Retrato do autor

Andrew Lennon

Autor(a) de A Life To Waste

20+ Works 107 Membros 11 Críticas

Obras por Andrew Lennon

A Life To Waste (2013) 31 exemplares
In Darkness, Delight: Masters of Midnight (2019) — Editor — 11 exemplares
Ode To Death (2019) 8 exemplares
Keith (2017) 8 exemplares
Time: A Short Story of Love (2015) 7 exemplares
Bound (2016) 7 exemplares
Twisted Shorts (2015) 7 exemplares
The Pigeon 2 exemplares
A Taste of Fear (2016) 2 exemplares
Une vie gâchée (2017) 2 exemplares
In Darkness, Delight: Fear the Future (2021) — Editor — 2 exemplares

Associated Works

Dark Tides: A Charity Horror Anthology (2019) — Contribuidor — 11 exemplares
In Darkness, Delight: Creatures of the Night (2019) — Editor — 8 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

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Membros

Críticas

This book is short stories mixed with horror poems and I really enjoyed all the stories in the book!

I will set out the titles of the stories along with a cryptic note of what the story is about without giving away spoilers. :) Also I am just doing the stories and not the poems.

House of Illusion: Two teens go on a carnival ride into terror and come out "changed".

Lunchtime: Mmmm.....good, but wait....what is in this meal?!

Ghost Story: Don't take loved ones for granted.

Caravan: A safe haven becomes a scene of a crime.

Buried: The feelings of death.

Santa Claus Comes At Night: One family finds out the hard way that not all good things come from Santa appearing in the home.

Dog Race: Human vs. Dog - who will win the race and which one will survive?

Trying To Write A Horror Story: A nutso #1 fan goes to extremes with an author.

Visiting Time: There is no such things as zombies, right?

Red Shoes: A serial killer gets more than he bargained for when he tries to kill someone.

The Secret Life of My Imaginary Friend: Who you are with is not always the person you think you know.

Lover: A wife "goes around the bend" with her husband and has a bloody good time with him.

One Night in Hotel: Hotel room haunted? An entity makes its presence known, but is that really what has invaded the room?

That is about as much as I can give out on a review of each book as the stories are short so cannot reveal too much. Giving this book four stars!





… (mais)
 
Assinalado
BookNookRetreat7 | Jul 25, 2022 |
I don’t know if it was accidental or deliberate, but the predominant theme of this anthology is grief.

Grief is a peculiar thing, not really horror but painful. But, in some sense, it’s often a sign you were lucky – lucky enough to know something or someone enough to grieve their passing. But, of course, grief can be the start of a more interesting story.

I bought this story for William Meikle’s “Refuge”, one of his Sigil and Totem stories, a series entirely built on grief and loss. Here, Meikle works another variation on that series’ central idea. The narrator is an Arab refuge living in London. He works at a pub where he catches the bad attentions of Wilkins whom he insults. This anthology is full of stories with progressive pieties and clichés, and this one fall in that category, yet another story with the modern obsession about racism and discrimination. Meikle conveniently does not make our protagonist a devout Moslem so he retains our sympathy. There is a bit of invade-the-world, invite-the-world theme here when the narrator replies, to Wilkins’ insult, that he’s in London “Because ignorant fascists just like you blew my family out of their shoes.” The story will take both Wilkins and the protagonist to a Sigils and Totems house where the dead can, in some form, live again. I suppose Meikle is saying we are all bound together by grief, but, frankly, I’m always going to sympathize with the Crusader over the Saracen.

“Angel Wings” from Paul Michaels, is another story dealing with grief. The horror is nothing supernatural just loneliness and isolation. Our 11-year old protagonist, Bobby Granger, has lost his mother. His father is distant and contemptuous of the notion, which his wife held, that people have souls. Bobby is a “soft atheist” warring with the need for belief. He comes across what is purported to be angel wings on a school trip to a museum of religious artifacts. He becomes rather obsessed with them with, of course, bad consequences.

