Horror Books
Related Subjects: Zombies Doctor Faust Maul of America There Goes Tokyo Buffy, the Vampire Slayer
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Her "other" great book of short storiesReview Date: 1999-10-01
Pure storytelling. Review Date: 2007-05-24
One of her very best booksReview Date: 2003-11-18
That's no surprise, because Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen) wrote a number of fine books. Her ledger contains a couple of volumes of reminiscence about her life in Africa, a pseudonymous novel of adventure (_The Angelic Avengers_), and posthumously published books of stories (_Carnival_) and essays (_Daguerrotypes_). Despite the interest and occasional excellence of these books -- especially in the case of _Out of Africa_ -- it's as a writer of long stories that she exhibited her greatest artistry and achievement.
She published 4 collections of short stories in her lifetime: _Seven Gothic Tales_, _Winter's Tales_, _Anecdotes of Destiny_, and _Last Tales_. She also published a slim novel (really a novella), _Ehrengard_. As a devoted reader, I've enjoyed every one of these books. Still, it does her no disservice to point out that some are better than others.
Her first book, _Seven Gothic Tales_ is usually the book of stories that people remember first -- deservedly, because any book that contains "The Deluge at Norderney," "The Monkey," and "The Poet" gets high marks. The other stories in the book aren't exactly chopped liver, either.
However, I will submit that _Winter's Tales_ deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the earlier book. I approached _Winter's Tales_ the first time expecting to be disappointed after the bravura performance of _Seven Gothic Tales_. I was surprised in the most pleasant manner imaginable. Indeed, in some ways, _Winter's Tales_ surpasses the earlier book as a work of art. The level of writing is uniformly high; the style is still ornate and surprising, but better controlled. And there are still the touches of melodrama and the gothic that give much of her work a strange feeling of having emerged from the 19th Century, while at the same time being very modern.
Although I found the whole of _Winter's Tales_ to my taste, some of the stories stand out. Two stories that I particularly liked were "Alkmene" and "The Fish"; but what puts this book over the top is that it contains "Sorrow Acre," arguably the best example of Blixen's fiction. In fact, one could argue that "Sorrow Acre" is one of the finest stories written in the 20th century by *anyone*. An historical and philosophical novella that reconstructs a day in 19th century Denmark, it plays out personal tragedy and comedy on an aristocratic estate with a subtle irony worthy of Theodor Storm or (dare I say) Thomas Mann. By itself, it was worth the price of admission. I've read it many times since. The thematic connections between this story and the earlier "The Deluge at Norderney" are patent.
Her two later collections, _Anecdotes of Destiny_ and _Last Tales_ have their moments. In particular, several stories from _Anecdotes..._ have grown on me over the years, such as "Babette's Feast" and "Tempests." Still, to my mind, she hit her high water mark in _Seven Gothic Tales_ and _Winter's Tales_.
Winter's Tales is refined prose and wisdom of a lost age.Review Date: 1999-12-27
Beautiful, rich, bizarre, and movingReview Date: 1999-07-29

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Chainsaw Sally's opinionReview Date: 2006-12-28
HiyaReview Date: 2006-05-20
It was initially released in July of last year as a white jacketed book - you can probably still see it listed here.
You can see some the reviews against that edition and they are very complimentary.
The five stars you see are based on those reviews.
It has been re-released with vigour by a new publisher and is here for the first time as an electronic download also.
I am however not going to promise you and easy ride, not with Black Volume on it's way so soon now.
If you are going to get caught in the Witness storm and ebooks are what you prefer get your hands on yours now.
I promise you a chilling time.
For further news and reviews you can access my profile that advises of my webpage, tell me what YOU think.
Your the ones buying the books!
Thank you
Jackie Coupe
please check this outReview Date: 2005-11-15
but dont take my word for it...
oh my goodness...!!!Review Date: 2005-10-24
I've enjoyed it's difference and originality
I would really recommend to Stephen King fans and followers of Shaun Hutson etc
I would say to you read this if you only read one book a year,
treat yourself!
But be warned, its a bit gory!!!
enjoy and well done...
Wah! this is surprizingReview Date: 2005-10-16
i enjoyed every min of this book because in a strange way you can relate to it

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Strangely WondrousReview Date: 2004-07-01
Uber Weird!Review Date: 2002-04-23
A TRUE PLEASURE FROM A TRUE ORIGINALReview Date: 2001-02-19
Wondrous and Strange! An Awesome BookReview Date: 2002-05-03
A SUREFIRE "STOKER" NOMINATIONReview Date: 2001-07-09

