Monday, April 30, 2012

Angel Board, (Samhain Publishing), by Kristopher Rufty

Kristopher Rufty's debut novel, Angel Board, is an interesting twist on the classic possession story; but in this case, instead of demonic possession, the protagonist faces what could almost be considered angelic possession.  A fast-paced thriller that offers some intriguing concepts about the hereafter, Angel Board is another solid rock in the foundation of Samhain's fledgling Horror Line.

David Barker has decided enough is enough.  His dreams have died, his long-time girlfriend has cheated on him, and for him, life holds no more meaning.  The time has come for David to take that "big ride", because he's tired of enduring the only thing this world has to offer: pain and disappointment. 

As he slips off this Earth, however - slain by his own hand - he's stunned by a vision of inconceivable beauty. A white, pure being that fills his soul with love, acceptance, and a desire to live.  This being...she, David is convinced...pulls him back from the brink of sure death, giving him a new lease on life.

And so David's new "relationship" begins.  With the aide of an "angel board" - the divine version of an Ouija Board - he's able to contact his savior. And learns, to his astonishment, that his "guardian angel" was doing more than just her "job".  She saved David because she loves him, and desperately wants to be with him.  Filled with new energy and vigor, David "cleans" up his act, quits drinking and smoking, his angel's love literally making him a new man.

The only problem?

Apparently, God isn't the only jealous divine being.  Because David's angel is jealous.  Maniacally so. And perhaps, falling from grace to be with her human charge, not entirely sane. Which doesn't bode well for anyone who dares step between her and her beloved.  David's miserable boss, his sister, ex-girlfriend, even mother...nothing but obstacles to be removed.  

This guardian angel will not be denied.  She will be with David.  The consequences, ironically, be damned. 

Angel Board's pace is excellent and it's an engaging read. It also offers interesting ruminations on the nature of angels, their servanthood to God, and what happens when one of them chooses to rebel like the Greatest Rebel of All Time.  At times, however, it's a little hard to feel sympathy for David.  Though everyone reacts differently to certain situations, his reasons for committing suicide don't play over well.  Also, there are some arcane explanations and devices introduced by a paranormal investigator late in the novel that fall a little flat.

Rufty executes some clever and intricate plotting near the end, however, taking readers on twists and turns while avoiding the dreaded pitfall of dues ex machina.  That, and the strength of the novel's prose and its pace make it an enjoyable read, boasting a promising future for Kristopher Rufty.



Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Westlake Soul (ChiZine Publications) by Rio Youers


If a single word can be used to describe a book, then Westlake Soul can only be described as transcendent.

The titular character is aptly named, because a soul is all that Westlake has left. His body was destroyed in a tragic accident, leaving the former surfing champion and all-around good guy in a permanent vegetative state. Nevertheless, he considers himself a superhero—his intellectual iceberg has flipped, giving him access to that mythic ninety-percent of the mind that the rest of us mere mortals can only glimpse below the churning of our surface thoughts. He’s now super-intelligent, can “release” and travel across the world outside of his body, visit other souls, and communicate with the family dog. Still, he must constantly struggle across the vistas of the mind with his arch-nemesis, Dr. Quietus, to stay alive and persevere.

Youers (Dark Dreams, Pale Horses and Mama Fish) builds this novel on the strength of his prose. He not only paints a picture of Westlake and his vivid mental landscape, but he performs that peculiar magic of the truly gifted writer—he pulls you into the heart of the story and makes you live there for a while. He accomplishes this by letting Westlake tell his own story in the manner in which only he can.

Every word, every delicate phrase, glows and vibrates with Westlake’s sly and optimistically world-weary voice. Witty, compassionate, and full of life, Westlake is the quintessential fighter—always striving for “more”. Though he is a superhero, he’s not perfect and is still human—which is the entire point. As he powerlessly watches the people he cares about ride out the curls of their lives, Westlake learns to absorb the emotional auras of others and incorporate them into psychic building blocks through which he can affect the world around him—essentially relearning how to build a human life. Whether or not Westlake is actually super-intelligent or if all that he describes is merely the ranting of a trapped mind, is unimportant and beside the point. Westlake’s understanding of the human condition ultimately transcends his physical limitations.

