Summer Scares Resources

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Tuesday, July 27, 2021

New Book Bonus Annotations: Chapter 12: Lovecraftian and Cosmic Horror

When I was writing the Third Edition of the Readers' Advisory Guide to Horror, I originally had over 20 annotated choices per subgenre appearing in chapter 4-13. However, for word count sake, I had to reduce each lists to a well packaged dozen. Obviously making the cuts was hard, but I was able to include the tittles of those deleted annotations in an appendix at the end of the book with a promise that the annotations would run here on the blog.

And that promise begins today. Each list will be posted on the blog over a series of 10 weeks, every Tuesday, beginning June 1, 2021 and running through August 3, 2021. This weekly series will serve to promote the book's upcoming release in August of 2021, but I have also created an archive of all of the lists that will live here. That page is the official index of this bonus content.

In the book, my top three choices in each list are marked to denote Becky's Picks. I will also do that in these lists to give you a place to begin as you suggest. Just like the titles in the print book, every title appearing here is a great options for all public libraries. You can use these lists for collection development, displays, lists, and suggestions. Each subgenre has an essay discussing its history and appeal in the book which you can order here

Bonus Annotations

Chapter 12: Lovecraftian and Cosmic Horror*

[+] Denotes Becky’s Picks


Baker, Jacqueline. Broken Hours: A Novel of H.P. Lovecraft. 2016.
 
It’s 1836 and Arthor Crandle is offered a job to be an assistant to a reclusive author in Providence, RI. Crandle has no idea what he is getting himself into, but readers will know right away due to the setting and novel’s subtitle. What follows is a story of Crandle’s odd experiences including nightmares, strange happenings, and even tentacles all of which are now a part of his everyday experience. This is a story that is more focused on recreating the atmosphere and tone of a Lovecraft novel and less interested in crafting terror. There are also basic Lovecraft biographical details sprinkled in amidst the weirdness. A great choice for Lovecraft novices who want to understand both the man and this subgenre.


Campbell, Ramsey. Thirteen Days by Sunset Beach. 2015.

Most of Campbell’s work tends to fall within this subgenre and this is a recent example of how Lovecraftian horror manifests itself in our modern world. Three generations of a family head to a Greek Island for a vacation. The grandparents are hiding a dark secret, but the island itself is holding onto an even darker one. A secret that is slowly infiltrating itself into the family, and it might not ever let go. A terrifying story that is all about the oppressive atmosphere, the details piling up on top of one and other, pressing down on the characters and the reader. Another recent option is The Searching Dead, the first book in a new autobiographical, Lovecraftian trilogy. 

Cantero, Edgar. Meddling Kids. 2017.

Scooby Doo meets H.P. Lovecraft as four kids and their dog spent the summer of 1977 solving a series of mysteries. But 13 years later, one of those mysteries, involving a lake monster, draws these now troubled and aimless adults back, and the truth is way more sinister and dangerous than they ever realized. Mixing fast paced horror action with a witty tone, this is a quirky and nostalgic tale, filled with monsters, ghosts, and extremely likable protagonists. 

Emrys, Ruthanna. Winter Tide. 2017.

This, the first book in the Innsmouth Legacy alternative history series mixes details from the Cthulhu Mythos with the Cold War paranoia through a Jewish lens. It’s 1948 and Aphra and Caleb are the only two survivors from the massacre and internment of the “Deep Ones,” a species of humans who lived in the sea and worshipped the Cthulhu elders. The FBI recruits them to reconnect with their spiritual culture to help fight the Russians who have harnessed some of their people’s supernatural powers. While this series is in direct conversation and debate with Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Over Innsmouth,” Emrys has created her own world that will appeal to fans of dark fantasy, cosmic horror, and even spy thrillers. Deep Roots is the sequel

Johnson, Kij.  The Dream-Quest of Vellitt Boe. 2016.

Dramatic and lyrical, this novella is set at a prestigious women’s college where the eponymous professor must go on a quest through the Dreamlands to rescue a star pupil. Inhabited by elder gods, the land is beguilingly beautiful and terrifyingly dangerous. Boe’s adventure is two-fold: to save her student and come to terms with her own life choices as she traverses a landscape that will enthrall readers, captivating those new to the subgenre with wonder and roping in experts with places straight out of  the Lovecraft cannon.

