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Where the Worm Never Dies

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Within these pages, you'll encounter spine-tingling tales of unrelenting dread, where men and monsters lurk in the shadows side by side. This collection is a harrowing journey into the unknown, where the eternal chill of the grave is a constant companion.



Where the Worm Never Dies beckons you to explore the uncanny and the inexplicable, offering a chilling narrative of horror and despair, a symphony of fear that resonates in your soul. These verses are an invitation to confront your deepest fears and embrace the terror that lies hidden within the recesses of your imagination. Be prepared for an unforgettable odyssey into the heart of darkness.

114 pages, Paperback

Published June 1, 2024

25 people want to read

About the author

Quinn Hernandez

13 books3 followers

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5 stars
8 (27%)
4 stars
5 (17%)
3 stars
9 (31%)
2 stars
5 (17%)
1 star
2 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Dr. des. Siobhán.
1,588 reviews35 followers
February 4, 2024
*I received an ARC via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Thanks for the free book.*

TW apply, please only read "Where the Worm Never Dies" if you're feeling up to it.

I'm sorry to say that this book wasn't for me. It's not that some of the triggering (and disgusting in parts) content was the problem, I honestly felt bored? The poems were often short, often pointless, I felt like the book tried so very hard to shock that it forgot that there's more to the genre than just the same old Gothic stereotypical dark stuff? I'm trying not to be mean here but I had high hopes for this book and it just didn't deliver.

1.5 stars because it was well crafted language-wise
Profile Image for Victoria.
666 reviews20 followers
November 17, 2024
This is a really solid poetry collection. It's well written and unique and interesting. I enjoyed this! Special Thank You to Quinn Hernandez, Swann + Bedlam and NetGalley for allowing me to read a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Bebo Saucier Carrick.
266 reviews13 followers
April 29, 2024
Thank you to NetGalley for providing me an ARC of this book for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

I found this poetry collection to be a vast range of hits and misses. Some of the best poems speak to generational trauma and grief and have excellent biblical and horror imagery. However, others sounded uninspired, and didn't even feel like poetry at all, just short stories with weird line breaks.

The poems I enjoyed were as follows:
"Breaking the Cycle" - this dealt with generational trauma and how it can mess you up so so well.
"Not Just Anybody" - excellent concept and follow through. Loved the idea of sin-eaters.
"The Power of Grief" - a beautiful look at death and grief, more haunting than scary.
"Pawn" - a fantastic exploration of Judas and how he was just what God made him to be.
"True Crime" - an insidious look at just how normal serial killers can appear
"Hypocrite" - an honest and graphic look at how Christians are not very Christ-like

Most others were regrettably very forgettable, but I did greatly enjoy this handful.

Publication date: June 1. 2024
Profile Image for Savannah Marchant.
45 reviews3 followers
January 13, 2024
Spoilers.

Received free for honest review.

This poem book was...different. People only read this if you can handle horror: murder, rape, necromancy, etc.

Some of these poems really spoke to me, like Breaking the Cycle. Which was about a man being tied to a chair by his son's because of the traits he passed on to them.

Or

The Power of Grief, which was about a man capturing death to delay his wife's inevitable death from cancer, but his son frees death.

But some of these poems really had me questioning if I was reading was a big metaphor or if I should take it literally. Poems are supposed to be interpreted by the reader, but I was having a hard time doing that. I could tell these poems were written by the heart of the person but the poems near the end started to dry up. And wasn't making me think as much or discuss with myself.

The three poems I disliked the most was Three Examples of Why Clowns Ain't Funny. Basically a spinoff of killer clowns from outer space and felt like the poems didn't fit well in the book.

Overall I give it a good three stars cause the book did make me think. But it also slightly disappointed with some poems.
Profile Image for silas denver melvin.
Author 4 books617 followers
February 28, 2024
reviewed through an ARC provided by NetGalley

interested in it because of the cover and premise, but poems were lackluster. not enough poetic devices utilized and language was very basic. only tie together was general shock-disgust. this did not feel curated or polished. a lot of telling and so little showing. particularly offended by the line "her lithe fingers finding his masculine heat where he guided her velvet glove." have yet to find a book of "horror" poetry that isn't taboo fetishism and grossouts in a dust jacket
Profile Image for Erica Baxter.
1,052 reviews7 followers
January 22, 2024
Great, thought-provoking pieces. All of the poems are dark and unsettling, to various degrees. And many had profound revelations that really made me pause and think. Deep and intelligent writing that isn't overly esoteric.
Profile Image for Heather O'Donnell.
16 reviews1 follower
May 15, 2024
I always love a good horror poetry collection, so this book immediately sparked my interest. There was a good spread of variety to this book from lyrical reflections on the horrors humans commit, to disturbing scenarios with striking imagery, odes to legendary film directors and pieces punctuated with a dark humor twist. Most of the works here utilize narrative poetry to tell quick self-contained stories. Like most collections, some of the tales will have a stronger impact on the reader than others. I particularly enjoyed “Not Just Anybody” about a family of sin-eaters, “The Power of Grief” where a man captures death only to have his son free him, and “Full Moon Limericks” which contains 8 short odes to the films of the iconic production company. This was a fast read that would be perfect for anyone looking for some bite-sized indie horror that celebrates the genre. This book put the author and publisher on my radar, so I’ll be looking forward to seeing what’s next for them!
Thank you Swann + Bedlam for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for A Crimson Petal 🥀.
119 reviews8 followers
May 14, 2024
This poetry collection was a range of hit and miss. Each poem describes to darker side of human nature, some quite unsettling.

