subject matter is right."
Bejamin's book is available both as a trade paperback and an ebook.
To read the full review click on this link.
Pages
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Wednesday, 21 February 2018
Sunday, 18 February 2018
Two New Reviews of Erik Hofstatter's The Crabian Heart
There have been two more great reviews of Erik Hofstatter's highly acclaimed collection, The Crabian Heart.
The first, On Cedar Hollow Horror Reviews, says: "The Crabian Heart grabs you by the pincers and doesn't let go until the last page. The reader can sense the impending danger, and that doom becomes more evident with every turn of the page. Erik can scare you with a short story or a novella. He is great with both forms. The reader can never predict the outcome of Erik's stories. When you are expecting a right jab, Erik hits you with a left hook right in the feels. The Crabian Heart will creep up on you in the best way. I will never look at crabs the same way again."
The second, on the Horror Maiden's Book Review site, says: "I thoroughly enjoyed the creeping sense of dread that permeates the melancholy atmosphere of this novella. A solid 4 star read."
To read the full reviews please click on the links above.
The first, On Cedar Hollow Horror Reviews, says: "The Crabian Heart grabs you by the pincers and doesn't let go until the last page. The reader can sense the impending danger, and that doom becomes more evident with every turn of the page. Erik can scare you with a short story or a novella. He is great with both forms. The reader can never predict the outcome of Erik's stories. When you are expecting a right jab, Erik hits you with a left hook right in the feels. The Crabian Heart will creep up on you in the best way. I will never look at crabs the same way again."
The second, on the Horror Maiden's Book Review site, says: "I thoroughly enjoyed the creeping sense of dread that permeates the melancholy atmosphere of this novella. A solid 4 star read."
To read the full reviews please click on the links above.
Saturday, 10 February 2018
Eric Ian Steele featured on the front cover of InkTip Magazine
Eric Ian Steele, who collection of short stories, Nightscape, was published last year by PUP, is featured on the front cover of the current issue of InkTip Magazine, with special mention of his latest film, The Student.
Friday, 9 February 2018
Carl Barker's Parlour Tricks given a fabulous review on the Horror Review website
An absolutely fabulous review of Carl Barker's collection Parlour Tricks on The Horror Review website by Brian James Lewis.
"Wow! Talk about an interesting short story collection! Carl Barker’s Parlour Tricks is what you are looking for if you enjoy twisted speculative fiction with shocking endings. Not only does this book boast a highly divergent content level, it also ties the stories together by relating them to specific magic tricks in a section called The Inner Circle at the end of the book. At first, I was a little skeptical of that, but it works! The cover art by Luke Spooner draws you into Barker’s clutches and after that it’s time for the magic to begin. Kids, don’t try these at home!"
After discussing several of the stories in more detail, the review ends:
"Would I purchase a copy of Parlour Tricks for myself or a friend? Indeed I would! Every book I’ve read from Parallel Universe Publications is better than the previous one. I’m not just saying that to be nice, either. There is definitely a positive evolution taking place as they grow their catalog of available works. As a reviewer, that is something enjoyable to watch. I totally encourage you to purchase a copy of Carl Barker’s Parlour Tricks in your favorite format today! Please keep in mind that this book is intended for adults and contains material best suited for them. As always, thanks for reading and remember: If you find yourself chained to a breakfast bar with no clothes on, it’s probably the work of a nutty ex-girlfriend. Good Luck!"
To read the full review click on this link.
Tuesday, 6 February 2018
The Fantastical Art of Jim Pitts
Because of the high cost of postage overseas for copies of The Fantastical Art of Jim Pitts we will also include a free copy of Fishhead: The Darker Tales of Irvin S. Cobb.
Women in Horror Month - Kate Farrell
Artwork: Vincent Chong |
"I first met Kate Farrell on Monday March 5th 1984 at a place called Petyt
Hall, hard by Chelsea
Old Church
in London. I
know this for a fact because I kept a diary, and for that matter still do. It
was the first day of rehearsals for a major national tour of Garrick and
Colman’s play, The Clandestine Marriage
in which we were both playing supporting roles to such theatrical luminaries as
Joyce Redman, Roy Kinnear and Sir Anthony Quayle. Kate Farrell, or Kate David
as she was then, was a bright young character actress with a gift for
friendship and a sharp, humorous eye for the follies of her fellow actors. I,
of course, had no idea then that I was encountering a future mistress of
macabre fiction, the Countess of the conte
cruel; but I thought I could detect in her a good sport, a “trouper” to use
the old theatrical term, and I was right. Did she herself at the time have any
intimations of her great literary destiny? I think not.
