I'm a Paul Tremblay fan, and I had never heard of Concord Free Press until some fellow Tremblay fans started posting this book on Instagram. Here's how it works: You request a book from their website, and they send it to you completely free and postage paid. Once you receive the book you make a voluntary donation and list how you chose to donate on their website. Every book is numbered, so they are able to track who donates for each book. Once you read it, you sign your name in the back and then pass the book on to someone else. It's a fantastic experiment in publishing, and I highly recommend you check out their website!
Another Way to Fall is a collaboration between Brian Evenson and Paul Tremblay. Both of the books in this novel were released in limited quantities previously, and are super hard to find, at least at an affordable price. So Evenson and Tremblay are making it easier for fans to read these titles through Concord Free Press.
The book starts with Evenson's short novel Baby Leg. I have to admit that I have never read Brian Evenson before, so I went into this novel knowing nothing about his writing style. After reading Baby Leg I learned that amputations are sort of an ongoing theme with Evenson, so the protagonist inexplicably missing a hand, as well as two characters missing legs, (one of which is the eponymous Baby Leg, who has a literal baby leg where one of her normal legs should be) is par for the course.
The protagonist, Kraus, wakes up in cabin with a missing hand, a gash on his forehead, and no idea who he is or what has happened to him. He spends the rest of the novel in a fugue state, and the reader is unable to tell what's real and what is a part of his dreams. Every night he dreams of a woman with one normal leg and one baby leg, lurching around with an axe. The rest of the novel is a series of bizarre and unexplained occurrences that have something to do with a man in a lab, a couple who are searching for Kraus, and Baby Leg, who tries to keep him from being found. The lines between dreams and reality are totally blurred, and the reader is left with no clues as to what is real and what exists only in Kraus's mind.
The second novel, The Harlequin & the Train by Tremblay starts out as a more straightforward horror novel, but soon becomes a reflection on choice versus chance, with cannibals. I researched this novella online, and apparently the small run of it's initial publication was interactive, and included Tremblay's instructions for highlighting certain parts of the novel with a yellow highlighter. (The color yellow is mentioned numerous time in the book.) I'm sorta bummed that I didn't have that interactive experience because I think it would have made this story more enlightening. (That's a terrible and totally unplanned pun.) So, I dug a little deeper and found a copy of the original novella for sale. I feel like I missed some important things in my first reading of this book, so I'm going to read it again once I receive the interactive copy. I've been thinking about the story a lot today, and the more I do, the more I'm convinced I need to read it again.
I'm really thankful that I discovered the Concord Free Press and was able to experience these two novellas that I'm sure I would not have discovered otherwise. I encourage you all to visit their website and give to a worthy cause in the name of books.