First edition, first printing hardcover with unclipped dust jacket, in very good condition. Light shelf wear to the jacket, and spine ends are slightly bumped. Otherwise, as unread. LW
4.25 stars Horror anthologies for me are usually hit and miss. I finish one remembering a few of the best but feeling the overall experience dampened by the ones I dislike. Happy to say this wasn't the case for this book. There's close to 30 stories here, so there are some weaker than others but I was very impressed by the overall quality. Some big names in horror took the opportunity to write unconvential stories out of their wheelhouse and it was great to see. The stories from Graham Masterson and Brian lumley are standout to me and I still think about the imagery they conjured for me now. This is a series so looking at buying the rest and seeing what they deliver.
‘Animal Life’ by Clive Barker ‘Out of the Woods’ by Ramsey Campbell ‘The Museum on Cyclops Avenue’ by Harlan Ellison ‘The Dead Cop’ by Dennis Etchison ‘To This Water (Johnstown, Pennsylvania 1889)’ by Caitlín R. Kiernan ‘A Really Game Boy’ by Brian Lumley ‘Underbed’ by Graham Masterton ‘Negative Equity’ by Paul J. McAuley ‘Absolute Zero’ by James Miller ‘Where the Bodies Are Buried 2020’ by Kim Newman ‘The Comfort of Stranglers’ by Nicholas Royle ‘Lily’s Whisper’ by Jay Russell ‘(Melodrama)’ by David J. Schow ‘Hell Hath Enlarged Herself’ by Michael Marshall Smith ‘Hunger: An Introduction’ by Peter Straub ‘The Rains’ by Steve Rasnic Tem ‘Ghost Music: A Memoir by George Beaune by Thomas Tessier ‘Something For Free’ by Conrad Williams
‘A Really Game Boy’ by Brian Lumley - The narrator's friend is a boy who puts worms in his mouth to scare girls. After the kid accidentally hangs himself flies lay eggs in his orifices. When the larvae wriggle from his mouth the narrator, who isn't very bright, just assumes that he's doing his trick again.
An excellent collection of fine horror stories - of course there are variations in terms of quality but I can't say any are really bad and my preferences for one story over another reflect taste rather then judgements of quality so I have no difficulty in highly recommending this anthology particularly if, like me, your taste for horror find satisfaction by preference in the short story format.
One quibble I would like to mention here is the extravagant praise for Harlan Ellison though the praise that '...It is long past time for him to be awarded the title 20th century Lewis Carroll...' arises not from the editors but the LA Times but they don't seem to disagree. I am afraid my limited reading of Mr. Ellison's oeuvre does not lend me to regard him as a great or even a significant writer.
Another excellent collection from Jones & Sutton, this gathers together the usual suspects but each provides a top-notch story. Stand-outs for me are the tales from Conrad Williams and Michael Marshall Smith. If you like short horror fiction, this is as good as place to delve as any!