My reviews of Horror, Urban/Dark Fantasy, LGBT Fiction, SF & WTF?! (and everywhere in between!)
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Review: GHOSTS IN GASLIGHT, MONSTERS IN STEAM edited by Evan J Peterson and Vincent Kovar (Minor Arcana Press)
Another queer horror anthology, with the added bonus of steampunk?! Count me in!
Ghosts in Gaslight, Monsters in Steam is the new anthology in the Gay City Anthology series from Minor Arcana Press and the Gay City Health Project based in Seattle. The series "produces vibrant, multi-disciplinary collections comprised of fiction, comics, poetry, photography and art" that raise awareness of the Gay City Health Project. This volume, the first one I've had the opportunity to read, features a steampunk/queer monster theme and boasts fiction, poetry and some great illustrations.
The book is divided into two "acts"; "Victorian Venom" and "Modern Monsters", and for me, the stories progressed from good to great, making for a very strong second half. The highlights for me:
Evan Peterson's introduction. It really sets up his process behind editing the book and what to expect inside, and also had me recalling my younger self, growing up gay and being drawn to that otherness that all LGBT people feel at one point in their lives...
Medium Mechanique by Catherine Lundoff is a wonderful story that successfully blends the steampunk and horror theme of the book with the desperation of wanting to be with that lost love just one more time...
Anthony Rella's The Heart of the Labyrinth offers a mystery, a bathhouse and what secrets lie deep in its core. Excellent storytelling here!
Monster Movie by Rebecca Brown is a moving remembrance of loving, and even sympathizing with, those classic movie monsters as young person, and knowing what it feels like to be different...
B.E.M.s by Gregory L. Norris is a fun, clever tale that is both light hearted and entertaining and pays homage to classic shows like Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone.
Splinter by Ryan Crawford is a weird tale that takes place in the woods...please do not hike in the forest at night. You've been warned!
And lastly, Steve Berman brings the collection to a satisfying close with what I think is his most horrifying piece to date. Boasting the most gruesome villains I've encountered in awhile, Feeding Desire is worth the price of admission alone, with its mix of suspense, burly men, and...meat. LOVED IT!
Ghosts in Gaslight...is being released in July and you can find out more info here at Minor Arcana's website.
Happy reading!
(This counts towards the 2013 Horror Reading Challenge hosted by Midnyte Reader)
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
First Trailer for THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG
We interrupt Pride Month to bring you, via Tor.com, the first trailer for The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug! Enjoy!
Labels:
fantasy,
movies,
The Desolation of Smaug,
The Hobbit,
Tor.com,
trailers
Friday, June 7, 2013
Review: PACIFIC RIMMING by Tom Cardamone (Chelsea Station Editions)
Tom Cardamone's writing is addictive.
I was first introduced to his work last year when I had the pleasure of reviewing the Lambda Literary Award winning Green Thumb. Since then I've sought out his other work and recently crossed paths with the filthy, gorgeous Pacific Rimming.
Pacific Rimming chronicles the sexual adventures of a nameless narrator who loses himself in drugs, the Manhattan gay club scene and his obsession with Asian men. He forms no attachments, preferring to move from one night stand to one night stand, attending only the bars and clubs where he knows he can indulge his paticular fetish.
This novella is worlds away from the speculative cataclysm of Green Thumb. Cardamone keeps this tale firmly rooted in 1990s New York City. And there is a grittiness and immediacy to his writing here that envelops the reader; you can feel the tingle of the drugs, smell the smoke and sex.
Pacific Rimming is yet another example of an artist who writes with a sure hand, comfortably at home in any genre he chooses to write in and navigating with ease the language that each tale needs to be told in. I'm very thankful to Chelsea Station Editions for bringing this book back into print, since it is not to be missed. If your looking for an unapologetic, graphic slice of the sexual underground and enjoy writing that will place you firmly in the story, then Pacific Rimming is the book for you and Tom Cardamone is the man that will bring it to you.
Happy reading!
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Review: GHOSTS IN THE ATTIC by Mark Allan Gunnells (Evil Jester Press)
I love me some Mark Allan Gunnells.
He is an author whose work I enjoy reading again and again; whenever I'm immersed in one of his novels or numerous short stories, I am never disappointed. His writing is always a feast for the imagination. And Ghosts In The Attic is no exception.
Trying to list my favorites from the choice morsels here was made nigh impossible by Mr Gunnells, as the stories range from great to excellent, but I managed to whittle it down to the gems:
The collection opens with 911, a poignant ghost story with its origin straight out of 9/11.
Another stand out for me is The Delivery Boy, a great thriller about a seemingly crazy pizza delivery boy that ends with a bang!
Wasted On The Young starts out pretty straight forward then takes an unexpected turn that brings the story to a creepy end.
The crown jewel of the collection, The Ghost Of Winnie Davis Hall, is a lovely, haunting story about belief and myth. In it, we meet a ghost who over the years has become lost, and now only wants to find her place in the world again. Beautiful!
Circular is a graphic tale about grief and desperation that can lead to obsession. Very creepy!
A Stranger Comes To Lipscomb Street and Finders Keepers are both love stories at their core, yet surreal and weird.
Ghosts In The Attic is another superb collection by an author who injects his writing with thoughtfulness and heart. Even his "horror" stories are emotive, and those collected here are wistful and wicked. Probably my only complaint is that the majority of these stories are very short and while that makes for quick reading, when I am reading Mark Allan Gunnells, I want to be lost in the writing for as long as possible.
Happy reading!
(This counts towards the 2013 Horror Reading Challenge hosted by Midnyte Reader)
He is an author whose work I enjoy reading again and again; whenever I'm immersed in one of his novels or numerous short stories, I am never disappointed. His writing is always a feast for the imagination. And Ghosts In The Attic is no exception.
