Nineteen eighty-eight heralded few significant changes overall in the horror
field, but there were some interesting events that might have long-term effects.
Pageant Books, a co-publishing venture started by Crown and Waldenbooks, is
essentially dead after only six months, a casualty of the acquisition of Crown
by Random House. Initially, it was announced that Pageant would not be affected
by Crown's sale and that its program was already exceeding previously set goals
for income and units sold; however, the last of the line was published in April
1989, the staff was laid off, and acquisitions were halted. Even though the
Pageant imprint is ostensibly for sale, Waldenbooks has not actively sought a
new partner. Pageant had been a controversial entity from the start; they were
publishing eight to ten category fiction books per month, prompting Waldenbooks
to cut back on orders for other midlist category books, thereby hurting other
publishers.
The Pinnacle imprint has been resurrected by Zebra books. Feast, by
British horror writer Graham Masterton, will inaugurate the program.
Tudor Books, the paperback house established by the late Ron Busch in
1987, was acquired by Stanley J. Corwin and Gerald Seth Sindell, book packagers
and film producers. Editor Kate Duffy is actively looking for horror and occult
novels and in May 1988 Tudor published its first horror novel, Amityville:
The Evil Escapes by John G. Jones.
St. Martin's Press announced that it was cutting back its regular sf line
and irregular horror line, primarily because of the competition with Tor. St.
Martin's is completely dropping its mass market sf program and cutting back on
its sf hardcover program. This didn't come as that much of a surprise to
industry experts, who speculated on the wisdom of creating a new line in
competition with an established one within the same corporation. Tor, however,
is also cutting its mass market list by 25 percent, from four horror titles a
month to three.
Beginning with Sphinx by David Lindsay last July, Carroll & Graf
started publishing a series of books called Supernatural Fictions, selected and
featuring introductions by Colin Wilson. The hardcover titles have a unified
format, with the covers proclaiming them part of "The Supernatural Library."
In the fall, McGraw-Hill announced that it was selling its trade book
division, but as of January 1989 there was still no sale and the unit was still
working on its spring and fall 1989 lists. In the last couple of years they've
published Bare Bones: Conversations on Terror with Stephen King, edited
by Tim Underwood and Chuck Miller; Age of Wonders by David Hartwell;
The Unlikely Ones by Mary Brown; and Eddy Deco's Last Caper: An
Illustrated Mystery by Gahan Wilson.
Most book publishers in 1988 either had horror programs or at least
published the occasional horror novel or anthology on their mainstream lists.
Tor, Berkley, NAL Onyx, and, on the lower level of both quality and payment,
Zebra and Leisure had very visible horror lists. According to Locus [magazine], at least
170 supernatural horror novels were published (Locus doesn't count psychological
horror novels) in 1988. This is almost double the number published last year.
While aficionados of horror fiction could be encouraged by these numbers, I'm
not. I'm worried because most of what I see is "generic" horror, horror as the
romance novel of the late eighties. There's no way to tell the schlock from the
quality. The packaging makes it all look and sound the same. This may not be bad
for established horror writers who already have followings, but it could be
deadly for writers breaking into the field.
The "controversy" over splatterpunk vs. quiet horror continues to
rage--and is about as important to the horror field in actual meaningfulness as
was cyberpunk vs. everything in sf a few years ago. It's all just as silly and
manufactured; there's enough room in the field for all kinds of horror. And as
with the "cyberpunks," the best writers of horror today are those whose fine
writing and versatility make labels meaningless. What is more interesting, and
to me more disturbing, is the rash of horror novels that take gratuitous
potshots at women. There is an underlying hostility in this that I find
unsettling. Some of the characterizations are so unbelievable that I wonder if
the answer is simpler than misogyny: bad writing by males who are absolutely
ignorant as to what women think or talk about.
My horror novel reading was peripatetic this year and admittedly the
following opinions are completely biased. Also, some of the books were published
before 1988 and I've just found them or gotten to them:
The Scream by John Skipp and Craig Spector (Bantam) is an effective
rock and roll horror novel but lacks the discipline evident in their excellent
short stories.
The Cormorant by Stephen Gregory (St. Martin's, first U.S.) is a
short literary horror novel about a man who inherits an ungainly and unfriendly
cormorant from a relative. Won the Somerset Maugham Award in England. So-so.