“Letters” from Michael Bray is about that madness that can come from grief. Miles and Bronnie were a “couple’. Bronnie doesn’t seem unhappy but, one day, she suddenly kills herself. Michael is despondent and a therapist suggests he write his feelings out in letters to Bronnie. He does – and gets letter in returns.

And we get another grieving protagonist in Jason Parent’s “Violet”. Ed grieves for his dead wife. Their sole daughter is long dead too. Except Ed doesn’t go crazy. He still does have his beloved, if very old and infirm, dog Violet. But a nasty, self-righteous woman in the apartment complex, Gladys, says he should just put Violet down. Ed has some sympathy for the abrasive Gladys. She is a hospice nurse also caring for her disabled husband. But then, one day, Gladys takes matters into her own hands and kills Violet – “for her own good”. So Ed takes steps.

While I enjoyed a few stories in this collection, the only one of those that stuck in my mind was John McNeed’s “The Dogshit Gauntlet”. Grief here leads to something truly weird. Our hero is Paul, a lonely man who has trouble talking with women. Some mornings, when he he’s running late in catching a bus, he goes through a nasty, rundown alley full of dogshit, and there’s always the same woman at a window staring down into it. One morning he chances to meet Maddy when they exchange a few words after she helps him clean some dog crap off his shoe. They meet several times, and Paul begins to look forward to meeting her; they learn more about each other. One morning, he sees Maddy in the alley with a dazed look on her face after she comes out of the alley. She seems frightened. We’ll see the connection between Maddy, that woman, and the alley in a tale of madness and strangeness in this skillful tale of urban alienation and realistic psychology.

More grief in Mark Matthews’ “Tattooed All in Black”. Here the protagonist is mourning the loss of his wife from cancer. Before she died, she told him they would “commune again”. He comes to believe there is no after life otherwise his beloved Lara would return. He gets a dog. He also takes to waking up every morning at 3:15 AM since he’s heard that’s when spirits return to the Earth. He gets a Ouija board. No communication comes through it. But he meets a kind neighbor woman. But even when they are sexually intimate, he projects Lara on to her. So, he decides to end it all, and we get a surprise ending, but the story is a bit muddled in the telling. Still it’s a story of faith rejected with tragic consequences.

Given that the anthology’s biographical notes say Espi Kvlt is a “nonbinary writer who specializes in speculative fiction . . . and a sex worker by night”, I’m not surprised “Pulsate” is a tale of tattoos and extreme self-mutilation. That narrator, Peter, feels the absence of his sister Delilah, who was never born because his mother seems to have miscarried after being beaten by Peter’s father. One of Peter’s new tattoos takes on the appearance of the woman he imagines Delilah would have been, so Peter takes steps to reify Delilah.

The twisting paths that grief takes people on is no the only theme here.

We also get the good old horror motif where the narrator may be crazy or he may be perceiving something real in Ryan C. Thomas’ “Who Are You?”. Maybe there is really a group of conspiring people in the neighborhood and maybe they killed Melinda after he dated her once. And maybe he was wrong to kill one of them . . . The plot of this effective story is further complicated by the narrator’s sleazy brother.

We go beyond mere sibling underhandedness in Monique Youzwa’s “The Rules of Leap Year”. It takes family feuding to a new level. Every Feb. 29th, the members of a family get together – to kill each other. Twenty-four years ago the family patriarch, disgusted by his children always asking for money and not appreciating what he had to suffer in the war, wrote a bizarre will. If you can successfully mount an attack on the fortified estate and kill its occupant, you get the estate – both the literal and legal one. There aren’t a lot of rules in this deadly contest. But, even where there only a few rules, there’s always a chance to game them. Sort of a crime gothic in its constrictions of space and family.

Also a nasty crime story is Israel Finn’s “The Pipe”. It starts out with the lame progressive cliché of the white father objecting to his daughter’s black boyfriend. That’s just the key to get the engine going on this well-done, visceral horror tale of the hero being forced to crawl through a sewer pipe to freedom and the surprise at the end.

I started out sympathetic to the teenage protagonists of Andrew Lennon’s “Run Rabbit Run”, after they accidentally kill a school bully with a rock. But I lost my sympathy in their dumb actions after that.