This novel transcends genre. Youers’ lyrical prose transcends literary convention. Westlake himself transcends the page and lives in hearts of all who encounter him. Anyone who finishes this book and does not carry a bit of Westlake with them literally has no soul.


Visit http://rioyouers.com/

Reviewed by Shedrick Pittman-Hassett 

 Shedrick Pittman-Hassett is a full-time librarian and part-time writer trying to do that the other way around. He has written reviews for Library Journal and has also had two articles published in the award-winning Knights of the Dinner Table magazine. Shedrick currently resides in Denton, Texas ("The Home of Happiness") with his lovely wife and the obligatory demon-spawn cats. When not writing, gaming, or watching cheezy kung-fu flicks, he can be found in a pub enjoying a fine brew. Visit him at Serial Distractions.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Dark Inspiration, (Samhain Horror), by Russell James

Russell James' debut novel for Samhain Horror, Dark Inspiration, is an entertaining read for those who enjoy classic, cursed-home stories. Offering solid characterization, tight prose and consistent pacing, it's a fine read invoking the classic themes of possession and obsession overtaking the unwitting in their pursuit of personal gain.

Doug and Laura Locke's life has stalled. Though Laura's happy teaching in an inner city school and Doug's carved out a lucrative career writing for the tabloids, neither of them are satisfied with their lives. Laura feels disconnected from Doug, and though Doug has gained a measure of notoriety, dreams of writing that "Great American Novel" have all but faded from the horizon.

After a school shooting that lands Laura in the hospital, they realize the need for change.  With a new sense of togetherness and resolve, they purchase and move to an old horse farm in Tennessee.  Laura lands a long-term substitute position in the local school district almost as soon as they move, and the beautiful farmhouse they've purchased - for a "steal" - works like a tonic on Doug's long atrophied muse.  It's not long before Laura feels right at home in her new classroom, and Doug's pounding away at the keys, writing as he never has before.

But all is not well at the Galaxy Farm.  For this house holds secrets.  Its previous owners died tragic deaths, and no one in town wants to talk about them. Before long, Doug discovers the attic...and all the wondrous "things" it contains.  Laura becomes enthralled with two ghostly visitors - little girls who died in the pound outside the house - and neither Doug nor Laura are aware of the insidious, creeping force working into them, from the house itself.  Even with the help of a local, recently-divorced psychic warned by bloody premonitions of danger, it might be too late for Doug and Laura to escape the malevolent entity that owns Galaxy Farm. 

Dark Inspiration is another solid offering from Samhain Horror.  There's nothing astoundingly new in the story of an evil entity haunting a house, tempting and corrupting a writer as he labors on his first novel, but it's still competently done here, and quite frankly, it's not trying to be anything else other than what it is.  There's a nice, unique angle involving the Egyptian occult, and the story does delve a little deeper than the standard: "person who died bad death haunting old house."  Though the story's resolution feels a little rushed, Dark Inspiration is another solid contender in the Samhain Horror line-up.


Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

The Dropper, (Cemetery Dance), by Ron McLarty

Full of substance, tempered by an unflinching realism, The Dropper is an emotionally complex portrait of a confused and determined young man aching for something better, unable to provide it, but still fighting to, anyway.  This is the type of story that defies easy categorization, for all those who love rooting for the underdog, the fighter in all of us.

Albert "Shoe" Horn is an apprentice plumber and part-time boxer in 1922 England.  A seventeen year old young man who's been forced to grow up far too quickly after his mother's death, Shoe is saddled with caring for his alcoholic, often abusive father and special needs brother, Bobby, while trying to make a life for himself as a plumber, and a name for himself as a fighter. 