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I and my students loved the book.Review Date: 2008-05-14
Great story but needed a better endingReview Date: 2008-02-08
Overall it was a good read, but also check out the Sword of the Spirits Trilogy and the Tripods Trilogy by the same author. Very good books, geared for young readers, but good at any age. You'll be glad you did.
Sci Fi at is BestReview Date: 2007-12-17
This is the way the world ends...this time.Review Date: 2005-12-17
After an enormous series of cataclysmic earthquakes wipes out modern civilization, a group of survivors struggle to stay alive in the ruins of the British Isles.
This is one of John Christophers most gripping adventure stories, filled with strange settings and memorable characters;
I especially liked the image of the oil tanker beached on the bottom of the now dry English Channel, its sole occupant slowly going mad.
Ground-breaking geopocalyptic masterpiece!Review Date: 2003-05-13
The basic premise is that of extreme earthquakes on a worldwide scale, which reduce towns and cities to piles of rubble and plunge the survivors straight back into the Stone Age. Much of western Europe is drastically uplifted, transforming the English Channel into a muddy desert overnight - whist elsewhere, lands are thrown down and drowned under inrushing seas.
The cataclysm and its aftermath are seen from the viewpoint of Matthew Cotter, a Gurnsey horticulturalist who finds himself one of a handful left alive on the former island. The future they face, attempting to begin life again with what they can scavenge amid the devastation, seems hard and uncertain enough.
Matthew then treks across the empty seabed to England, in the faint hope that his student daughter has also survived. He finds the situation far worse in a wider land, with many competing bands of scavengers. Pillage, rape and murder are now the norm as mankind revets to utter barbarism.
The actual scientific likelihood of such immense convulsions in the Earth is very doubtful, and the author's explanation - as a new mountain-building episode - is certainly nonsense, since such events take tens of millions of years. The sheer dramatic impact of a global earthquake, however, makes this book greatly entertaining for all but the most pedantic.
Its central emphasis is on the reactions of people, totally unprepared, who see their world turned (almost literally) upside down and everyone they knew destroyed. While some find natural strength and determination, even leadership, others respond with violence, with apathy and despair, or retreat into lunacy. John Christopher displays a subtle and far-ranging mastery of characterisation. He has created a stark and very believable vision of human struggles to survive in a world made suddenly strange, lawless, primitive and hostile.
It might have been even better to see Matthew Cotter and others ten or twenty years on, after the barbaric majority had mostly starved or slain each other and nature had begun to reclaim the shattered country. Would naval vessels have survived in mid-ocean and acted as nuclei for new communities? Or would the fallout from wrecked nuclear power stations have caused widespread cancers, sterility, mutations - and ultimately lethal new diseases, which would finish off the human race?
This is, surely, the essence of "thought-provoking" literature.
Regardless of unanswered questions, I would rate "A Wrinkle in the Skin" as being among the finest pieces of speculative fiction I have read.

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Gripping and sick!Review Date: 2004-11-30
Acquired Taste$Review Date: 2004-07-18
Acquired Taste$ by Tom MoranReview Date: 2004-07-07
Frighteningly IntriguingReview Date: 2004-05-22
Terrific ReadReview Date: 2004-05-17

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What Does "EPIC" Mean To You???Review Date: 2004-10-28
Blood for the Masses
Reviewed By
B.L.Morgan
What does the word "Epic" mean to you? To me an "Epic" is a tale that has far reaching consequenses for the entire human race. An Epic shows our good traits and faults on a grand scale. AfterAge by Yvonne Navarro very much qualifies as an "Epic."
In AfterAge a plague of Vampirism has taken hold of the world. Angelet, an ancient female vampire caused this plague which threatens the extinction of the human race. She can see that unless she changes the way things are going her kind will become extinct along with the living humans. Too many vampires, not enough people make for a grim future for both.
AfterAge begins after the plague is well underway and life for the few humans left is a constant struggle for survival. Civilization is a thing of the past. The cities are empty shells. During the day the humans have free reign. Food is not too hard to find because of canned goods. But during the night is when the vampires come out to play. Droves of them. Hiding is the most effective survival strategy. Sometimes that is not enough.
The characters in AfterAge stay in your mind long after you've closed the last page. I finished AfterAge about a month ago and sometimes Deb or Jo or Vic pop into my mind for no reason at all. These characers as well as all the others became living breathing people during the story.
You'll fing yourself fearing for these peoples lives. There are scenes in AfterAge that will make your skin crawl and scare the hell out of you and others that make you feel like crying. There was one scene of foreshadowing where I turned to my wife and said, "Damn, I don't think they are going to make it." I was reacting like these were real people. This book is that good.
The structure of AfterAge is one that I've encountered over and over again in Stephen King novels. The story shifts back and forth between several groups of characters, the good guys and the bad guys and it all comes together at the end.
AfterAge takes place in Chicago. The empty dead city, over-populated by blood sucking fiends after dark becomes a frightening character in its own right. Yvonne Navarro painted a dead Chicago perfectly. According to the inside back cover she lives there so all the locations are dead on accurate.
This is without a doubt one of best novels I have ever read. If you really want to be able to say you've read the best that the horror field has to offer then you need to find a copy of Afterage.
Riveting and fun fang tale (mellion108 from Michigan)Review Date: 2003-05-07
A relatively small group of human survivors exists in downtown Chicago. They don't know about each other because they all live in fear simply trying to survive each night while the vampires stalk for food. Anyelet is the queen vampire who decided not too long ago to create more of her kind in order to not have to hide her existence. Unfortunately, this quickly grew out of hand, and now the vampires must scrounge for a food source. Navarro gives us a story telling us what happens when these few humans and these powerful vampires clash, and the struggle the humans face to free themselves from the plague.
This was such an entertaining and creepy novel to read. There were a few passages that actually had me checking over my shoulder to see if anyone was there (I dare you to read the first several pages detailing the doctor's search and discovery mission without shivering). It's no wonder that this novel gained enough attention to warrant a special hardcover release. The story has adventure, vampires, guns, medical experiments, human slaves used as food, and an apocalyptic vision. Afterage is relatively original, well-written, and fun. Sometimes that's exactly what you need in a good, scary read. If you want something refreshing after reading all those other copycat vampire novels, then give this one a try.
Great StoryReview Date: 2005-09-28
A Great Pos-Apocalyptic Vampire NovelReview Date: 2000-04-12
A fantastic horror tale; great characters and storyReview Date: 1998-01-09