I had a similar reaction to Evans Light’s “One Million Hits”. At first, I was willing to cut our four high school seniors – Demarco, Trevor, Kurtis, and Austin – some slack despite their obsession with posting YouTube videos and trying to get candy trick-or-treating at their age. One even blackmails a man – by threatening to tell his wife he smokes – into getting some candy. But, deciding to play a prank on that man, one of them is fatally shot. And then things careen out of control in a series of events that will see several people in the neighborhood dead, mostly shot. There is a not well-developed notion that maybe this all started with “Operation: Halloween Shakedown”, the boys’ unseemly desire to trick-or-treat at their age, their greed, has unleashed some kind of supernatural curse.

I liked Lisa Lepovetsky’s “Kruze Night”, a story of a man trying to recapture his high school days by getting his Thunderbird out of storage and going to “Kruze Nite”, a local gathering of vintage ‘50s and ‘60s cars at a drive in. Though he’s a vice-president at a bank, Hugh Spafford doesn’t get a lot of respect from his kind of bitchy wife. But it becomes clear through the night, given the state of the drive-in and his old friends from high school and their cars, that this is going to be a return to his youth but something much more sinister and supernatural

And there were a few stories that don’t fit in any easy category. Joanna Koch’s “Every Lucky Penny Is Another Drop of Blood”, a weird, surrealistic horror story, reminded me of the mutilations and fashionable transformations in Kath Koja’s Skin and David J. Skal’s Antibodies. It is about the fashion designs of Elaine Elias: “Jaded by years of insipid, unrealistic beauty codes, the fashion world went wild for Elliane’s shocking aesthetic of the forbidden”.

Her designs revel in bizarre mutilations, and Detroit becomes the center of medical tourism to effect those transformations. The plot itself isn’t that great. Astilbe likes Andy. She considers him loyal, energetic, faithful, and a hard-worker even if his money is literally (and metaphorically) dirty hence her constantly cleaning it. However, following Andy to work, Astilbe realizes he’s not really that faithful. Andy takes up promoting Elliane’ fashion collection. Elliane is associated with an underground city around Detroit, a secret city which even has its own coins. Astilbe warns Elliane not to move in on Andy.

The story is full of perversity.

Impossible bodies become the fad, and the love triangle of Astilbe, Eliane, and Andy is fatally and pathetically resolved.

The central power of the story is that its depiction of the perverse corruption of the idea of beauty seems psychologically and socially (if not medically or scientifically) plausible given modern culture and fashion trends today. For that reason, this is the book’s most profound story – if not its most enjoyable.

“Mirrors” by Billy Chizmar is a rather pointless vignette unless it intended to make the normal compromises and disappointments of life seem like a horror story viewed retrospectively. The plot involves a man looking into a mirror before his grandson’s junior high school graduation and contemplating his past.

Josh Malerman’s poem “One Thousand Words on a Tombstone” concludes the anthology.

Yes, there are some annoying stories, particularly in the characters we are asked to sympathize with, but there are enough interesting ones to give it a marginal recommendation.
… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
RandyStafford | 1 outra crítica | Jun 14, 2020 |
John is a data entry clerk and hates his job. So begins this short novella, (or long short story?) from Andrew Lennon.

I can't say too much without spoilers, but I can say that I guessed the outcome of this story pretty much right from the get-go. (I HATE when that happens.) I consider myself a seasoned horror fan, so perhaps that's why I so easily saw where the story was going. Someone new to horror would probably have been much more surprised.

There were a few instances where I felt that the story went beyond the realm of believability, but they were passed over quickly due to the fast pacing.

Overall, I feel that this is a good first effort. The writing isn't polished, but it's decent and the imagination is there. I feel that Andrew Lennon could be an author to watch in the future.

*Andrew Lennon provided a free copy of this story in exchange for an honest review. This is it.*

… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Charrlygirl | Mar 22, 2020 |
CORPUS PRESS is a publisher that I've grown to love. Everything I've read from them looms large over the competition and IN DARKNESS, DELIGHT is no exception! Featuring authors like Josh Malerman, Patrick Lacey, John McNee and William Meikle, among others, how could this volume be anything but excellent?