Bones of the Moon by Jonathan Carroll (Arbor House/Morrow, first U.
S.). As always, the writing is wonderful but this one struck me as a bit too
insular and precious. Not a favorite Carroll of mine.
Sleeping in Flame by Jonathan Carroll (Century
Hutchinson/Doubleday). There's some overlap with Bones but this is not a sequel.
This is the Carroll novel I've been waiting for since Land of Laughs.
It's about magic and the darkness just around the corner-as are all his
books-and it's the "true" story of Rumpelstiltskin. A brilliant and satisfying
build-up leads to a disappointing last page. But this time he almost makes it
all work. Highly recommended.
Mascara by Ariel Dorfman (Viking). A "literary" horror novel about
a man whom no one notices and his obsession with faces, this book has been
embraced by the New York literary establishment as a brilliant political
statement, but as horror, I found it virtually unreadable--oblique and no meat.
I couldn't get through it but it has gotten some very positive review attention.
Cabalby Clive Barker (Poseidon). A good novella by a writer who is
always entertaining, at the very least. The stories in the volume, which made up
the sixth Book of Blood in England, are excellent. Highly recommended.
The Kill Riff by David J. Schow (Tor). His first novel. It's very
well-written, as one would expect from Schow, but I had a problem with the fact
that there are no sympathetic characters. The "protagonist" is a psychotic
anti-hero with a very nasty little secret who is bent on avenging the death of
his teenage daughter at a rock concert.
The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing (Knopf). A very upsetting short
novel about a couple who crave the "ideal" family and decide to have as many
children as they can until their fifth is born--an inhuman goblin whom no one,
not even his mother, can love. The mother's inability to divest herself of this
creature leads to the dissolution of the entire family. This odd, powerful fable
is borderline horror recommended for those willing to broaden their definitions.
Possession by Peter James (Doubleday). A frightening, effective
supernatural thriller that falls apart when you think back on it, a problem
novels of the supernatural often have. Is it that writers don't bother to tie up
loose ends or that they lose track of what they've previously established, or
simply that the supernatural inherently doesn't make sense if you think about it
too hard? Recommended with strong reservations.
Sleep: A Horror Story by Lynn Biederstadt (St. Martin's/Richard
Marek). This is an excellent novel about a man haunted by an entity within,
"sleep," who begins to take over his waking life in addition to generating
nightmares. The characters are engaging and this is an incredibly powerful,
terrifying, and well-wrought horror tale that maintains its logic throughout and
doesn't give the reader a bullshit trick ending. A very satisfying read. First
published in 1986 in hardcover and reprinted by Paperjacks. This is one I
unequivocally recommend. If you can find a copy, buy it.
Koko by Peter Straub (E. P. Dutton). A serial killer is "inspired"
by a Vietnam atrocity. Good reading but doesn't really get cooking until about
halfway through. Could have cut about 100 pages from its 560-plus page length.
Recommended.
Necroscope by Brian Lumley (Tor). Despite a truly disgusting and (I
think) misleading, although not completely inaccurate cover, an excellent book
about ESP, vampires, Soviet/West rivalries and what death is really like. While
the blurb says it's the first volume of a trilogy, the book is satisfyingly
independent. Recommended.
Roofworld by Christopher Fowler (Ballantine). A first novel about a
society existing above London and the deadly warfare that erupts between two
factions, one of which wants to impose a new, dark order on the world below.
Science fiction but macabre, with hints of the supernatural. Very readable,
although the ending goes on too long. Nice characterizations. Read this and
forget his short stories (City Jitters and More City Jitters).
The Drive-In by Joe R. Lansdale (Bantam/Spectra). A good read.
Violent and virulently funny and with a lighter touch than much of Lansdale's
recent work. No, it doesn't exactly have a happy ending but it makes you feel
pretty good, anyway. Recommended.
Sepulchre by James Herbert (Putnam) is a good horror/thriller with
believable characters. Herbert is excellent at building and sustaining suspense.
A good read.
The Dark Door by Kate Wilhelm (St. Martin's), while billed on the
cover as science fiction, is actually more horror. It's a novel about a
malfunctioning alien space probe that causes madness wherever it shows up.
Excellent characterizations.