Keene, Brian. Darkness on the Edge of Town. 2008.

The residents of a small Virginia town wake up to find that they are cut off from the outside world. It is just gone. There is nothing but impenetrable darkness surrounding them with no way for others to get in, or they to get out. The story follows the citizens as it explores their isolation and varying reactions as darkness permeates their lives and the entire tone of the book. Action and character development work hand in hand to create an unsettling, richly detailed story of survival in the face of unknown supernatural forces that easily eclipse human civilization. 

Kenemore, Scott. Lake of Darkness. 2020.

Click here for my review in ALA Booklist. I added this one to the book's appendix at the last minute.

Kepnes, Caroline. Providence. 2018.

John, an odd kid, disappears. His best friend Chloe holds onto the hope that he will be found, and four years later, he is, but he may not be the same boy she knew. He wakes up with no memory of what happened after his teacher kidnapped him. He also has new powers, powers he doesn’t quite understand, powers that cause others harm just by being near him, powers that might be explained by a Lovecraft book. A move to Providence, RI, a series of strange murders, lead John, Chloe, and the detective on the case on a journey to find answers. A compelling, haunting, and suspenseful cosmic horror-thriller hybrid that is a great option for introducing the trendy subgenre and its themes to a wider audience.

+Klinger, Leslie, ed. The New Annotated HP Lovecraft. 2014.

Renewed interest in Lovecraft has drawn readers to his stories, but given the problematic nature of his beliefs it is important to provide the right edition. Award winning editor has multiple volumes collecting the cosmic horror master’s stories which he extensively annotates providing insight, context, and details to enhance the experience of reading Lovecraft in the 21st Century. This particular volume includes both an introduction by Victor LaValle and an annotated version of “The Horror at Red Hook,” the story that LaValle used to frame The Ballad of Black Tom.

Liu, Marjorie M. Monstress series. 2016.

Set in a lavishly rendered, art deco inspired, steampunk world, of an alternate early 1900s, matriarchal Asia, readers follow the strong but flawed teenager, Maika Halfwolf, as she struggles to discover her personal history in the aftermath of war, how she is connected to a monster, and what this discovery means for the world, both human and supernatural. Over multiple compiled volumes of this popular and critically acclaimed  graphic novel series, Maika goes through dramatic, emotionally resonant, and violent adventures framed by well-trod cosmic horror themes and tropes.

+Miller, Sam J. The Blade Between. 2020.

Ronan had to leave small, blue collar hometown of Hudson, NY in order to safely live as a gay man and pursue his career as a photographer, but now returns to care for his dying father. However, to his surprise,  the town has been completely transformed into a hip retreat for wealthy city dwellers. Reconnecting with his first love, Dom, a police office and his community organizer wife, Attalah, Ronan begins to realize that their fight against gentrification is complicated by a supernatural power buried in the land itself, a menace that doesn’t see humanity as a significant obstacle, a terror that might be on their side this time, but is not under their control. Intense dread and unsettling unease permeates this Lovecraftian tale from the very first lines while the issue oriented small town horror tropes keep the cosmic plot grounded enough for subgenre novices to easily follow along.

+Piper, Hailey. The Worm and His Kings. 2020.

It’s 1990 in New York City and Monique’s girlfriend, Donna, has simply vanished. After hearing of the disappearances of other women who, like themselves, live on the fringes of mainstream society, Piper learns that Donna might not be the victim of a human monster. Rather a crack underground has opened a wormhole, a portal to a cult world where strange, dangerous creatures rule, creatures that may have Donna in their talons. Piper must take the plunge to save Donna, but is her mind ready for what she will find hidden just below the surface? Both an exploration of the holes in our modern social services that force many into poverty and a fun, cosmic adventure through multiple, mind-bending, dimensions set in an original and wholly new mythos with obvious Lovecraftian roots, this novel announces Piper as an emerging voice in the horror community that cannot be overlooked.

Snyder, Lucy. Garden of Eldritch Delights. 2018.

