As a lover of the horror genre, and having read almost everything by Clive Barker, I have been trying to get my hands on this book for years. Apparently, in ‘97, Barker did a series for the BBC - this book was released as a companion piece. I haven’t seen the show, but I found this to be a fascinating hodgepodge of horror - there are discussions with Alan Moore (and, wow, was he completely different in the 90s from the curmudgeon he appears to have become), Stephen King, and so many directors and authors, but there are also artists, such as H.R. Giger, and discussions of real killers (such as Ed Gein and Jack the Ripper), and even a section focusing on Shirley Jackson (which I found quite interesting, especially after having just finished reading her first three novels), with some great art from Clive Barker on many of the pages, and great shots from films, and quotes from texts and experts in the margins of many of the pages. In his introduction, Barker informs the reader that this is not meant to be an exhaustive, encyclopedic tome on the history of all things horror, but rather, just a way of touching upon some of the horror genre. I think this text does exactly what it set out to do.