The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris (St. Martin's), while not
as dazzling as Red Dragon, ain't bad. Harris brings back Hannibal (the
Cannibal) Lector, the brilliant, evil serial killer/psychiatrist from the
earlier novel, and introduces him to FBI trainee Clarice Starling. She is
looking for insight into the mind of a serial killer nicknamed Buffalo Bill.
Lector, a monster in human form, is a very believable character. While he loves
"playing games" and is a vicious killer, there is something endearing in his
relationship with Starling and his "psychoanalysis" of her. Highly recommended.
One of the best of the year.
The Arabian Nightmare by Robert Irwin (Penguin). I was first made
aware of this remarkable book in London in 1987. Viking published it in 1987 and
it's now out in trade paperback. A funny, horrific, Byzantine adventure of an
innocent in medieval Cairo. Highly recommended for those who like cross-over
material.
The People of the Dark by T.M. Wright (Tor) is a reprint of the
1985 hardcover. Good eerie story, much better than his recent novel The
Island. Subtle and low-key and very frightening. A confusing prologue that
didn't make sense to me even after reading the entire book should be skipped. Go
right to the meat. Recommended.
Waking the Dead by Scott Spencer (Ballantine). The paperback was
published in 1987 but I just got to it. The author of Endless Love writes
a beautiful, heartbreaking ghost story about a lawyer offered a chance at public
office-something he has worked for his whole life-who be-gins to see (or thinks
he does) the woman he loved, and who was killed twelve years before. It's about
ideals, ambition, passion, and love. An exquisite book that's only peripherally
a ghost story, but still....Highly recommended.
Queen of the Damned by Anne Rice (Knopf), the third in her Vampire
Chronicles. Goes into more depth about the genesis of the creatures. Mythical,
legendary, historical, and of course, talky. But an excellent addition to
vampire lore. Recommended.
Black Wind by F. Paul Wilson (Tor) is a big book, more
suspense novel and thriller than horror but there are occult elements. If only
everything weren't so coincidental. All these people just happen to meet over
and over again in the period before WWII. Contrived and demands a great
suspension of disbelief, but there's some real horror here.
For Fear of the Night by Charles L. Grant (Tor). An excellent ghost
story. Subtle, well written; something you can sink your teeth into.
Well-rounded characters and no trick endings. Recommended.
The Fire Worm by Ian Watson (Gollancz, U.K.) is an sf/horror novel
that expands Watson's brilliant story from Interzone (1986), "Jingling
Geordie's Hole." It's about a reincarnation therapist who mesmerizes patients
into their past lives during the day and writes horror fiction under a pseudonym
by night. It's also about AIDS, reincarnation, and an evil telepathic wormlike
creature that corrupts the innocent. A tough but very good read. Recommended if
you can find it.
Cities of the Dead by Michael Paine (Charter) is a first novel
about Egypt in the early 1900's, about the horrifying yet fascinating clash of
cultures and religions. There isn't enough action in it, but the book is
unsettling and frightening. Paine's someone to watch. Skip the generic prologue.
Dreamer by Daniel Quinn (Tor). A good, convoluted first novel about
a man who is either being fiendishly manipulated or is crazy.
The Two Deaths of Senora Puccini by Stephen Dobyns (Viking) is most
definitely a stretch but very worthwhile. A dark novel about obsession, passion,
morality, reminiscent of some Luis Bunuel films, a Don Juan becomes obsessed
with the one woman who shows no interest in him. Although written by a North
American, the book takes place in an unnamed Latin American country and is
magical realist in feel. Brilliant, powerful, depressing.
The magazine field also saw many changes in the past year. In January
1989, Montcalm Publishing Corporation decided without warning to "suspend
publication of Twilight Zone magazine indefinitely." The same language
was used in describing the death of Night Cry, so one can only assume
that this means Twilight Zone is, in effect, dead. This decision took the
editorial staff by surprise because, although circulation had de-clined over the
last two to three years, there seemed to be no precipitating factor to influence
the shutdown decision. The last issue (June 1989) will be available in March.
The magazine, named after Rod Serling's famous television show, was
started up by Montcalm in April 1981. T.E.D. Klein was the founding editor,
with Carol Serling, Rod Serling's widow, acting as consultant. Since it was
conceived as an homage to Rod Serling and his vision, the magazine always
featured a good deal of television and film coverage and the fiction combined
the nostalgia, wonder, and terror inspired by the TV show. After T.E.D. Klein
left in 1985, the two subsequent editors, Michael Blaine and Tappan King, both,
in different ways, moved the fiction into more experimental territory. In 1988,
the magazine moved away from "strong horror" and returned to its earlier
nostalgia and media magazine focus.