The author did a great job in vividly describing how dark and depraved ones thoughts can be.

The ones that stood out were:
“Breaking the Cycle” - The way it dealt with generational trauma really spoke to me.
“The Power of Grief” - A beautiful and haunting look at grief and death.
“True Crime” - Interesting and thought provoking.
“Hypocrite” - An honest and raw look at Christians and how they’re not very Christ-like.

The ones that felt really out of place were “Three Examples of Why Clowns Ain’t Funny”.

I give it 3 stars. Because overall these poems did make me think, although some are forgettable.

(I received an ARC via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.)
Profile Image for Sassy Sarah Reads.
2,346 reviews306 followers
July 17, 2024
DNF

Life is too short for poetry collections that do not bring me sheer joy. Reading this was nearly unbearable for me. The prose was underwhelming and reminiscent of what I wrote in my emo poetry phase in middle school. Some phases should stay in notebooks, but that's just my opinion.
Profile Image for Sam Ashurst.
Author 2 books2 followers
May 1, 2024
Thank you Netgalley for the early access to Where The Worm Never Dies, in exchange for a truthful review.

Look, I’m a simple man. I read a poetry collection with an ode to Argento, an ode to Fulci, an unofficial sequel to Killer Clowns From Outer Space (via PM Entertainment), and some of the most fucked up shit this side of a splatterpunk anthology?

A collection that also features a separate poem depicting a wereclown? WITH FULL MOON FEATURES LIMERICKS?!!

I click five stars and smile.

Honestly, this thing isn’t so much a poetry collection as it as video store, I loved it.

Despite the full spectrum of trigger warnings, there’s a weird innocence here. It’s the sweetest edgelord shit I’ll encounter this year, I’m sure. I loved it!
Profile Image for Carina Stopenski.
Author 9 books17 followers
January 17, 2024
thanks to netgalley for an arc of this title in exchange for an honest review. i wanted to like this so much based on the synopsis but i was really let down. first of all, there were so many moments where i couldn't tell if this was satire or edgelord nonsense, which i feel is a huge loss for this collection. if it played more into the humor, i feel i may have received this better. the horror is not revolutionary or transgressive to me in any way, even though the blurb referred to this as an uncanny odyssey of terror. i was not scared! like, clowns? sexual assault? weird religious metaphors? cheap and overdone in the genre in my opinion. "desire" was probably the most unique and abject piece for me. it may just be that for me, someone who regularly consumes extreme horror, i felt like this was nothing new and didn't live up to what it promised. additionally, typos and grammatical errors abound, which i am assuming will be fixed in post, but errors like "gentile" instead of "genteel," "it's" instead of "its" and "peace" instead of "piece" end up glaring on an already sparse page.
Profile Image for Francine.
9 reviews
April 2, 2024
Thanks to NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to review this book.

A delightful collection of macabre and horror themed poetry. There are limericks, freestyle prose, traditional rhyming schemes, and more, along with subjects ranging from satirical and comedic to straight laced and somber. It's not every day I see horror poetry, but I think that's what lends charm to this fun little book.
Profile Image for Patricia Puckett.
Author 5 books5 followers
January 26, 2024
*I received a free ARC of Where the Worm Never Dies in exchange for an honest review via NetGalley*

I was very intrigued by the idea of horror themed poetry. As I wanted to read a bit more poetry this year, this seemed like a match when I first signed up for NetGalley. That being said, the collection isn't... bad. It just left me wanting. Many of the prose poems would have been better off as full stories. Or, maybe, I would have been happier if the poet had played a little more with punctuation or formatting to pack more of an emotional punch. There were, however, two poems that stood out for me as highlights.

Full Moon Limericks: these were really creative and fun, especially for those who are horror movie fans.

Pawn: Loved the whole sympathy for the devil vibe of this one, really making the reader question perception... I just didn't feel like it belonged in this collection.
17 reviews
January 24, 2024
I read other reviews and I think they tainted my reading experience. Don't get me wrong I enjoyed many of the stories/poems, but I didn't realize that I was about to read a book of short stories and poems. Not Just Anybody" was a delightfully unique. Experiencing someone else's darkest sins after they have died is just a crazy concept. I thoroughly enjoyed it. "Pawn" makes you think about one of Christianity's core villians in a new light. I appreciated the nods given to classic horror and would really like to read a longer version of any of the "Three Examples of Why Clowns Ain't Funny". This collection was a quick read and the author had a fresh take on horror.
Profile Image for LX.
377 reviews9 followers
January 23, 2024
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an ARC to review!