Trying to list my favorites from the choice morsels here was made nigh impossible by Mr Gunnells, as the stories range from great to excellent, but I managed to whittle it down to the gems:
The collection opens with 911, a poignant ghost story with its origin straight out of 9/11.
Another stand out for me is The Delivery Boy, a great thriller about a seemingly crazy pizza delivery boy that ends with a bang!
Wasted On The Young starts out pretty straight forward then takes an unexpected turn that brings the story to a creepy end.
The crown jewel of the collection, The Ghost Of Winnie Davis Hall, is a lovely, haunting story about belief and myth. In it, we meet a ghost who over the years has become lost, and now only wants to find her place in the world again. Beautiful!
Circular is a graphic tale about grief and desperation that can lead to obsession. Very creepy!
A Stranger Comes To Lipscomb Street and Finders Keepers are both love stories at their core, yet surreal and weird.
Ghosts In The Attic is another superb collection by an author who injects his writing with thoughtfulness and heart. Even his "horror" stories are emotive, and those collected here are wistful and wicked. Probably my only complaint is that the majority of these stories are very short and while that makes for quick reading, when I am reading Mark Allan Gunnells, I want to be lost in the writing for as long as possible.
Happy reading!
(This counts towards the 2013 Horror Reading Challenge hosted by Midnyte Reader)
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Miscellany
June is Pride Month and over at the SF Signal website, they've compiled a list of favorite LGBT authors, stories and novels, asking some authors to chime in with their own recommendations. Here is that list; use it to help find books and authors for your own reading lists!
"Q: LGBT themes and characters have, thankfully, enjoyed an emergence in speculative fiction the past few years, and we’d love to know who some of your favorite LGBT authors, stories, and novels are, and why?"
http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2013/06/mind-meld-lgbt-themes-in-fantasy-and-sf-recommendations/
Happy reading!
"Q: LGBT themes and characters have, thankfully, enjoyed an emergence in speculative fiction the past few years, and we’d love to know who some of your favorite LGBT authors, stories, and novels are, and why?"
http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2013/06/mind-meld-lgbt-themes-in-fantasy-and-sf-recommendations/
Happy reading!
Labels:
authors,
books,
gay,
LGBT,
Mind Meld,
Miscellany,
Pride Month,
reading lists,
SF Signal
Monday, June 3, 2013
Review: HUSTLER RAVE XXX by David Caleb Acevedo and Charlie Vazquez (Tincture)
Admittedly, I do not read poetry often. However, when an author whose work I respect and enjoy releases a new collection of poems chronicling the joys and pains of the street hustler, I will sit up and take notice.
With Hustler Rave XXX: Poetry of the Eternal Survivor, Charlie Vazquez and David Caleb Acevedo have put together a collection that makes for erotic, compulsive, and at times, poignant reading. Each author puts a magnifying glass to what transpires between these hustlers and their "johns", illuminating what is more often than not a tragic, lonely and dangerous existence. Acevedo, in his introduction, is very open about his own past as a hustler and pulls some very graphic imagery from his experiences and Vazquez's pieces also sear themselves into your brain; these poems combine to give voice to the countless young men that have found themselves on the streets. They are cautionary tales. They are memorials.
As is often the case with poetry, several readings may be needed to help interpret the meaning behind the words on the page, and Hustler Rave XXX is no different. Each time I reread the poems, I learned a little more and my heart broke a little more for these poor souls out there on the streets. I found myself hoping that somehow, these eternal survivors would know their stories were being told and that they were not forgotten.
I'll end this review with a thank you to the authors, for bringing to light such a controversial subject and handling it with both honesty and heart.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Review: NIGHT SHADOWS: QUEER HORROR edited by Greg Herren and J.M. Redmann (Bold Strokes Books)
Nowadays the horror and urban/paranormal fantasy genres seems replete with anthologies centered around one theme or another; shapeshifters, vampires, zombies-they all have had the starring role. But it's harder to find a good, solid anthology that just has "horror"as its central idea, and harder still when the theme is "queer horror".
I haven't read such a book since 2002 when Michael Rowe's Queer Fear came out. That book, along with its successor Queer Fear 2, was an ambitious and critically acclaimed collection that thrust "queer horror" into the spotlight and filled a vacancy in the horror genre that hadn't been occupied before. Now Night Shadows: Queer Horror continues that fine tradition with a fresh, new collection of stories that encompass many facets of horror, not just the fanged and furred kind.
I am a big fan of anthologies but I am always prepared for each one I read to be a mixed bag;there are always some stand outs and some clunkers. This time, however, I found that each story was a worthy entry and the collection as a whole made for happy reading. Here are my favorites:
The Zealous Advocate by Carsen Taite; a well written, bloody revenge story...
Matinee by Vince A. Liaguno is another juicy revenge story and also an ode to the slasher horror films of the 80s...
Capturing Jove Lunge by Steve Berman was for me the most erotic entry in the book; a darker, pulpy tale ..
All The Pretty Boys by Michael Rowe is another of the sexier entries here, a seductive werewolf story...
Filth by 'Nathan Burgoine is one of the creepiest stories I've read in a long time. I literally felt my skin crawl as I read it...my favorite of the bunch!
Blackout by Jeffrey Ricker is an eerie ghost story, well told by the author who keeps the tension mounting throughout the entire piece.
As I said, each of the stories here are good, solid tales but these listed here are for me well worth the price of admission alone. Night Shadows: Queer Horror does an excellent job of exploring and celebrating the gay horror genre and will appeal to fans of horror from every walk of life.
Happy reading!
(This counts toward the 2013 Horror Reading Challenge hosted by Midnyte Reader )
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