One of Snyder's numerous story collections, this one contains 12 tales that are unapologetically Lovecraftian and feminist; fact, many of the stories make obvious nods to Lovecraft and his peers, ones that you don’t need to “get” in order enjoy this volume. A woman wakes up realizing that her girlfriend has ripped her heart out of her chest, a fresh take on the vampire trope, and revenge against a rapist are example plots of these tales featuring inclusive characters in original and shocking cosmic horror situations. In general Snyder’s story collections are reliable, sure bets in this subgenre.

Wong, David. What the Hell Did I Just Read?: A Novel of Cosmic Horror. 2017.

Combining his trademark comic horror tone with Lovecraftian elements, Wong bring in the characters from his previous novels to send them on another gruesome, intricately plotted, dangerous adventure that uses all of the tropes of cosmic horror to create the satisfying emotions of fear that horror fans crave while at the same time actively satirizing both the subgenre and the absurdity of modern life. Readers need not be familiar with Wong’s previous novels to enjoy this one in all of its weird and psychologically terrifying glory. 



*This chapter also relies on a longer essay that Mary SanGiovanni wrote for me in the October 2020 issue of Library Journal which you can find here.

Thursday, July 22, 2021

#HorrorForLibraries Giveaway 50: The Death of Jane Lawrence

It's #HorrorForLibraries giveaway day and I have a major, upcoming release to giveaway to you today, but first, here is a refresher on the basic rules to enter:

  1. You need to be affiliated with an American public library. My rationale behind that is that I will be encouraging you to read these books and share them with patrons. While many of them are advanced reader copies that you cannot add to your collections, if you get the chance to read them, my hope is that you will consider ordering a copy for your library and give away the ARC away as a prize or pass it on to a fellow staff member.
  2. If you are interested in being included in any giveaway at any time, you must email me at zombiegrl75 [at] gmail [dot] com with the subject line "#HorrorForLibraries." In the body of the email all you have to say is that you want to be entered and the name of your library.
  3. Each entry will be considered for EVERY giveaway. I will randomly draw a winner on Fridays sometime after 5pm central. But only entries received by 5pm each week will be considered for that  week. I use Random.org and have a member of my family witness the "draw"based off your number in the Google Sheet.
  4. If you win, you are ineligible to win again for 4 weeks; you will have to re-enter after that time to be considered [I have a list of who has won, when, and what title]. However, if you do not win, you carry over into the next week. There is NO NEED to reenter.
Click here to see giveaway #49. Our winner was Kate from the Hennepin County Library [MN].

Now to this week. Today I have an ARC of Catlin Starling's upcoming novel, The Death of Jane Lawrence. My review of this book is in the current issue of Booklist. Here is what I wrote about this title on the general blog:


The Death of Jane Lawrence
by Caitlin Starling
Oct. 2021. 352p. St. Martin’s, $27.99 (9781250272584)
First published July 2021 (Booklist).

Opening with a very creepy Rebecca vibe and set in a fictional world reminiscent of post WWII Europe, Starling introduces the very practical Jane as she proposes a business arrangement marriage to the local doctor, Augustine Lawrence, a brilliant and kind man, but an outsider who keeps to himself. Dr. Lawrence’s only rule for their marriage is that Jane sleeps at the office, his home in town, while he must return to the crumbling family manor home on the outskirts of town each evening. After a storm forces Jane to break this agreement on the very first night, what began as an uneasy story steadily builds to unrelenting tension, further enhanced by Jane’s intense first person narration. The reader is compelled to follow Jane as she discovers the truth at the manor home, unravels her husband’s lies, and battles horrors, be they real or imagined, but they will also thoroughly enjoy falling in this immersive and unsettling journey. A perfect choice for readers who enjoy how today’s writers are playing with the well trod Gothic trope to create something wholly new, utterly terrifying, and supremely satisfying such as Mexican Gothic by Moreno-Garcia or Now You’re One of Us by Nonami.


Further Appeal: First things first, shaking off that ominous title is impossible and I loved it. From that unsettling start, it all builds. And I am happy to report, the book resolves very well. Don't underestimate the skill here. To stick the landing on a book that has the protagonist's death in the tile, that is hard.

