With lnto Wrack and Ruin, Unsworth crafts a series of well written, weighty tales that cover a multitude of genre conceits ranging from the supernatural to folk tales, with a dash of cosmic horror thrown in. Where the collection stands out is the relish in which the author shirks convention and produces stories that are in parts nebulous, yet bristle with ambition. There is the assured confidence of a writer who knows their voice and is content to raise it so that it may be heard.
I advise that those seeking new genre talent invest a moment to listen, and take heed.
This is a collection of short horror fiction from a new horror author, Ben Unsworth. The tales are varied and consistently well-written. The author obviously knows his horror history, from classic literary horror Doctor Who, and those influences feed into the worlds he creates here. Occasionally, in a couple of weaker stories, those influences seem too obvious, the inspiration for a story seemingly a twist on a trope rather than anything more, well, inspired. Sometimes you can see the zipper on the monster suit... but for most pieces here, it's hard to tell and Unsworth has blended his influences and own experiences into some horrific and horrible wholes. I'm mixing metaphors horrendously now so I better stop, but I'll just add that the story about a plastic bag - yes really - is one of the creepiest and most original things I've read for years.
An impressive collection, which shows a marked improvement (it was already good before, fyi) in Unsworth's writing over the last couple of years, displaying what can only be described as an epic amount of variety in the types of horrors he explores.
There's one about a plastic bag that just.....I have no words, honestly, but it's my favourite.
Ben Unsworth's writing and penchant for story telling has come a long way since the collection he co-authored with Simon Kurt Unsworth, which was already good. A fantastic imagination, some of his influences obvious (and delightful to pick up on) and others a mystery, and a vocabulary to match the atmosphere he paints throughout.