During the long tour of a play indelible friendships
are forged, and sometimes indelible enmities. With Kate, happily, it was the
former. 1984 was the year that Margaret Thatcher took on the miners and, as we
made our way round England, the head of the company Anthony Quayle, expressed
the pious hope that our tour to all four corners of the nation would help heal
the great “North-South divide” that was being much talked about at the time.
How Sir Anthony imagined that the performance of an 18th century
comedy about aristocratic misalliances could oil the troubled waters of class
hatred I do not know. Kate and I both thought that the idea was b – well, shall
we say, a little far-fetched. We shared a distrust of that mixture of
grandiosity, sharp practice and slightly glib bonhomie of which Sir Anthony was
capable. A group of us, including Kate and myself, shared digs whenever we
could. There were parties and laughter and gossip; we heard reports of Thatcher’s
war with Scargill and the miners, but it seemed a world away.
After the tour there was a West
End run at the Albery Theatre and my friendship with Kate
continued when that came to a close. Over the years we kept in touch. I began
to devote more time and effort to writing. The theatre is a fickle mistress and
life took both Kate and I in different directions. One day, perhaps, she will
tell us of her experiences with the infamous Chuckle Brothers, but at some
stage show business ceased to beckon for her as well. She too began to write
and she sent me some of her stories.
I am generally wary of commenting on other people’s
unpublished manuscripts. What if they are no good? How does one gently tell a
good friend that the writing of fiction is not for them? The stories Kate sent
me were “His Family”, “Mea Culpa” and an early version of “My Name is Mary
Sutherland.” I read them and I must admit my first reaction was one of immense
relief: they were good, really good.
No disingenuous words of faint praise were needed. I was impressed by the
extraordinary assurance of the writing. Purple passages, wearisome clichés,
vague and inconsequential digressions, indeed any sign of the amateur, all were
entirely absent from her engrossing narratives. I should have known: Kate had
always been the most professional of actresses; she was bound to be
professional in whatever she took up.
But there was something much more important even than
professional competence in her writing. She had a voice: crisp, shrewd,
unsparingly honest, and rather elegant, despite the decidedly macabre subject
matter. The people in her stories lived: they were vivid, recognisable; you
might be unfortunate enough to meet them. You heard their voices and they
seemed disturbingly familiar. The story telling was often uncommonly ingenious
and surprising, as in “Mea Culpa,” but the ingenuity was not just for show; it
always had a purpose. I advised Kate to send some of her stories to Charlie
Black, for inclusion in one of his splendid Black
Book of Horror anthologies. He accepted them without hesitation, as I was
sure he would, and the rest, as they say, is her story.
As you have probably just acquired this book what more
need I say, really, except that you are in for an exceedingly entertaining and
thought-provoking time from one of the most accomplished and original writers
of macabre fiction alive today? If by any chance, you have not yet bought it,
and are browsing through its pages, then what are you doing reading this
introduction? You just have to go to the first paragraph of any of the stories
here, and you will be hooked, but before you do, save yourself the discomfort
of reading this book while standing up and probably pressed for time in a
draughty bookshop. Buy the thing – it is exceptionally reasonably priced – put
it in your pocket, go back home, make a cup of tea (or something stronger if
you prefer) settle yourself in a favourite armchair and start reading.
You have done that? Congratulations! My job is done.
But just in case you need a little further encouragement, let me say this. What
distinguishes Kate Farrell’s work is the extraordinary accuracy and vividness
with which she sets up her situations. She has an eye for detail and an
outstanding ear for the way people think and speak. It is far from fanciful to
see this at least partly as the product of her experience as an actress. In the
theatre, a natural faculty for observing one’s fellow human beings is trained
and honed. Listen to the narrator of “Waiting”. If you don’t know someone like that
personally, you will have certainly heard her talking just behind you on a bus
at some time. The intonation, the accent, the understanding, and the lack of
it, are all so true to life. But the people Farrell evokes are not all from one
social stratum, or one nation. Here is an ancient and corrupt Irish Priest
(“The Way the Truth and the Life”), here is the wife of a notorious Argentinean
dictator (“Las Cosas Que Hacemos por el Amor”), or the two Spanish
schoolchildren in “The Efficient Use of Reason”, and they are all done with the
same conviction, the same ruthless accuracy. Farrell’s eye is not heartless,
but it is unclouded by any kind of sentimental affectation; her horrors emerge
from what we sometimes call the commonplace. Very occasionally she touches on
the supernatural, but when she does she does it superbly as in one of my
favourites among her stories “A Murder of Crows” which shows that she can do an
uncanny rural atmosphere with grim poetry as well as anyone. It is the gift of
every worthwhile writer in this genre to make us realise that just beneath the
surface of the banal and ordinary, there yawn great abysses of wonder and
terror. I don’t know quite why this realisation, in the hands of a writer like Farrell,
should be so thrilling, enjoyable even, but it is. There is not a dull page,
not a dull sentence in And Nobody Lived
Happily Ever After.