The world building here is excellent. It is not only the details of the magic, ghosts, and medical science, but it is also the unsettling almost recognizable setting. It is almost alternative history, but not quite. And the terror builds steadily and relentlessly without sacrificing the interesting world building.

Jane is a great heroine. Her backstory and details are assembled and revealed well and her motivations and growth are interesting to watch unfold.

Like Chizmar, Starling is also an author whose books are very different but her writing draws you in: Space Body HorrorVampire novella, and now a twist on Gothic Horror. I have read and reviewed all of these and really enjoyed each. [She has more, but this is what I have read.]

Three Words That Describe This Book: intense tension, haunted house, trust no one


Readalikes: The Upstairs House by Fine, The Little Stranger by Waters and anything by Shirley Jackson. Crimson Peak [film] is in the publisher comps. I am not familiar enough with the movie to add that to my official review, but I am adding it here for those who do like it.


This feminist retelling of the Gothic novel, a modernization which gives much more agency to the women, is a huge trend right now. That's how you hand-sell this title-- Did you like Mexican Gothic? Shirley Jackson? Then read this. 


Just get it into people's hands ASAP.

Enter now. And good luck! 

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

New Book Bonus Annotations: Chapter 11- Psychological Horror

When I was writing the Third Edition of the Readers' Advisory Guide to Horror, I originally had over 20 annotated choices per subgenre appearing in chapter 4-13. However, for word count sake, I had to reduce each lists to a well packaged dozen. Obviously making the cuts was hard, but I was able to include the tittles of those deleted annotations in an appendix at the end of the book with a promise that the annotations would run here on the blog.

And that promise begins today. Each list will be posted on the blog over a series of 10 weeks, every Tuesday, beginning June 1, 2021 and running through August 3, 2021. This weekly series will serve to promote the book's upcoming release in August of 2021, but I have also created an archive of all of the lists that will live here. That page is the official index of this bonus content.

In the book, my top three choices in each list are marked to denote Becky's Picks. I will also do that in these lists to give you a place to begin as you suggest. Just like the titles in the print book, every title appearing here is a great options for all public libraries. You can use these lists for collection development, displays, lists, and suggestions. Each subgenre has an essay discussing its history and appeal in the book which you can order here

Bonus Annotations

Chapter 11: Psychological Horror

[+] Denotes Becky’s Picks


Ajvide Lindqvist, John. I Am Behind You. 2014.

Four families set up their campers in  the same area, all on vacation, and go to bed. When they wake up, they realize the entire world around them has disappeared, replaced by endless fields of green grass. What  follows is a story of the families, their relationships with each other, their interactions and how their own psyches, pasts, and personalities handle the horror confronting them. A menacing and engrossing tale of  terror where the characters deepest secrets and desires manifest into the monsters they are forced to battle.


Chesterton, R.B. The Darkling. 2013.

Mimi, now a senior citizen, recounts the time, just after college, when she lived with a wealthy family, serving as a governess/teacher to their three children. Readers are swept back to 1974, deep in the Alabama swamps, to a rundown home, in a town struggling to restore its former glory, and the California transplant family, who not only welcome Mimi, but also a troubled teenager, with no recollection of her past. The stage is set for maximum tension and unease, and it doesn’t disappoint as things start going badly almost immediately and then spiral out of control. Is there a supernatural evil in the woods stalking the children or is the killer human, and more importantly, why do we only have Mimi’s point of view? The oppressively atmospheric, anxiety driven tale builds to a frenetic conclusion with an ending that will make readers question everything they just experienced.  

Darnielle, John. Universal Harvester. 2017.

It’s 1999 and Jeremy lives with his Father and works at the Video Hut in Iowa. Life is not very exciting, that is until customers start remarking about strange scenes spliced into their videos, creepy black and white images of frightened hooded people. Working together with a group of people, all who live with intense grief and loss, Jeremy and his ragtag crew embark on a creepy mystery that feels like classic Twilight Zone episodes while it follows its flawed, but extremely sympathetic characters through an intricately plotted and suspenseful plot that dives deeply into their haunted lives and experiences. While the VHS frame adds a bit of nostalgia that will be appreciated by many readers.