I can't cover all the stories here or my review would be as long as the book itself-because almost every tale in this book is good. What I'm going to focus on here are the ones that I found to be truly exceptional:

THE PIPE by Israel Finn: I had no idea where this story was going and when it got there, I felt...stunned ...just...stunned. I love short stories with a punch and this is definitely one of them! (His volume of short stories, DREAMING AT THE TOP OF MY LUNGS, is now heading towards the top of my "to be read" list.

LETTERS by Michael Bray: Here's another tale it's hard for me to describe without giving anything away. It twists and turns into itself before it twists again. My emotions were so confused I felt absolutely wrung out by the time I finished. LOVED it!

ONE MILLION HITS by Evans Light: A group of teenagers on Halloween night concoct a scam to bring in as much candy as possible, and then they concoct another scam to get a million hits on their site. You already know things will go wrong, but just how wrong was a surprise to me.

VIOLET by Jason Parent: It's always hard to lose someone, and sometimes I think it's even worse when you lose a dear pet. After all, you're with your pets almost every single day of your life. Sometimes, you just don't want to listen to platitudes or the attempts of others to comfort you. Or worse yet, when they try to tell you what to do. I felt this one deep in my heart.

THE DOGSHIT GAUNTLET by John McNee. I chuckled at the title, I admit it. But the actual story was scary and sad, with the two being all wrapped up and twisted around each other. I was so happy for Paul...and then I felt so sorry for him. Read it and you'll see.

TATTOOED ALL IN BLACK by Mark Matthews: You might recognize the title from the Pearl Jam song BLACK. It's an excellent tune and this tale is excellent too. I've yet to read anything from Mark Matthews that I haven't enjoyed. At this point, I doubt I ever will. (P.S. Prepare to have your heart ripped out and then you can "be a sun in someone else's sky.")

REFUGE by William Meikle I came away from this story feeling that it was about forgiveness. I'm not sure my conclusion is correct, but I do know that holding a grudge can kill you. Let love rule instead.

PULSATE by Espe Kvlt: I've already cursed in this review with John McNee's title, so...all I can say about this one is: WTF? I'm not sure exactly what was going on, but I know I liked it! (I've done a search for this author on Goodreads and don't see anything else by them. That needs to change!)

As a long, long, long-time reader of horror anthologies, I like to think that I'm a good judge of them. There certainly are a lot more of them in this age of digital publishing and it can be difficult weeding out the good from the bad. I hope you feel that you can trust me when I say this will surely make my top ten of the year list, so DON'T MISS OUT!

Highly recommended!

*I received a paperback ARC from the editors, Evan Light and Andrew Lennon, in exchange for review consideration. I considered it, said HELL YEAH, and read the book!*

**Further, I have been friends online with a few of these authors for years and I think I should let you know that. Our relationships have not affected the honesty of this review.**
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Charrlygirl | 1 outra crítica | Mar 22, 2020 |

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Associated Authors

William Meikle Contributor
Joe Koch Contributor
Israel Finn Contributor
Billy Chizmar Contributor
John McNee Contributor
Paul Michaels Contributor
Lisa Lepovetsky Contributor
Monique Youzwa Contributor
Jason Parent Contributor
Patrick Lacey Contributor
Espi Kvlt Contributor
Ryan C. Thomas Contributor
Mark Matthews Contributor
Michael Bray Contributor
Marshall J. Moore Contributor
Jenn Hopkins Contributor
Frank Oreto Contributor
Jason Washer Contributor
Max Booth III Contributor
Michael Laimo Contributor
Phil Sloman Contributor
Sheldon Higdon Contributor
Ben Eads Contributor
Tim Curran Contributor
Eric J. Guignard Contributor
Michelle Muenzler Contributor
Ben Lawrence Contributor
Lisa Morton Contributor
Van Aaron Hughes Contributor
Dominick Cancilla Contributor
C. S. Mergo Contributor

Estatísticas

Obras
20
Also by
2
Membros
107
Popularidade
#180,615
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
11
ISBN
15

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