And now, I suggest you waste no further time on
studying this introduction, and embark at once on the seriously exciting
business of reading Kate Farrell.
Reggie Oliver"
Sunday, 4 February 2018
The Fantastical Art of Jim Pitts reviewed on The Vault of Evil
The Fantastical Art of Jim Pitts has just been reviewed on the prestigious Vault of Evil website:
"Far the most attractively presented book I've set eyes on this year and an absorbing and informative read into the bargain. Rolling Back The Years is both a glorious celebration of Jim Pitts' talent and, for those of us with an enthusiasm for the golden age of British fantasy and horror fanzines, an invaluable companion to David A. Sutton's On The Fringes For Thirty Years . MRJ is well served with four illustrations from Ghosts: A Tribute to M. R. James and The Treasure Of Abbot Thomas illo which "was used quite randomly by Francesca in Kadath. It was recently placed on the book cover of Ghosts & Scholars #27, where Rosemary Pardoe used it more appropriately."
Read more: http://vaultofevil.proboards.com/thread/6710/fantastical-pitts-rolling-back-years#ixzz568udxa00
"Far the most attractively presented book I've set eyes on this year and an absorbing and informative read into the bargain. Rolling Back The Years is both a glorious celebration of Jim Pitts' talent and, for those of us with an enthusiasm for the golden age of British fantasy and horror fanzines, an invaluable companion to David A. Sutton's On The Fringes For Thirty Years . MRJ is well served with four illustrations from Ghosts: A Tribute to M. R. James and The Treasure Of Abbot Thomas illo which "was used quite randomly by Francesca in Kadath. It was recently placed on the book cover of Ghosts & Scholars #27, where Rosemary Pardoe used it more appropriately."
Read more: http://vaultofevil.proboards.com/thread/6710/fantastical-pitts-rolling-back-years#ixzz568udxa00
Friday, 2 February 2018
Women in Horror - Jessica Palmer
Jessica Palmer was born in Chicago, Illinois. Her
mother became a professional clown when she was in her teens, leaving Jessica irrevocably altered. She received her degree in nursing and worked in
hospitals, starting with medical-surgical units. Eventually, she settled into
psychiatric nursing where she got along famously with her patients.
Her medical background presented
opportunities to write. In 1976, she was asked to develop a script for
educational television, entitled Journey
To Nowhere, about the medical aspects of addiction. Later she became a
technical writer for the safety and health department at Schlumberger Well
Services with an emphasis on explosives and radiation. The job took her to
England where she became a British subject.
The fates decreed her combined
experiences constituted a hazard to herself and others. Jessica returned to her
first love, genre fiction. She wrote her first novel at the age of nine –
ninety-nine typewritten pages about her then-hero Max Smart of Get Smart. Altogether, she has had 28
books published in fiction and non-fiction, including university textbooks
about Native American history and culture.
Jessica has received numerous awards in journalism, spanning a period from 1980 to 2014. Lullaby, published by Pocket Books, was nominated for the Horror Writers Association's Bram Stoker award in 1991. Now she concentrates on satire. Parallel Universe Publications released her collection of short stories, Other Visions of Heaven and Hell in 2015, and will be publishing her latest collection, Fractious Fairy Tales later this month.
Thursday, 1 February 2018
Women in Horror Month
As it's Women in Horror Month, a reminder of two great books published by Parallel Universe Publications: Jessica Palmer's Other Visions of Heaven and Hell, and Kate Farrell's And Nobody Lived Happily Ever After. A second collection of Jessica's stories, Fractious Fairy Tales, will be published by PUP later this month.