+Hightower, Laurel. Crossroads. 2020.

A story about grief, obsessions, and ghosts, Crossroads is focused on a mother, Chris, who cannot get over the death of her teenaged son. She spends hours at the place of the car accident that killed him. After she accidentally spills blood on the site one day, he appears to her, in the middle of the night, outside their home, begging for comfort, a plea that leads her down a dark road. Is it all in her head? Maybe but the evidence leans towards his soul out there roaming and restless. Hightower invests in the emotional horror, as readers will live inside Chris’ pain, they will see her make bad choices but for the right reasons, they will be filled with dread and anxiety, they will watch her lose control, and they will be horrified for her and for themselves throughout. 

Kang, Han, Deborah Smith, translator. The Vegetarian. 2016.

After overwhelming, violent, bloody thoughts consume her, Yeong-hye turns vegetarian as a way to rid the images from consuming her. However, this decision is taken as a betrayal of tradition by her family and leads them all down different, dangerous paths. Different members of the family, their reactions to Yeong-hye, are explored, but she  is  the center here, holding the narrative together as it spins around her. With its spare language and surreal moments, this is an unsettling story that will haunt readers as it builds relentlessly, breaking open in a shocking climax.

+McOmber, Adam. Jesus and John. 2020.

In this honest, thought-provoking, and terrifying look at devotion, McOmber uses the Resurrection as a horror allegory. Jesus’ risen body escapes from his tomb in a mute fugue state and begins walking with purpose. Peter has Jesus’ lover, the fisherman John accompanying him. They end up at a mysterious palace in the center of Rome, a palace that is impossibly larger than it appears; a palace filled with malice, monsters, and nightmares; a palace they might never escape. A lyrical, compelling, and awesome story of people trying to outrun disorientation, menace, and threats, whether real or imagined, with or without the religious or heretical undertones attached.

+Meijer, Maryse. The Seventh Mansion. 2020.

In this startling, unique and beguiling debut, Xie is a troubled teen, physically affected by the destruction of the environment around him. After getting kicked out of school, he finds calm from his intense anxiety by spending evenings in the woods near his home. One of those evenings he finds, steals, and  falls in love with the bones of a Catholic Saint and begins a sexual relationship with the relic. Written as a stream of consciousness from entirely inside Xie’s head, this is a book unlike any that came before, this is a haunting story, a disorienting and lyrical tale  that is hard to explain or classify, but even harder to shake or forget, filled with questions that need to be asked, but most likely, do not have an answer.

Moulton, Rachel Eve. Tinfoil Butterfly. 2019.

Emma is on the run, from people and her past, hitchhiking across the desolate highways of South Dakota. A violent scuffle leaves Emma bloody and alone with a stolen, out of gas van as a blizzard bears down. Enter Earl, a transgender boy in a tinfoil mask, who brings Emma to the abandoned town where his family lives. The story focuses on Emma as it bounces back and forth between her story in the present and past. The more we learn about Emma, the less we like her and yet, we keep reading. This is a brutal book, filled with horrible evils, real, imagined, and supernatural; however it is also a lyrical and thought provoking look at the human experience, and Earl is a magical character you will not soon forget.

Oates, Joyce Carol. The Doll-Master and Other Tales of Terror. 2016.

Collecting six previously published stories which all revolve around unreliable narrators and macabre situations, this volume showcases Oates at her macabre best. The stories all take a creepy situation, twisting and turning the characters and readers into dark corners, leaving both breathless from the tension. Each tale is rooted in reality, from a bookstore to house sitting to doll collecting to vacation, but the safety of the known is quickly replaced by dread, unease, and even evil. An excellent introduction to this master’s more recent work.

Pessl, Marisha. Night Film. 2013.

Scott McGrath is a journalist whose entire career was trashed when he falsely accused the [fictional] cult horror film maker, Cordova of evil things. Opening with Cordova's college age daughter Ashley found dead at the bottom of an elevator shaft, McGrath feels his obsession, pulling him into the mystery. McGrath and two questionably helpful assistants play detective, but when you are trying to solve the murder of the daughter of a highly secretive man, whose entire life has been spent creating dark, disturbing, movie masterpieces, things do not follow the straight line of a basic mystery novel. That it’s told entirely from McGath’s point of view and intricately plotted and constructed to make McGrath’s quest feel as if he is stuck in one of Cordova's movies rather than living his own free will life, allow the intricately detailed story to be both compelling and highly unsettling.