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Great shipper ...Review Date: 2008-02-27
Comic CollectingReview Date: 2008-05-09
Deadliest of the Species is about a girl who can't sleep and dreams about the past of fighting the predators & aliens.
Booty is a one-shot special dealing with predators trying to capture an
alien queen onboard a space station.
Hell-Bent is about a predator who is facehugged and a crew member who must make a choice on living or not.
Pursuit is about an android/hybird who is being hunted by the predators & marines.
Lefty's Revenge is about a predator who befriends a human fighter and seeks revenge on her while fighting aliens.
"Chained To Life & Death" is another story is about a predator whose thoughts are about life & death while fighting an alien.
Xenogenesis is mostly about corporate espionage gone wrong when aliens & predators suddenly appear.
Deadliest of the SpeciesReview Date: 2008-02-13
Better then tha AVP movie!!Review Date: 2007-12-03
Aliens Vs. Predator Review Date: 2007-11-24

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Who knew chicken pox could be so much fun?Review Date: 1998-07-21
Amber Cat Book ReviewReview Date: 2004-07-29
The Amber CatReview Date: 2002-10-16
Chicken Pox FunReview Date: 2001-06-21
Stick with itReview Date: 1998-10-03

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Annotated Supernatural Horror in LitReview Date: 2008-10-01
The Definitive Guide to the Weird TalesReview Date: 2008-02-19
A Sharpened ToolReview Date: 2008-01-07
Joshi does Lovecraft's Seminal Essay JusticeReview Date: 2007-01-04
His essay remains one of the most thoughtful and insightful discussions of "weird fiction" ever written. Others have used his essay as a springboard for their own work--Joyce Carol Oates' American Gothic Tales and David Punter's The Literature of Terror, for example. But Lovecraft read, understood, and described these stories as only a writer himself and a master of the macabre could. Joshi's notes are excellent (albeit at times opinionated), and the texts Lovecraft cites in his essay deserve new readers. If you're a Lovecraft fan--or if you're a fan of "weird" tales--read this book.
Another Lovecraft/Joshi must-have!Review Date: 2001-09-05
The only flaw/drawback to this edition is the decision to keep all annotation notes in the back of the book unlike previous annotated Lovecraft works. Granted, having the annotations at the bottom of the revelant page did slow down a straight reading of only the text in the annotated story collections. However, an indepth reading was not hampered by having to track down the exact footnote/annotation.
Even with this minor design point, your Lovecraft library deserves this new annotated edition of a Lovecraft classic...Once again, S.T. Joshi proves his status as THE Lovecraft scholar with his in-depth research that sheds new light on this classic work for the modern reader.

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A GREAT BOOK!Review Date: 2004-11-11
In a fair world, this author would stand on the stage with James Joyce--this book is THAT good!
AN AWESOME MIDNITE RIDE!Review Date: 2004-07-28
A GREAT BOOK FOR WITCHES!Review Date: 2004-07-07
A GREAT NOIR NOVEL THAT'S SMART, TOO!Review Date: 2004-08-23
GREAT SYBOLISM GREATER TRUTHSReview Date: 2004-07-07
Related Subjects: Zombies Doctor Faust Maul of America There Goes Tokyo Buffy, the Vampire Slayer
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However, I will submit that _Winter's Tales_ deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as _Seven Gothic Tales_. Indeed, in some ways, it surpasses the earlier book as a work of art. The level of writing is uniformly high; the style is still ornate and surprising, but better controlled. There is some excellent work here, such as the story "Alkmene." But what puts this book over the top is that it contains "Sorrow Acre," probably the best of Blixen's fiction. In fact, one could argue that "Sorrow Acre" is on of the finest stories written in the 20th century by *anyone*. It's a marvel of subtle irony. By itself, it was worth the price of admission.
Her two later collections, _Anecdotes of Destiny_ and _Last Tales_ have their moments, but to my mind, she hit her high water mark in _Seven Gothic Tales_ and _Winter's Tales_.