I received an ARC copy from the author in exchange for an honest review. And what a pleasure it was.
As a reader, there are a variety of factors that make a story resonate with me. Diverse characters, interesting plots, unusual twists, originality. However, one thing I love the most is when a story speaks to me on a personal level. You know the stories; the ones that remind you of certain, important moments in your life and take you back to a near-forgotten time when life was not all that great or, on the flip side, when life was amazing for a brief moment. Every person has that one place that we dare not revisit for risk of ruining the cherished memory...for me, it's my wasted youth...which is probably why Slush spoke to me on so many levels.
Slush - or slush, no capital S - is a collection of short stories, varying in size, that encapsulate many different themes. Some are poignant and some are dark and depressing, but all of them are excellent in their own right. The general theme is childhood, or the teen years; which is always ripe material for a horror author. Now, when Glenn Rolfe offered me an ARC for this book, I was slowly working my way through his novel, The Haunted Halls. I jumped on the chance because Rolfe has a writing style that I find very comfortable. It's easy to become immersed in his familiar worlds, sit down, and take the realistic characters at face value. In slush, this is the core of the writing, binding the shorts together in one tight, creative little bundle. It's on this canvas that Rolfe sketches his special blend of horror...and doesn't disappoint.
I know several of the characters contained within, and you will too. The bullying Physical Education teacher, the acne-ridden geek who wants nothing more than to have a clean, smooth complexion, and the popular girls who rally against anyone who opposes them. The characters are real and flawed, as teenagers should be. The adults don't fare much better, normally providing antagonistic foil in which to drive the stories along on a moral compass that sometimes wobbles from its natural course. In fact, as you work your way through the stories - all of which are original, heartfelt, emotional and, in some cases, outright shocking - you will feel a smile caress your lips and on several occasions, you will be thinking: Been there, done that, got the memory t-shirt. The stories are effortless engrained in many a childhood and Rolfe uses each different tale to chip away at those memory banks and provide a phenomenal reading experience.
One story gave me goosebumps. Not because it was scary as such - it was more familiar than terrifying for me - but because it helped me recall a stark moment in my teen years. As a youth, I had a terrible complexion and hated my reflection, to the degree it gave me a complex. I was willing to do anything to change this. One story nailed this on the head and it's as if Rolfe crawled into my brain and borrowed the memory, twisting it into a macabre short story. I couldn't help but smile, realising the author was touching a nerve that many teenagers will hesitantly remember. This writing style has made me an instant fan and I will continue to read this author going forward.
5* - A fantastic read. Teenage dilemmas are woven into simplistic, but genuine, horror tales. A guys first shave. The oppressive bully, both parental and educational. Acne. Ignorance and neglect. Jealousy. Familiar themes that every angst ridden teenager would have experienced at some point in their lives. Several stories stand out, but as a whole, this collection is essential reading for any horror fan. Rolfe crafts a mesmerising and realistic set of tales that will haunt, scare, buoy you with joy, and take you back to a simpler time when life was yet to kick you in the balls. Not so much slush as lush, a fictional, twisted trip down memory lane. Essential.