Stage, Zoje. Baby Teeth. 2018.

Seven year old Hanna wants to kill Mommy. Suzette, already battling chronic illness, cannot connect with her daughter. Incident after incident pile on top of each other as the trauma and horrors mount. Is Hanna possessed by a 17th Century witch, or is she just obsessed with being the sole recipient of Daddy’s love? With alternating, first person narratives from Hanna and Suzette, readers are thrust into psychological terror from an intimate perspective, a narrative choice which constantly escalates the tension and keeps the pages turning. Stage leaves nothing off the table in this nightmarish look at the terror that resides at the core of unconditional love.


Wilson, Kea. We Eat Our Own. 2016.

Deep in the jungles of South America, a possibly mad, but definitely violence obsessed director is trying to make a realistic horror movie. Written as a deconstruction of what it was like to film the fictional, barbaric, 1979 “classic,: Cannibal Holocaust, the novel presents points of view from across cast and crew, manipulates the time line, and wraps the story in a terror that shoots past  the point of no return. A gory and disorienting read, but also a thought provoking look at the cruelties  of violence, an immersive experience that will follow readers off the page and into the real world.


Thursday, July 15, 2021

#HorrorForLibraries Giveaway 49: Chasing the Boogeyman

It's #HorrorForLibraries giveaway day and I have one of the hottest books scheduled for August to giveaway to you today, but first, here is a refresher on the basic rules to enter:

  1. You need to be affiliated with an American public library. My rationale behind that is that I will be encouraging you to read these books and share them with patrons. While many of them are advanced reader copies that you cannot add to your collections, if you get the chance to read them, my hope is that you will consider ordering a copy for your library and give away the ARC away as a prize or pass it on to a fellow staff member.
  2. If you are interested in being included in any giveaway at any time, you must email me at zombiegrl75 [at] gmail [dot] com with the subject line "#HorrorForLibraries." In the body of the email all you have to say is that you want to be entered and the name of your library.
  3. Each entry will be considered for EVERY giveaway. I will randomly draw a winner on Fridays sometime after 5pm central. But only entries received by 5pm each week will be considered for that  week. I use Random.org and have a member of my family witness the "draw"based off your number in the Google Sheet.
  4. If you win, you are ineligible to win again for 4 weeks; you will have to re-enter after that time to be considered [I have a list of who has won, when, and what title]. However, if you do not win, you carry over into the next week. There is NO NEED to reenter.
Click here to see giveaway #48. Our winner was Joleen from the Boca Raton Library [FL].

Today I am giving away an ARC of one of the most buzzed about books coming in August. Chasing the Boogeyman by Richard Chizmar. Here is the publisher summary from Goodreads 
The New York Times bestselling coauthor of Gwendy’s Button Box brings his signature “thrilling, page-turning” (Michael Koryta, author of How It Happened ) prose to this story of small-town evil that combines the storytelling of Stephen King with the true-crime suspense of Michelle McNamara.

In the summer of 1988, the mutilated bodies of several missing girls begin to turn up in a small Maryland town. The grisly evidence leads police to the terrifying assumption that a serial killer is on the loose in the quiet suburb. But soon a rumor begins to spread that the evil stalking local teens is not entirely human. Law enforcement, as well as members of the FBI are certain that the killer is a living, breathing madman—and he’s playing games with them. For a once peaceful community trapped in the depths of paranoia and suspicion, it feels like a nightmare that will never end.

Recent college graduate Richard Chizmar returns to his hometown just as a curfew is enacted and a neighborhood watch is formed. In the midst of preparing for his wedding and embarking on a writing career, he soon finds himself thrust into the real-life horror story. Inspired by the terrifying events, Richard writes a personal account of the serial killer’s reign of terror, unaware that these events will continue to haunt him for years to come.

