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Mad Hallelujah and other oddities

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“BEHOLD THESE MAD HALLELUJAHS, WE SCREAM INTO THE DARK…”

An already cracked marriage is obliterated with a single, destructive word…

A hiker is compelled to join a strange child, digging in the woods for truffles...

A clump of hair stuck in a drain turns out to be much more than it appears…

An experiment in rubberisation rebounds in violent fashion at a secret research facility…

A cruel mother's obession with roses leads to a disturbing and bloody transformation...

All this and more is held within these pages, waiting to be fed. Mad Hallelujah and other oddities is the debut poetry and short fiction collection from Owen Morgan, featuring 14 short stories and poems to make your skin crawl, your brain fizz, and your bones dance. Be warned, these stories will take you to bizarre, gory, and gloriously absurd places…

…but at least you’ll have some fun along the way.

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Owen Morgan is a writer from South Wales, UK. His work has, despite his best efforts, been published in places such as Aphotic Realm, Stinkwaves Magazine and Dimension Bucket.

Includes story notes from the author.





119 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 15, 2019

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About the author

Owen Morgan

3 books3 followers
Owen Morgan is a writer from South Wales, UK. His work has, despite his best efforts, been published in places such as Aphotic Realm, Skinwaves Magazine and Dimension Bucket.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Aiden Merchant.
Author 36 books73 followers
September 21, 2019
4.5/5 - Covers are important, especially for new authors. A handful of my favorite books this year were found this way. Owen Morgan’s debut collection, Mad Hallelujah and Other Oddities caught my eye the moment he started revealing its cover across social media. I didn’t know who he was or what he wrote, but the cover had my attention. And so, I kept my eyes out for it.

When the book released online, I immediately downloaded the Kindle edition (despite my overpowering stack of TBR titles and current reviews in progress). Over the course of two separated days, I read the collection with a sort of glee. This is a short collection, admittedly, but it packs an impressionable punch. With a sprinkling of tongue-in-cheek humor throughout, Morgan delivers a handful of strange and entertaining stories that would make King and Lutzke fans proud.

My original draft of this review had me outlining my favorite moments of the collection; but when I realized 85% of the stories were being noted (while others were being left off purely due to space), I erased the mess of a paragraph. The point I’m making is this: Mad Hallelujah is excessive fun. The Great Travelling Graveyard, The Clump, Flower of Flesh and Blood, The Elgin Incident…damn it, I loved this collection. The more I look back on it, the more I want to read it again.

Just do yourself a favor and put Owen Morgan on your radar. His brand of horror is too witty to ignore.
Profile Image for Yvonne (the putrid Shelf).
1,031 reviews391 followers
March 28, 2020
Mad Hallelujah and other Oddities is a work of literary genius.  Have you ever wished your spouse away with a single word?  How often have you seen a clump of hair stuck in the plug hole and pulled and been surprised by what lays beneath?  Or a beautiful rose bush that signifies something far deeper and darker.  Owen Morgan has delved feet first into topics that lay dormant in the back of our psyche and he has the key to unlock the cage to our darkest fears.  He has made the unthinkable totally and utterly realistic. 

My favourite short story within the collection was either; Flower of Flesh and Blood or The Elgin Incident.  Let me first examine Flower of Flesh and Blood.  It is no secret that I love horror stories that delve into the very scary world of body horror.  Haven’t we all wished our bullies should come to some kind of nasty fate?  Unfortunately, in this story it is the mother that is the abuser.  We have seen how she can inflict damage both mentally and physically upon her son.  She is a woman of little conscience.  Sam has suspected such evil and brutality from her before but with no proof.  He lands himself in hot water with her once again when he destroys her precious rose bushes.  The harrowing scene that follows is a difficult pill to swallow.  She beats her own son bloody with the deceased remnants of said rose bush.  He wishes that she would just go away and leave him.  He’s tired of her draconian ways – what follows is one of the best scenes in body horror I have read.  Gory and vivid, we see just how Morgan’s imagination can come into the fold. 

The Elgin Incident is a brilliant case study of how sometimes an idea should be left well alone.  Stuart Elgin is an incredibly intelligent man…too intelligent.  The idea of creating a real life flubber in a lab was, well, hilarious.  This story was deeply disturbing in its violence, but I couldn’t stop laughing.  It truly deserved a Darwin award.  What could go wrong when developing the world rubbiest rubber?  This is where we see Owen Morgan’s dark and sardonic sense of humour and it is divine!

Mad Hallelujah and Other Oddities is definitely for those that love their horror in bite sized portions.  Creepy and marvellous
Profile Image for Nat.
23 reviews1 follower
February 27, 2020
Accomplished prose and some fascinating stories, though I usually struggle with short stories as the hit rates are usually too low and I found that here. That said, I will keep an eye out for future works from this clearly talented author.
Profile Image for Jayanne Rahal.
410 reviews40 followers
January 11, 2020
I'm astounded by just how much I liked this collection. Short stories and I typically don't get on as a rule: my attention span struggles to remain invested in a book that has no narrative flow to it. This was a welcome break between longer novels and I found myself absolutely LOVING every story except two or three. Out of fourteen that's insane!

Mad Hallelujahs has it all: short bite sized poems, tongue in cheek humour, the eeriness of abject terror and the spine curdling grisle of body horror. In such a short time I had such a whirlwind of emotions thrust onto me. Suspense, mirth, and that rapt intensity only a good horror tale can deliver; absolutely my favourite short story collection I've read.
Profile Image for Jade.
30 reviews4 followers
January 16, 2020
This is a fantastically weird little book full of bizarre incidents and characters. I love the explanations of where the ideas came from because I did sit there wondering wtf. I especially love that one of them has possibly the nerdiest background story ever and it involves one of my favourite card characters. Nothing in the book is really what is expected.
Profile Image for Rachel Louise.
341 reviews7 followers
December 12, 2020
If you're an Abominable Book Club Box subscriber then you may already know that Mad Hallelujah is by Abominable's very own Owen Morgan. I was really looking forward to reading this, I love the tiny tales on the spookmarks so getting to read some more detailed stories was very exciting. It's also quite rare that I read anthologies so I'm always down for digging into some short stories when the opportunity arises.

Some of the stand out stories for me were The Great Travelling Graveyard, Curse Word and The Clump. Like most anthologies I found this was quite hit and miss, none of the stories or poems were bad, just some I preferred far more than others. I've also never been much of a fan of poetry but I actually did enjoy a couple of the poems, especially The Eternal Thicket because that last line leaves some rather funny images in your head.

I admit I don't have much to say about this short anthology of bizarre tales but I can say that if you like weird and wonderful stories and poetry then this may be the book for you. After all, who doesn't want to read about a giant moving wave of the dead and a strange clump of living hair?

Definitely a book for those who enjoy the weirder side of literature.

Rated: 3/5 Stars
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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