'Phobic' review
Jun. 16th, 2007 01:06 pmM'friend Ra Page of Comma Press decided last year that he wanted to launch a new series of horror anthologies that very much address the contemporary world. He somehow failed to ask me to edit it, but hey; I was invited to contribute. And did. The book's called 'Phobic' and it's just been reviewed in the Guardian, hurrah! And the review says:
Phobic: Modern Horror Stories, edited by Andy Murray (Comma Press, £7.95)
With Phobic, editor Andy Murray sets out to provide a fresh take on an old genre, with horror stories set in a world of mobile phones, the internet and computer gaming, fears induced by climate change, child abduction and the sheer terror of going to Ikea and not finding a single thing you want. Contributors range from established genre names such as Ramsey Campbell, whose claustrophobic snapshot is one of the book's highlights, to newcomers such as Maria Roberts, whose "By the River", told in a detached yet thoroughly engaging voice, shows society falling apart under the stresses of extreme weather. The relative newcomers to horror provide both the highs and lows of this anthology: Hanif Kureishi's "The Dogs" offers little, whereas Dr Who writers Paul Cornell and Robert Shearman contribute, respectively, a genuinely disturbing tale of the overlap between a computer game's world and reality, and a brilliantly funny and poignant tale about the inevitability of death. The remaining highlight of a patchy but rewarding anthology is Chaz Brenchley's "The Deadly Space Between", a moving story of art, love and loss.
*g*
(For those who'd rather, the same story is also available in the most recent Phantoms anthology: six new ghost stories, with CDs of a live reading, in a most handsome volume and available from me...)
Phobic: Modern Horror Stories, edited by Andy Murray (Comma Press, £7.95)
With Phobic, editor Andy Murray sets out to provide a fresh take on an old genre, with horror stories set in a world of mobile phones, the internet and computer gaming, fears induced by climate change, child abduction and the sheer terror of going to Ikea and not finding a single thing you want. Contributors range from established genre names such as Ramsey Campbell, whose claustrophobic snapshot is one of the book's highlights, to newcomers such as Maria Roberts, whose "By the River", told in a detached yet thoroughly engaging voice, shows society falling apart under the stresses of extreme weather. The relative newcomers to horror provide both the highs and lows of this anthology: Hanif Kureishi's "The Dogs" offers little, whereas Dr Who writers Paul Cornell and Robert Shearman contribute, respectively, a genuinely disturbing tale of the overlap between a computer game's world and reality, and a brilliantly funny and poignant tale about the inevitability of death. The remaining highlight of a patchy but rewarding anthology is Chaz Brenchley's "The Deadly Space Between", a moving story of art, love and loss.
*g*
(For those who'd rather, the same story is also available in the most recent Phantoms anthology: six new ghost stories, with CDs of a live reading, in a most handsome volume and available from me...)
(no subject)
Date: 2007-06-16 03:20 pm (UTC)