Twilight Zone, with its annual short story contest and
later through its "TZ First" policy, provided a forum for new writers. Two
of the writers first published in TZ this way are Dan Simmons (Song of
Kali, Carrion Comfort) and Elizabeth Hand (who has sold but not yet
published a first novel). There has never been a professional horror magazine
market comparable to the science fiction market, and TZ was one of the
few slick magazines regularly publishing horror. It's a devastating loss to the
field.
As far as Twilight Zone's 1988 fiction was concerned, the magazine
published less "dangerous" (read "offensive") material, by order of the
publishers. So while there was some very good short fiction by John Skipp and
Craig Spector, Elizabeth Hand (her very impressive first sale), T.M. Wright,
Charles L. Grant, Chet Williamson, Barbara Owens, and Michael Blumlein, in
general I think the breadth of fiction suffered.
Several other horror and horror-related magazines published good fiction
in 1988. Fantasy and Science Fiction, edited by Ed Ferman, published fine
horror stories by Brian Lumley, Rory Harper, Brian Stableford, Lucius Shepard,
Charles L. Grant, Ian Watson, Brad Strickland, and Jessie Thompson (another
impressive debut).
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, edited by Gardner Dozois,
published excellent horror by Alexander Jablokov, Pat Cadigan, Thomas Wylde,
Martha Soukup, Somtow Sucharitkul, Lisa Mason, Gregory Frost, and Cherry Wilder.
Interzone, until recently Britain's only sf/fantasy magazine, has
gone from quarterly to bi-monthly as of its August 1988 issue. It published a
surprising number of horror stories in 1988, including some very good ones by
Greg Egan, Julio Buck, Brain Stableford, Susan Beetlestone, Ian Watson and Bob
Shaw.
OMNI (of which I'm fiction editor) also published more horror than
usual, mostly as a result of my having commissioned five horror short-shorts
for a special horror theme project in April. There were good stories by Dan
Simmons, Pat Cadigan, Edward Bryant, Richard Matheson (his first new one in
seventeen years), Harlan Ellison, Garry Kilworth, and Lucius Shepard.
Weird Tales, revived in the winter of 1987-8 by George Scithers,
Darrell Schweitzer, and John Gregory Betancourt, published three issues in 1988,
the first a special Gene Wolfe issue featuring six stories by Gene Wolfe, all
but one reprints from obscure sources, the exception being an original. Summer
'88 featured two novelettes by Tanith Lee and Fall '88 featured three pieces of
fiction by Keith Taylor. Very little of the fiction so far impressed me as being
particularly horrific, notable exceptions being a couple of the Tanith Lee
stories and the Brian Lumley.
There are occasional horror pieces mixed in with the straight suspense and
mystery in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine and Ellery Queen Mystery
Magazine. In AHMM there were good borderline horror stories by Bill
Crenshaw and David Kaufman. In EQMM there were good stories by J. Wagner,
Thomas Adcock, Robert Twohy, and Stringfellow Forbes.
Fantasy Tales, edited by Stephen Jones and David Sutton and one of
the oldest and most respected of the semi-pro magazines, has just gone to a
different format: perfect bound, digest-size with a full color cover. It is now
called "A Paperback Magazine of Fantasy and Terror" and is being published by
Robinson Publishing twice a year. In the first new-format issue, which appeared
at the World Fantasy Convention in London, there were good stories by Charles L.
Grant and C. Bruce Hunter.
The Horror Show, edited by David B. Silva, looked very good in 1988.
The covers and inside illustrations were for the most part imaginative,
sophisticated looking, and usually appropriate to what they were illustrating.
There was a particularly good piece of art by Russ Miller called "Metamorphosis"
in the Winter '87 issue. (I received the Winter 1987 issue after last year's
deadline so didn't cover it in the previous volume). There were excellent
stories by Dennis Etchison, Brian Hodge, John Strickland, A. R. Morlan, Susan M.
Watkins, Bentley Little, and Benjamin T. Gibson.
New Pathways, edited by Michael G. Adkisson, doesn't often publish
horror fiction, but there are occasional reviews of horror material and black
humor graphics by Ferret.