A clever, terrifying, and heartrending work of metafiction,Chasing the Boogeyman is the ultimate marriage between horror fiction and true crime. Chizmar’s “brilliant…absolutely fascinating, totally compelling, and immediately poignant” (C.J. Tudor, New York Times bestselling author) writing is on full display in this truly unique novel that will haunt you long after you turn the final page.

I read this book back in May and turned in a glowing review of this book for publication in Booklist's July issues review that will be out any day now. In a direct quote to my editor when I turned in the review, "People will LOVE this book."

It is a horror-true crime hybrid. As I wrote in my notes, "The story is a winner as both True Crime and Fiction, not an easy feat to pull off." and "Meta fiction to the extreme. So creepy because so real and yet….it isn’t." 

And here is what I have for now in my Goodreads review space:

As metafiction, this novel excels. Its palpable proximity to reality adds an unshakable level of unease. With less narrative restraint this book becomes a caricature of itself; however, Chizmar injects just the right amount of self reflection to forge an undeniable, and ironically honest, emotional connection with the reader. The result is strikingly original, a story that will thrill fans of intimately investigated nonfiction like I’ll Be Gone in the Dark by McNamara, and self aware, psychological suspense like My Sister, the Serial Killer by Braithwaite.

Three Words That Describe This Book: metafiction, unshakably unsettlingly, strikingly original

These are some of the thoughts I turned into the review you will see soon. In the meantime, cutting to the chase, you will want to have copies of this book on hand BEFORE it comes out on August 17th. And you can get a head start on the buzz by entering to win a copy of your own, today.

I'll be back next week to give away another book with a review in that same issue.

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

New Book Bonus Annotations: Chapter 10- Satan and Demonic Possession

When I was writing the Third Edition of the Readers' Advisory Guide to Horror, I originally had over 20 annotated choices per subgenre appearing in chapter 4-13. However, for word count sake, I had to reduce each lists to a well packaged dozen. Obviously making the cuts was hard, but I was able to include the tittles of those deleted annotations in an appendix at the end of the book with a promise that the annotations would run here on the blog.

And that promise begins today. Each list will be posted on the blog over a series of 10 weeks, every Tuesday, beginning June 1, 2021 and running through August 3, 2021. This weekly series will serve to promote the book's upcoming release in August of 2021, but I have also created an archive of all of the lists that will live here. That page is the official index of this bonus content.

In the book, my top three choices in each list are marked to denote Becky's Picks. I will also do that in these lists to give you a place to begin as you suggest. Just like the titles in the print book, every title appearing here is a great options for all public libraries. You can use these lists for collection development, displays, lists, and suggestions. Each subgenre has an essay discussing its history and appeal in the book which you can order here

Bonus Annotations

Chapter 10: Satan and Demonic Possession

[+] Denotes Becky’s Picks

Editor's Note: This list is all male. I know this. It is because the women are in the print book. When I made the lists for the book, I made sure all lists were diverse and inclusive. In this subgenre that meant the men got the ax.


Arnopp, Jason. The Last Days of Jack Sparks. 2016

First things first, Jack Sparks is dead. He died while writing a book about the paranormal, a book is part of this novel. But how and why? Opening with an unsettling exorcism, one Sparks goes on to mock on Twitter and spiralling into a tale that mixes all out terror, black humor, a found footage frame, and the possession trope, readers will hate Sparks more with each turn of the page, even as they fear for him and themselves. Arnopp further enhances the unease of the written words as he plays with format and page layout. A satisfying Horror tale with just enough intricacy to the plot to keep it fresh and compelling. It will also scare some readers right out of their social media accounts.


Danielewski, Mark Z.  House of Leaves. 2000

With its book within a book frame, House of Leaves tells the story of a home under the control of the Devil through the manuscript that its former inhabitants left behind.  This is a creepy, thrilling, and intelligent novel.  The apprehension and unease are bolstered by the book’s odd construction: footnotes, askew text, pages with only a word or two.  There are real demons here too, but the ones Danielewski puts in your mind as you read are what is going to make you keep the lights on.