3 stars!

First off I loved the random Dario Argento poem! I enjoyed these. Very different, and held lots of raw emotions and dark themes within them. I also really liked the poem Hypocrite.

Obviously not for everyone but I'm glad I came across this as now it has put Quinn Hernandez on my radar!
308 reviews6 followers
January 16, 2024
This was definitely written by a fellow horror nerd and I see you dude. Very fun, still had a few edge lord moments but I have a feeling those may have been put in there on purpose to make people laugh.
Profile Image for Air.
533 reviews27 followers
February 4, 2024
I think this book can really go either way. That’s what poetry tends to do to its audience. A part of me enjoyed quite a few of these, especially Breaking the Cycle. But some of them fell flat. I wouldn’t say they were bad just not for me!

Thank you NetGalley!
Profile Image for Parker ♡.
17 reviews1 follower
March 1, 2024
* received an ARC via netgalley
True horror poetry! Each poem creating a raw blistering image. Each was a joy to read as a fan of the genre. It pulled from tropes (lovingly) and established unique ideas in turn. Splattering viscera and rotting flesh, like a cult classic film.
Profile Image for Seher.
783 reviews31 followers
April 8, 2024
Thank you NetGalley and Swann + Bedlam for the chance to read and review "Where the Worm Never Dies" by Quinn Hernandez!

A quick search for the phrase "where the worm never dies" shows you that it's a biblical phrase; something that I did not pick up with the title (I'm muslim, so this isn't an area I know too much about). This is an interesting phrase because even a small look into it shows you a myriad of interpretations and why this makes an excellent title for the book.

The phrase can mean a worm that continuously feeds on the flesh without dying, as in the horror and pain never ends (as can be seen in the poems on hell and other violence in the book). It can also mean that the work that needs to be done, will continue to be done (the work of writing horror, or the work of torment and darkness or cycles of violence and trauma that continue to perpetuate just that). Either way, the title suits the book!

That being said, I'm not a horror girly, but I am a die-hard poetry girly which is why I picked up the book and was excited to read it. But to sum, horror > poetry when it comes to this. As poetry, it's fairly standard modern poetry, but the horror made me flinch and quite uncomfortable, which is not to say that it wasn't interesting. Poems like "Breaking the Cycle", "Pawn" and "Not Just Anybody" are really interesting explorations on religion and inherited anger.

While my review for this book is 3 stars, many people reading this will weigh the poetry to horror aspect very differently; if poetry is what's important this is 3 stars. If horror, then you're looking at something along the lines of 4 stars.
Profile Image for Sarah’s Book Nook Corner.
85 reviews2 followers
July 4, 2024
This is a short horror poetry collection that I was able to obtain from NetGalley. So thank you to NetGalley for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
It’s hard for me to put my finger on what exactly this horror collection is about, mainly because it didn’t have overlapping themes to me besides that it was all based on horror tropes. This book was honestly a mixed bag for me, there were some poems I really enjoyed, and then some others I really did not enjoy. Not because it made me squeamish, or was too horrifying, but mainly because I didn’t understand where the poem was trying to go, or what it was trying to tell me. It seemed really random, these poems. Almost as if they were all bad dreams or bad psych trips the author had gone on. I do gotta give a shout out to the author though about the line from Puppet Masters. That is my favorite horror movie collection of all time. I am always so surprised to find others who know of Puppet Master. It made me smile to see that in his book.

Overall, I am giving this a 2.5 star ⭐️ rating, because I did really enjoy a good chunk of the poetry. But the other chunk left me more confused and I didn’t know what the point of the stories were. Thank you again to NetGalley for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Missy (myweereads).
763 reviews30 followers
March 5, 2024
“…the only thing left holding his soul down is the weight of a lifetime of a multitude of sin, his reservoir of flesh stinks, it’s saturated with it this sin mixed with flesh hardens into a tomb.”

Quinn Hernandez’s collection is an unsettling round up of monsters and the unknown. Each poem uniquely describes the darker side of human nature. It explicitly describes the lengths to which one would go. Even those they feel they may not be capable of.

The author does great work in vividly describing how depraved ones thoughts in their most difficult times must be yet to have them portrayed so viscerally makes these poems uncomfortable to read.

Several of these had me pausing for a moment to really take in what had happened. Each one has that power to leave a lasting impression.

This collection may be a bit much for some readers as it does address the darkest and depraved parts of human existence. By looking into the hidden areas and voicing thoughts one could not fathom, it may unnerve some and for the same reason keep you wanting to read more.

A unique horror collection I really enjoyed.

Many thanks to @netgalley for a copy of this collection
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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