During the day he lugs his tool box around town, wading through sewage and water, fixing pipes and water closets while his employer is busy down at "the club".  At night he "goes under the lights", carving out a reputation by the cut of his fists.  And somewhere in between he watches after Bobby and romances two different women, one a romantic ideal who dreams of being an actress, the other a woman Shoe could easily marry.  If he could ever make himself stay in one place with one woman for any length of time.

Things are changing for Shoe, though.  One night, under the lights, he deals a head-blow to a friend that turns lethal, and becomes haunted - either supernaturally, or psychologically - by his friend's resulting death.  And Molly has tired of Shoe's indecision, forcing him to make a choice Shoe isn't sure he's capable of.  And, worst of all, is Bobby.  It's become painfully clear that Bobby's needs have grown beyond Shoe's ability to manage, and this seventeen year old is suddenly faced with the very real possibility that he can longer care for his brother. 

And then there's Shoe's worst nightmare: The Dropper. A specter of darkness and rumor, a midwife-turned-child murderer...or so the story goes.   She haunts Shoe's steps, speaking in cryptic half-truths, and Shoe fears even more for his growing inability to care for Bobby...because he fears that Bobby may be The Dropper's next victim.

Haunting and melancholic, with the lightest touch of the supernatural, The Dropper is sure to be one of the year's best novels.  This isn't a "ghost story" or "dark fiction" or anything like that.  This is simply storytelling at its finest, a tale about a young man who never quite figures things out, but never drops his fists, either.

Visit www.ronmclarty.comBuy it today.

Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Shoebox Train Wreck, (Chizine Publications), by John Mantooth

John Mantooth's Shoebox Train Wreck is a unique, startling, moving collection of genre-twisting stories that play out in those shadowed places that linger as the sun goes down.  These stories happen in the marginalized, dark nooks and crannies of life that most folks only dare look at out of the corner of their eyes, if at all.  Some of the best stories are:

"A Long Fall Into Nothing", in which an unhealthy, symbiotic relationship spirals down to its only, inevitable conclusion. "The Water Tower", in which two friends embark on a journey and find something more horrible and sadder than the dead "alien" they'd been looking for. 


"Walk the Wheat", a touching - and eerie - story in which brotherhood bonds stretch past the grave.  "This Is Where the Road Ends", a story about a man who can't let go of his guilt...and also can't bring himself to admit it to the one he loves. "Saving Doll", an especially wrenching story about a high school track star trying to free herself from her family's squalid destiny, but to do so, she must face a shocking betrayal, rather than run from it. "The Cecilia Paradox", in which the future may be televised, or apocalyptic, or staged...or all three. "Chicken", a story about a boy pretending to be fearless, and the boy he meets who really does fear nothing. Or, perhaps everything.

The three best stories are "Sucky", "James" and the collection's title story, "Shoebox Train Wreck."  In "Sucky", a boy with special needs discovers that his greatest fear will deliver a kind of mournful, partial salvation. "James" is a wonderfully non-linear story about those individuals - or, maybe, that same individual - we encounter throughout life who never fits in anywhere, and eventually fades away.   And "Shoebox Train Wreck", a story in which a man's grief and sadness holds back more than just his own life.

The best thing about this collection is despite it's shadowed nature...it's not needlessly grim. Often, collections like these boast stories ending in despair and pointlessness, offering no resolution of any kind. That doesn't happen here.  These stories feature broken, confused, wandering souls.  But many of them find a kind of resolution or peace, or, at the very least, discover the hope of such peace.  And that lifts this collection above many others.

Visit jpmantooth.blogspot.com. Buy the ebook or print version today. 

Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

At the End of the Road (Berkley Trade ) by Grant Jerkins


It seems like everyone has that one special summer, that point that marks the separation between the carefree days of childhood and the burdens of adulthood. It’s a common experience—which is why it makes such a rich setting for any coming of age story. For Kyle Edwards, that summer will be infused with terror, violence, and the end of all innocence.