Dekker, Ted. Adam. 2008

FBI agent Daniel Clark is obsessed with catching the serial killer known as Eve. When she kills Clark and he is resuscitated after 20 minutes, his life turns upside down. Clark is battered physically and mentally from his ordeal, fighting for his life, to stop Eve, and for his very soul. Combining a menacing tone with violence, intense suspense, and a fast pace, is a solidly disturbing and chilling story. Adam is also a Christian fiction, Possession Horror tale, a frame that used to dominate this subgenre. While it is being overtaken by other frames here, it is important to remember it is still popular and Dekker is the most consistent Christian Horror writer right now.


Ennis, Garth. Preacher. Begins 1995

In this long running and popular graphic novel series, a former con man returns home to take over his father’s church, but not before being possessed by a powerful entity of cryptic origin and agenda. Joining with his unconventional friends, he then begins a quest to find God in an evil world. This is a character driven, action packed story, that sustains the bleak, violent and gritty atmosphere with both words and pictures. While the original graphic novel series ran from the late 90s to the early 2000s, the series saw renewed interest when it was made into a popular 4 season TV series in 2016.


+Janz, Jonathan. Exorcist Falls. 2017

Merging the demonic possession trope with a fast paced serial killer thriller, Janz introduces readers to a Chicago held hostage by a vicious serial killer who is targeting 16 year old girls. A young priest, Jason Crowder, is called to the home of a parishioner who is clearly possessed but also knows way too much about the murders, and in the struggle for his soul, the demon enters the priest. The intense first person narration by Crowder enhances both readers’ sympathy for him and their sheer terror at seeing what the devil is capable of. This is a bloody and violent novel that will appeal to a variety of genre readers.


Keene, Brian. City of the Dead. 2005

The king of the zombie novel imagines what would happen if the dead not only rise but do so at the behest of demons who are angry at God.  This possessed zombie army, consisting mostly of animals, traps a handful of survivors in a well stocked skyscraper and relentlessly assaults them.  Keene switches the point of view among the interesting and complex survivors without losing sight of the awful bloodshed going on outside.


+Kirkman, Robert. Outcast. 2016

Kyle Barnes has a gift for pulling demons out of possessed bodies, but this gift has had negative effects on his life. When a young boy’s soul is overtaken by a violent demon, a Reverend enlists Kyle to help. But along the way, Kyle is forced to come to terms with exactly why demons are so drawn to him. Kirkman proves he is not a one hit wonder with a compelling and original story, an intriguing if flawed hero, and a terrifying and violent story. The plot driven, fast paced tale is further supported by dark, detailed illustrations. 


Miura, Kentaro. Berserk. Begins 1990

In this long running, Horror-Dark Fantasy series, swordsman Guts is out for revenge carries The Brand, a symbol that dooms him to a life besieged by demons. The series follows, in graphic detail, Guts’ quest to destroy the demon ruler. His adventures lead him to battle a variety of monsters, bring danger to all who surround him wherever he goes. His sprite sidekick adds humor, empathy, and magical help to the antihero and allows for breaks in the graphic violence and battle sequences. Widely considered among the best manga series of all time, Berserk is a huge series centered around its hero and intricate world-building that shows no signs of slowing down any time soon. [Editors note: Miura died suddenly in 2021. There is no word on the fate of the series as of today's post.]


Pyper, Andrew. The Demonologist. 2013

English Professor David Ullman has made a career out of studying the demons in Milton’s Paradise Lost, never believing they were more than metaphors and products of the human brain. However, a work invitation to Venice, a trip he brings his daughter on for fun, begins to unravel everything David thought he knew about his life, the world, and demons. Told with both Thriller and Horror tropes, this is a fast paced, atmospheric tale with a demonic frame that makes for wide appeal.


+Russell, Daniel, I. Entertaining Demons. 2017

Splatter Punk meets satire this bloody, frightening battle of demons vs reality TV. Molly,  the newest star of the popular reality TV show, “PI: Paranormal Investigations,” is not staging her paranormal experiences for the camera, she is the victim of a very evil demon, one that has managed to survive through millennia. An alternating view point between the protagonists and the demons, who are descending upon Molly and her entire town, this is an action packed story of sympathetic characters up against a powerful moral evil, but it is also a darkly humorous satire on modern life. This is an example of the recent resurgence of Extreme Horror that you can safely add to your collections.