<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: Super scares Review: Elizabeth's stories are more offensive than scary. I'd be scared one in particular may give those prone to animal abuse a gory idea..maybe it's just me...it seems that short stories don't allow for a complicated plot, or in-depth character development.I can think of other horror writers short stories that "..grab you by the throat" more.
Rating: Summary: A great collection of stories! Review: I had never read a book by Elizabeth Massie before so I was pleasantly surprised to find this gem of stories. There isn't a bad story in the bunch and each is frightening and shocking in their own way. My favorites were "Thundersylum", "Fisherman Joe", "Dibs" and "Meat". The rest of the stories are excellent as well. These stories aren't traditional horror in the ghost and goblin vein, but the real stuff, everyday life and she invokes quite a bit of terror in the seemingly normal. These stories are literature, horror and mystery wrapped up together and they are wonderful. All in all, a great book from an author I will read again. If you like compelling, good horror pick this up. You won't be disappointed.
Rating: Summary: Celebrates both the common and the fantastic. Review: Leisure continues its tradition of reprinting some of the finest genre fiction of recent years, this time publishing a slightly different version of Elizabeth Massie's Shadow Dreams, a collection originally issued by Silver Salamander Press in 1996. Although Gary Braunbeck's powerful introduction is gone, three stories, written contemporaneously with the others in the collection, have been added. A common theme running through this compelling volume is the way our family life shapes us, for better or worse. Ten of the seventeen stories in this volume deal with family motifs, running the gamut from the unsettling, but ultimately unconvincing "Sanctuary of the Shrinking Soul, " where the bizarre circumstances surrounding the death of a child still haunt her mother years later, to the superior "Snow Day," in which a child dreads, rather than pines for, a day off from school. All deal with the very human need for family, even when a particular version of the family unit is nontraditional or decidedly dysfunctional. All are strangely touching and thought provoking. Although she seems to prefer quiet horror, Massie can also hold her own with the more "extreme" writers in the genre. Prime examples of this ability are "Dibs," in which youthful promises come back to haunt those who made them, "Crow Cat Cow Child," where an animal rights activist's core beliefs are shattered, "Damaged Goods," whose twist ending suggests that absolute power corrupts absolutely, "Thundersylum," about the nature of fear, and "Fisherman Joe," a tragic tale of death and bloody retribution. The most moving pieces in the collection are "I am Not My Smell" and "Shadow of the Valley". Both deal with damaged human beings, who, for various reasons, have given up hope along with their sanity, only to have that hope renewed in bizarre ways. In "I am Not My Smell," a bag lady discovers a new purpose in life, one which requires her to make the ultimate sacrifice so that another being may find happiness; "Shadow of the Valley," depicts a prisoner in solitary confinement who unexpectedly finds redemption in the arms of a gentle woman thrust into his cell by a sadistic guard. In each, Massie shows seems to say that even at life's lowest moments, fate often finds a way to bolster our courage, to allow us to hang on long enough to do what we have to do. There are greater and lesser stories here, times when the climax of a particular story doesn't entirely satisfy. But at its best, Shadow Dreams celebrates the commonplace and the fantastic, subtlety and shock. Reading the stories in this collection creates a longing for more--hopefully, Massie will accumulate enough material for another collection sometime soon.
Rating: Summary: belongs in the shadow Review: okay, the stories here are not driven by plots, but more by images, to put it that way. the writing style is simple, though some of the descriptions had some interest because they were uncommon similarities, etc. but there is too little going on. but most of all the problem was the way the story was written. -"yes" she says. she walks. the streets are emty. very simple stuff like that. and i never cared for what the story was about, being practically nothing at times.
Rating: Summary: Spooky! Review: The back cover copy on this release is highly misleading. Normal people who are touched by nightmare? If you've ever read any of Elizabeth Massie's short fiction, you know that very few of her characters could ever be described as normal. They usually run the gamut from slightly unhinged to utterly demented. In this collection you'll meet sideshow freaks, abusive parents, sadistic prison guards, entire families who are living in their own fantasy worlds, and a pair of orphans whose destiny is to prevent global annihilation. You'll witness the cruelty of children, betrayal of the deepest kind, and more than one instance of self-mutilation. Elizabeth Massie is one of the finest writers of modern reality-based horror. Her characters may be unusual, but they are all within the realm of possibility in our world, which is what makes them frightening. There is but a single story with any supernatural elements, and it's the weakest of the lot. Massie belongs on the same shelf as Kathe Koja and A. M. Homes. The darkness in her stories comes from the recesses of the human mind.
Rating: Summary: Super scares Review: This super collection of horror stories will haunt me for a long time. They are well written, driven by both plot and character. Each story is about something deep and something haunting. Some will stay with me for a long time, such as "I Am Not My Smell" and "Valley of the Shadow." Massie has a keen sense of people, emotion, and circumstance. Recommended highly.
<< 1 >>
|