It’s 1976 and the Edwards family lives at the end of a long dirt road in rural Georgia. One day, young Kyle is riding his bike down the road when a fast moving car swerves to miss him. Looking back, he sees a bloodied woman emerge from the wreckage and start to make her way towards him, asking for help. Panicked, he rides as fast as he can toward home and says nothing about the accident he caused. When no evidence of the incident is found, Kyle, in the classic manner of children with other things to do, puts the “reticulated woman” out of his head. Meanwhile, as their parents’ marriage quietly falls apart, Kyle forms a bond with his younger sister, Grace, against the bullying of their older siblings and the crueler depredations of another band of teenagers. This bond is soon tested—and manipulated—by Kenny Ahearn, the “paralyzed man” who lives down the road and has a backyard full of secrets, a strange new pet in his attic, and a heart blacker than anything Kyle or Grace have ever imagined.

Jerkins (“A Very Simple Crime”) creates a beautifully suspenseful story filled with dread, cruelty, and—most of all—power. Kenny Ahearn is one of the most unspeakably evil creatures encountered in print in some time. His diabolical ability to control Kyle and draw him into his blood-soaked web is truly inspired—and, above all, chilling. The writing is top-notch; Jerkins’ prose is lyrical, evocative, and layered. The picturesque setting—a long, lonely road through wide, open spaces—serves as the perfect contrast to the stifling, closed-in terror that Ahearn represents. Further, as Kyle is drawn into the Paralyzed Man’s clutches, the boy’s emotional world turns in on itself, which serves to increase the novel’s already high levels of suspense and icy despair.

At the End of the Road is a completely gripping, bone-chillingly disturbing, read. Highly recommended.



Reviewed by Shedrick Pittman-Hassett

Shedrick Pittman-Hassett is a full-time librarian and part-time writer trying to do that the other way around. He has written reviews for Library Journal and has also had two articles published in the award-winning Knights of the Dinner Table magazine. Shedrick currently resides in Denton, Texas ("The Home of Happiness") with his lovely wife and the obligatory demon-spawn cats. When not writing, gaming, or watching cheezy kung-fu flicks, he can be found in a pub enjoying a fine brew. Visit him at Serial Distractions.

The Boy Who Shoots Crows (Berkeley Trade) by Randall Silvis


When speaking of depression, the experience that springs most readily to mind is sadness; a melancholy so profound that its victims are weighed down into a completely inert state. What many do not realize is that depression can also represent a completely debilitative case of self-absorption. The depressed person is engaged in a constant examination of the inner mirrors of their soul and battles their loathing of what those mirrors reveal. And while the person is caught in a looking-glass maze of self-recrimination and doubt, they lose the ability, or even the desire, to interact in a meaningful way with the people with whom they come in contact.

On the surface, Randall Silvis’ “The Boy Who Shoots Crows” involves the disappearance of twelve-year-old Jesse Rankin, a troubled boy living with an alcoholic father and his victimized mother in a small town with few options. He is known to go out to the woods that separate his family’s trailer from the Dunleavy farmhouse and shoot at the crows that gather there --either from boredom or as a release from his tragic, and far-too-ordinary, life. Charlotte has only recently arrived in town, bringing with her the demons birthed from her poisonous marriage and bitter divorce. Questions quickly arise as to Charlotte’s involvement in Jesse’s disappearance and how much she knows of his ultimate fate.

Silvis presents a tried-and-true premise with the promise of an intriguing mystery. Instead, he takes a risk and performs a unique literary balancing act. While he sets the scene for a traditional mystery story--complete with a quaint farm community, a stolid small town sheriff, and charming neighbors--Silvis chooses to allow his protagonist’s descent into despair to serve as the novel’s primary engine, not the mystery investigation. It is a gamble that largely works due to Silvis’ ability to infuse each passage with heavy emotion and to immerse the reader in the inner world of the main character, Charlotte Dunleavy. As Charlotte’s inner turmoil grows, it colors her perception of the world around her and her ability to engage with her neighbors and potential friends. Silvis brilliantly describes the kaleidoscopic point-of-view through Charlotte begins to view her surroundings, taking the reader along for the downhill ride into an inevitable, though satisfying, conclusion. What happened to Jesse is merely the catalyst of the plot. What the novel is actually about is the muddled paths down which our perceptions, distorted by the funhouse mirrors of our introspection, can bring us. 


