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review 2019-12-22 04:04
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Volume One
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Volume One - Laird Barron

Stopped at 56%. Hoopla says this title is unavailable now so I'll be returning to this again...at some point.

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text 2019-12-19 06:48
Reading progress update: I've read 51%.
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Volume One - Laird Barron
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text 2019-12-11 01:54
Reading progress update: I've read 25%.
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Volume One - Laird Barron
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review 2019-10-06 20:51
The Case Against Satan by Ray Russell
The Case Against Satan - Ray Russell,Laird Barron

 

Demons Square: Susan Garth is possessed, but how and to what purpose?

 

Susan Garth has been unable to attend mass for some time. Nausea overcomes her whenever she gets too close to the church. Her behavior has also been erratic, quarrelsome, and, at least once, obscene. Her father is dead set against a psychiatrist and so he asks the parish priest for help.

 

The priest is a recent transfer and has to battle with his modern sensibilities to believe in the evil that has taken over the girl. The page count is low, but the characters represent a neat cross-section of American Catholics in the early '60s. There was a lunatic pamphleteer, too, representing the very real prejudice Catholics still faced in that time.

 

I have not read 'The Exorcist', but many elements from the film version are present. Russell brings the devil in to modern times. Many have borrowed Russell's methods, but this still is genuinely scary.

 

 

 

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review 2018-07-02 00:00
The Croning
The Croning - Laird Barron I really enjoyed this book. The writing flowed very well, making this an easy read. The dialogue felt real and the figurative language was on point. The horror lay in the way Barron described things. At one point he compares an open cellar door to an open throat, which is quite the image. He excels at bringing to life descriptions of uneasiness in the face of lurking shadows.

The overall feeling of the book is that there's something wrong going on but you don't know quite what. It's a well-told dark, unsettling, and weird tale.
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