‘Suspended in Dusk’ can be described by a brief summary of Wendy Hammer’s contribution, ‘Negatives’: strap yourself in for a roller coaster ride at the carnival of death, and enjoy the macabre show!
The stories in this anthology were perfectly placed, each one offering up a slightly different take on that witching hour of partial darkness between day and night.
Alan Baxter’s ‘Shadows of the Lonely Dead,’ about a hospice worker who absorbs the dark parts of souls through a sort of osmosis, set the tone for the beautifully sinister collection, placing an emphasis on character-driven stories and the horror of human emotion.
In Anna Reith’s ‘Taming the Stars,’ a creature inadvertently turns a human into one of her kind, and is faced with the uncertainty of going forward with a partner when she’d become so accustomed to being alone.
‘At Dusk They Come,’ by Armand Rosamilia: a man in a trailer park must provide soul-eating monsters with the names of those they can feast on, but when the names begin to run dry, his wife takes over his duties, to unfortunate results. This story had that wonderful ‘damned if you do…” feel to it, reminiscent of many Stephen King short stories.
Icy Sedgwick’s ‘A Woman of Disrepute’: I enjoyed the imagery of the unforgiving waters surrounding Blackfriars Bridge, a setting that ruled and punished the unfortunates of London as much as the hooded figure at the story’s center did. Our writer protagonist has seen the creature picking off prostitutes, but when he names the apparition, he becomes the next victim.
Rayne Hall, ‘Burning’: A somewhat depressing story in terms of our current political landscape. In the wake of a tragedy, families express their regret over their neighbors burning to death in a house fire…but how regretful can they be when the Arabs absence may lead to the property owner rebuilding the site as a new church?
Chris Limb’s ‘Ministry of Outrage’ is a story with a lot of twists and turns. A man takes a job crafting news stories aimed to shock and outrage; when his artistic expression leads to a real life murder, the Ministry’s reaction is far from disappointment. “Welcome to the next level,” is one of the creepiest lines in the collection.
Toby Bennett, “Maid of Bone: Loved the atmosphere in this story. If Allie wants to be among the dead, who’s to say her sacrifices are not enough to be among the people of bone? Also, great first line: “The teeth in Allie’s pocket were chattering with the cold.”
S. G. Larner, ‘Shades of Memory’: Patrick chooses to send the woman folk of a post-apocalyptic town out of purgatory, to his own demise…a well-crafted tale.
J.C. Michael, ‘Reasons to Kill’: A great twist on the vampire trope. Sure, if your fellow humans were victims of a disease that required them to subsist on blood, one might be able to sympathize…but what if you discovered a really good reason to kill them off? If you’re this story’s protagonist, you abandon a life of relative comfort, and become a vampire-hunter…
Ramsey Campbell – Digging Deep’: I loved this story! A man is buried alive, but as luck would have it, his cell phone is in his pocket. When he calls for help, the police don’t believe him, until he finally hears sounds of a rescue mission digging down to him. The reader realizes, right at the same moment as the hapless Alan Coe, that the noise is coming from below, in the creepiest ending of the anthology.
Brett Rex Bruton, ‘Outside In’: A gangster love story written where the line between fact and fiction is blurred. Very cool concept.
Karen Runge, ‘Hope Is Here’: Homeless men are corralled within the walls of the Sunshine Group, anxious to begin a new life, but their ticket out of poverty is not the ticket they would have chosen. As a mental health counselor and advocate for social reform within mental health and substance abuse, this story isn’t far from some of the comments you see on our online newspaper articles proposing fairer treatment for those of lower socioeconomic status.
Tom Dullemond, ‘Would To God That We Were There’: A claustrophobia-inducing story about a space mission gone wrong…
Shane McKenzie, ‘Fit Camp’: Great concept! Fat campers donating fat to an evil entity! What’s more innovative and disturbing than that?!? Again, something that many in our society may very well propose…
‘Sarah Read, ‘Quarter Turn to Dawn’: Another fresh and exciting concept: fish zombies! Hell yes!
Benjamin Knox – A Keeper of Secrets’: I loved this story! A little doll-girl in an attic that thrives on secrets to survive; I was in bed reading this at the end of a long day, and went from sleepy to creeped-out within a few pages!
John Everson, ‘Spirits Having Flown’: A dream collector apprentice graduates to master… “The fake woodgrain surface came alive with twisting, writhing shades of flame, of blackness, of blood.” Loved this line!
Angela Slatter, ‘The Way Of All Flesh,’ Loved a good horror story where the tables are turned on the evil protagonist. In the world of cannibals, there’s no worse demotion than going from eater to eaten!
In summary, this anthology is well-worth the price of admission, and I am looking forward to the publication of Suspended in Dusk 2!