 
Visit http://randallsilvis.wordpress.com/


Reviewed by Shedrick Pittman-Hassett

Shedrick Pittman-Hassett is a full-time librarian and part-time writer trying to do that the other way around. He has written reviews for Library Journal and has also had two articles published in the award-winning Knights of the Dinner Table magazine. Shedrick currently resides in Denton, Texas ("The Home of Happiness") with his lovely wife and the obligatory demon-spawn cats. When not writing, gaming, or watching cheezy kung-fu flicks, he can be found in a pub enjoying a fine brew. Visit him at Serial Distractions.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Dark Companions, (Samhain Publishing), by Ramsey Campbell

There are very few horror authors writing today who possess the blessed gift of invoking disquiet and unease without ever showing exactly what the source of that unease is. Writers such as these have the uncanny ability to tap into basic, human fears, giving them shadowy form through artful prose, sleight of hand, and misdirection.   Thankfully, one such writer is still going strong, producing new work, as well as seeing his out of print work breathing new life through Samhain Publishing's new Horror Line

That writer is Ramsey Campbell, and bringing him aboard is one of the smartest things Samhain could've done to give their fledgling horror line credibility.  For Campbell is one of those writers with a knack for making us afraid...

Of nothing. A shadow on the wall.  A moist draft wafting up from the basement. A light, papery scuttling from a dark corner.  And in this reprint of his collection Dark Companions, terrifyingly and delightfully subtle horrors abound.  But the most important thing is the core of these stories: human fears.  Nightmares.  Mundane worries and haunting tragedy.  Many of the stories in this collection initially read like straight literary works commenting on the human experience, and Ramsey's touch is so gradual, you don't notice the shadows growing quietly in the corner....

Until it's almost too late.  Among the best in the collection are:

"Down There", in which a secretary learns in horrific fashion that something soft and moist and creeping lives in the sub-basement of her office's temporary location.  "The Proxy", in which a ghost of a different kind - not even the ghost of a person at all - haunts a woman's house, eventually claiming her husband. "The Depths", in which a writer's sudden, graphic insight into horrors too grotesque to mention proves more than just grisly inspiration for slasher fiction...but premonitions of actual events. 

"Out of Copyright", an always timely piece about an unscrupulous anthology editor that pilfers the wrong story.  "The Invocation", a classic 'be careful what you wish for' story, in which a college student wishes the noisy, troublesome old lady living above his apartment would shut up...for good.  "The Pattern", possibly the BEST story in the collection, about the "echoes" that are left in the wake of tragedy, and their unexpected effects on all of Time.

"The Show Goes On", a terrifying allegory of a store owner "walling off" memories of his youth and the now-defunct cinema next to his store. "Call First", in which a nosy library clerk gets more than he bargains for when snoops where he's not meant to. And finally, the collection's title piece, "Dark Companion", in which a man's phantasmagoric reliving of old carnival days takes a wrong turn...literally.  

Ramsey Campbell's work isn't for everyone.  But for those looking for something finer, something of substance, with subtle horrors woven in artful tapestries of smooth, flowing prose...he could be a door into an entirely new and much needed  horror fiction experience.  

Visit Ramsey Campbell's website.  Browse his titles at Samhain. Order the ebook or paperback of Dark Companions today. 

Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com. 

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Killing Ghost, (Cemetery Dance), by Christopher Ransom

Christopher Ransom's latest, Killing Ghost, is creepy, very modern exploration of the psyche and self, dressed up in the trappings of a classic ghost story.  Ransom exploits the first person narrative skillfully, manipulating the reader in unobtrusive ways.  The result is a thoroughly entertaining - and often thought provoking - journey into a man's search for both healing and self-identity.

James Hastings had a unique job.  Working as a body double for the wildly and controversial white-rapper Ghost, James spent several years of his life pretending to be someone else. He dressed like Ghost, sported matching tattoos, walked and talked like him, even spent time in the gym matching Ghost's muscular physique.

