Disclaimer: I received an e-ARC from netgalley in exchange for a review.
This short horror collection features satirical social commentary on the modern age often with a bloody twist. Personally unfortunately not a lot in here worked for me. While I enjoyed reading about the AI exorcism and the deadly injuries acquired in a new online trend, I also did not enjoy the way some of the satirised people were treated in the end. Mostly I have to say that the stories did fall a bit flat too me and did not dive deep enough into the topics they were satirizing and so I was left bored or feeling like it was too easily predictable, so all in all, only a two star read.
Below here there will be spoilers as I describe the various stories, including trigger warnings and some commentary on them.
They Say the Sky is Full of Snakewolfs: a short story about what to do when there's a monster in your home, but there's also monsters outside, interesting and tense and a really quite good investigation of domestic abuse. TW: graphic domestic abuse, rape, violence, gore, murder
Get Me Out of this Shimmering Oasis: Wellness influencer is invited to a new resoir, somethings off though and soon she will realize it too. Interesting concept but it quickly loses steam as the big twist behind this one becomes quite obvious. Personally it does not sit well with me that the influencer claims very many rare illnesses, because this idea of a faker just makes life so much harder for people actually affected. I think the shitty sides of wellness culture can be much better explored by showing who is exploited by the people in it than call sick people fakers. Finally I also did not feel like the implications of the ending sat too well with me. TW: ableism
Karen: A woman chooses vehicular manslaughter as a solution to all her problems, satirically evil in a very Kill Your Friends way it follows am eating disordered Karen who receives a device that transmits her thoughts to those around her, could have been interesting if it had been snappier, we know shes a fatphobic pos after the first two times she kills and it just gets unrealistic after a while. I did enjoy this story more than Get Me Out (...), but again I hated the way she was punished in the end (disability is Not a punishment and seeing it used that way while the story literally uses the c-slur in the same part is just... really bad). I also don't think that a story that supposedly satirizes fatphobia and fatphobic societal ideas of fat people being lazy (etc.) really works if by the end the character is told that without her leg she too will now be unable to work out and eat her pain away and grow fat due to being lazy. I would have found it more interesting if her comeuppance had been something that didn't reproduce harmful tropes such as the disabled & disfigured villain where their battered outsides finally match their horrible inside thoughts. Unfortunately a case of a story that could be interesting that just really got ruined by the end for me. TW: eating disorder, fatphobia, murder, ableism, c-slur
The Shoe Box Challenge: A new tiktok challenge leads to some gruesome injuries that get shared far and wide online and so find their own kind of audience. Features some really gruesome gorey descriptions, which I liked and the story is fun. I enjoyed that it explored the bloodthirsty side of potentially harmful online trends, while including some social criticism at the same time. TW: gore, injury
Xorcize.me: A interview of a new start up that offers AI exorcisms. Interesting exploration of tech bros, combining AI and religion and creating an really quite interesting world which I enjoyed reading about a lot. TW: murder, gore, rape
The People Around You: What if you went to the bathroom at a bar and when you came out your friends are turned into charicatures of 4chan misogynist, instagram influencer and hysteric buzzword warrior? Could have been fun & I enjoy the gore, but the end kind of stole a lot of the story's power unfortunately. TW: misogyny, violence, murder