When I started reading this book it was headed to two or one star territory, then I started looking at it more like young adult horror, or EC pulp horror, and I really started liking it. The first story is the worst, and the first few are the weakest in the book.
After that, the ball gets rolling. "A Good Day For Dragons" is really for kids, but has a really neat twist at the end that I enjoyed. And "Blossoms in the Wind" is totally gay, about a kamikaze ghost saving his granddaughter from boarding one of the 9-11 planes. BUT, some of the other stuff is fantastic.
"Burning Man Decapitated in Fatal Fall" is short and hilarious, and the title will make perfect sense later. "Oilman: A Tale of the 'Little Brothers'" is apparently one of many stories he has about a race of evil little demon people, it was great. "Scared Crows" is a HELLBOY story, which is something I usually hate (writers working in other writers' creations, I mean. I love Hellboy), but the story was fantastic. "The Back of My Hands" is a gruesome black comedy about a good and evil twin. "The Screaming Head" sounds like a story my grandfather would have told me about the woods of East Texas. "Colt .24" is one of the best "don't make a deal with the devil stories" I've ever read, "The Compost Heap" is something that seems like it should have been in Creepshow Part I, etc. I don't want to go over every story, but about 75 percent are really great.
He has a lot in common with Stephen King, and not just because he happens to be a horror writer from Maine (but really, what are the chances of that? Horror writers in Maine are probably as common as funk musicians in Minnesota. You've got Prince, and...), he has the same kind of child-like glee writing his country-bumpkin or beer-swilling blue collar worker characters into these horrible, pulp comic situations, the colorful local language ("I'll be dipped in shit," didn't Jordy Verrill say those EXACT words in Creepshow?).
These are fun, fast stories. A lot of them have that Twilight Zone twist in them, which I just love, and they are all really easy to read. You could actually give most of these to a high school English class if you wanted. I think of this book as a more grown up version of the awesome Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark series that I ate up in elementary.