And it's a great gig.  Pays for a life-style James and his wife Stacey couldn't have otherwise afforded.  But exposure to the glamor and excesses of the entertainment industry takes its toll.  James' script writing for his own work goes nowhere.  He's on the road all the time.  Stacey is left at home, slipping deeper into depression, relying more and more on drugs - both prescribed and illicit - to make it through each day.

Worse, James is losing touch with who he is. Is he James Hasting, a guy lucky to land such a lucrative gig?  Or is he Ghost? Who's the rapper, and who's the body double?

When Stacey is killed by an apparent hit and run outside their home - while James is sleeping off another arduous road trip pretending to be Ghost - everything falls apart.  James quits the life.  Becomes a recluse.  A voyeur who lives vicariously through others by watching them through a high powered telescope from his home. A refugee from life, in all aspects.

Until Annette Copeland moves in next door.  An attractive, scarred widow looking to start over.  At first,  this seems like the perfect way for James to heal, by starting over himself.  But there's more to Annette than meets the eye.  Her past is full of shocking half-truths and clever deception.  Also, James can't shake the feeling that something lives in his house.  Something left over from Stacey, a residue.  And it either wants to get rid of Annette...

Or take her over completely.  

But nothing here is what it seems.  Not Annette, the eerie presence he feels in his home...not even James himself. It's said that truth will set one free.  In this case, the truth may destroy everything James thinks he knows.
 
Killing Ghost is a surreal and enthralling experience from page one. Ransom's deft narrative touch pulls readers into James Hastings's fractured world, leaving doubt about his reliability and his sanity. This one is not to be missed.

Visit Christopher Ransom at www.ransomesque.comPre-order it today.

Kevin Lucia is a Contributing Editor for Shroud Magazine and a blogger for The Midnight Diner. His short fiction has appeared in several anthologies. He's currently finishing his Creative Writing Masters Degree at Binghamton University, he teaches high school English and lives in Castle Creek, New York with his wife and children. He is the author of Hiram Grange & The Chosen One, Book Four of The Hiram Grange Chronicles, and he's currently working on his first novel. Visit him on the web at www.kevinlucia.com.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

JOHN CONSTANTINE, HELLBLAZER: PHANTOM PAINS (Vertigo) by Peter Milligan


"I'm scared. Yes, me, scared! The thought of dying and never seeing Epiphany again...it actually hurts. Like the phantom ache of a missing limb. And I thought I was immune from that fear stuff. Untouchable... What's changed?"

If you've ever read any of the previous adventures of John Constantine, reading that little passage probably makes you ask the same question. Phantom Pains is the fifth collection of comics in writer Peter Milligan's run on Hellblazer, and it nicely tells its own stories while advancing the larger plots that have been running through the title for the last few years.

Phantom Pains, the five part story that takes up the bulk of the book, deals with the fallout of Constantine's recent little crazy spell in which he ripped off his own thumb and a doppelgänger was giving him trouble (all covered in previous books). As the little stub really freaks out his wife and (completely ruining a rather intimate moment that the two are trying to share), John realizes that he needs to get this sorted out quickly. Worse, Gemma Masters has a few big problems with her Uncle John Constantine due to a misunderstanding regarding the aforementioned doppelgänger, enlisting the services of some creepy tatooed women who subsequently summon a demonic harpy.

In the first Milligan/ Bisley tale, a certain number-cruncher named Marcus has gotten exceptionally good at trading and investing his money. His company has grown pretty large, but he doesn't know there is a very old debt to be paid by those who use the algorithms he's been using. Constantine is around when a demon who hasn't been seen since the time of the ancient druids comes back to settle the score.

Inside sends Constantine to jail, where he takes care of a demon that has been causing some problems with the prisoners. It gives Bisley a chance to draw some demented characters and serves as a nice closing chapter for the latest book in the Hellblazer series.

Not enough writers get to really take their time in relating the adventures of John Constantine, and it's nice to see what Peter Milligan has been building throughout more than thirty issues of Hellblazer. His Constantine is pitch perfect, always stumbling into his next predicament, always saying the wrong thing at the wrong time, and always making it by on about ten percent skill and ninety percent luck. While you could just crack open Phantom Pains and be solidly entertained for an hour or two it would certainly be worth it to read Milligan's work on the series in its entirety.

There are no slouches in the art department: Giuseppe Camuncoli and Stephano Landini handle the majority of the chores in Phantom Pains and their crisp linework tells the story nicely. Whenever Simon Bisley is involved he does tend to take the spotlight though, and it's a real joy to see his art on the two "bookends" of this collection of comics, High Frequency Man and Inside.


Review by Christopher Larochelle


Christopher Larochelle is buried under a huge pile of comics. At least that's his excuse for not updating his blog (where he used to write about them from time to time): www.clarocomics.blogspot.com. Visit it and encourage him to get back to updating.

Monday, April 2, 2012

BLOOD SOCIETY (Necro Publications), by Jeffery Thomas


It’s tempting to start off with a trite rant about how defanged and bloodless vampire stories have become, but Blood Society isn’t really about vampires. I don’t just mean in the sense that we never truly know what protagonist Dragna and his ilk are; the monsters simply are not the focus. This is more of a traditional gangster story with the presence of vampires being used as a metaphor for the parasitic nature of the mafia. That’s where things get interesting.

 Back in the early 1900’s, Attilio Augusta met a woman who turned him into something other than human: an immortal with the ability to transform into a hideous and ravenous beast. Unsure of what to do with his new unlife, he opts for following the family tradition of becoming a Mafioso. The rest of the book chronicles his life among Italian-American mobsters until his eventual reunion with the one who turned him and a run in with rivals like unto himself. Hijinks, blood and bodies ensue.

 Dragna (Attilio’s immortal pseudonym) is no Don Corleone. He runs his organization with a firm fist and sheds whatever blood is needed, but spends quite a bit of time reflecting on how he feeds upon society and the destruction his parasitism helps to wreck. Consequences follow him around like a shadow, destroying everything that matters to him and he is never truly at peace with what he does. This internal conflict within a type of tale that is usually too morally simplistic is refreshing, to say the least.

Jeffery Thomas also does some amusing things with the vampire aspect. Right off the bat (yes, that pun was intentional), he is shown to be a violent and predatory and it is always nice to see vamps using their teeth for more than biting pillows during Mormon-friendly sex. At the same time, he toys with the traditional vamp tropes, warping them into a new being that may not even be vampire. Best of all, none of the characters are magically aware of what they are or all of the rules and reasons of their condition (I always hate it when characters “just know” damn near everything). They’re just kids trying to figure out who and what they are, knowing only that they seem to be immortal, drink blood, turn into a monstrous form and travel between alternate realities at will.

On a negative note, the cover art is a tad uninspired and bland. As much as we get told not to judge a book by its cover, it’s sad to see this from Necro, a company I can usually depend on for high quality presentation. More pressingly, Dragna’s journey has no real arc to it. ***warning: minor vague spoilers may be present*** The end seems to point to a redemption through sacrifice but I don’t quite buy it, Dragna never seems to change in any fundamental way. ***End possible alert*** That may very well be the point of the metaphor of the nature of the mafia, but it comes across as cheap and is unfulfilling.

Overall, Blood Society is an intriguing take on two overused genres that blurs them in a way that makes a statement while drenching us with blood. Can’t complain about that.


Reviewed by Anton Cancre

Anton Cancre is one of those rotting, pus-filled thingies on the underside of humanity that your mother always warned you about. He has oozed symbolic word-farms onto the pages of Shroud, Sex and Murder and Horrorbound magazines as well as The Terror at Miskatonic Falls, an upcoming poetry anthology by Shroud Publishing and continues to vomit his oh-so-astute literary opinions, random thoughts and nonsense at antoncancre.blogspot.com. No, he won't babysit you pet shoggoth this weekend. Stop asking.