Weirdbook, published by Paul Ganley, wasn't very visible in 1988,
but this award-winning magazine did bring out a twentieth-year anniversary issue
late in the year-unfortunately too late for review in the current anthology; a
review will appear in next year's Year's Best.
Despite these continuing markets, the death of Twilight Zone
Magazine leaves a great gap begging to be filled. Several new magazines
began publication in 1988. Pulphouse Publishing, a small press in Eugene,
Oregon, started a quarterly magazine in hardcover format. The first issue of
Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine of Dangerous Science Fiction, Fantasy and
Horror was an all-horror issue that came out in fall 1988. The trade edition
is an attractive and well-made volume, although the print is a little small. The
fiction was uniformly interesting, with fine stories by William F. Wu, Steve
Rasnic Tern, Lori Ann White, Harlan Ellison, Jeannette M. Hopper, Nina Kiriki
Hoffman, Edward Bryant, and Randolph Cirilo. The winter issue was devoted
exclusively to speculative fiction; it featured an excellent crossover story by
Charles de Lint and a fine horror piece by Spider Robinson. The spring issue
will concentrate on fantasy, and the summer issue will be sf. The magazine is
published by Dean Wesley Smith and edited by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.
Fear, a new slick, professional-looking magazine devoted to horror,
fantasy, and sf, appeared in Britain the third week in June 1988. Judging from
the first issue, the nonfiction emphasis seems to be on media. There were three
pieces of fiction: schlock by king of schlock Shaun Hutson, average Ramsey
Campbell, and a pretty good story by newcomer Nicholas Royle. But four writer
profiles in one issue is just too much. And so are three "competitions." Still,
it's a good-looking, colorfully illustrated magazine and it's scheduled to be
bimonthly. The publisher, Newsfield Ltd.--a company best known for its computer
magazines--has committed to six issues. John Gilbert is editor
Midnight Graffiti is a slick new large-format quarterly focusing on
dark fantasy and horror. The first issue, available May 1988, featured
interesting fiction by David j. Schow and Harlan Ellison, some good articles
and reviews, good interior illustration and a powerful Giger-inspired cover by
Martin Cannon. The second issue, published in Fall 1988, had stories by Steven
R. Boyett and Joe Lansdale, and the "censored" chapter of Ray Garton's
Crucifax (originally cut more in the interest of good taste, I think,
than because the material was too hot to handle). The issue also included serial
killer John Wayne Gacy's art portfolio, a preview of John Skipp and Craig
Spector's forthcoming Book of the Dead anthology, and another smashing
full-color cover by Martin Cannon. So far, it's very promising, although I'd
like to see more fiction in it. Highly recommended. The publisher is James Van
Hise and he is also editor, along with Jessie Horsting.
What would you expect of a magazine named Slaughterhouse? Blood and
gore, right? Well, that's exactly what you get in this new bimonthly, first
published in October. Edited by Jim Whiting and Mark Gibson, this four-color
horror magazine specializes in spectacular and disgusting photos of special
effects: rotting corpses, monstrosities sprouting from human bodies, etc. The
first issue, which is kind of amateurish-looking, also contains one so-so piece
of fiction, some good capsule movie and book reviews, and interviews with horror
stars Linnea Quigley and Vic Noto and director John Carpenter. The second issue
looks much better but lacks fiction, although the editors promise more next
issue.
The Starlog Group, which publishes Starlog and Fangoria, is
now also publishing Gorezone, a bimonthly. The first issue appeared in
May 1988. It's more a media magazine than anything else, but there is one
original horror story per issue. (Not seen by me.)
Horrorstruck, Paul Olson's ambitious and much needed news magazine
specializing in horror, unfortunately folded after only two issues, which leaves
the field with no news source covering horror exclusively and extensively
(Science Fiction Chronicle, Locus, SF Eye, and other
magazines only cover it peripatetically).
There were also noteworthy horror stories by William F. Wu, Buzz Dixon,
Kathleen Jurgens, Jeffrey Osier, D. P. Pavlovic, Steve Rasnic Tern, John
Shirley, Philip Sidney Jennings, Archie N. Roy, Joe Clifford Faust, Ron
Weighell, Roger Johnson, Jeannette M. Hopper, D. W. Taylor, Ronald Burnight, and
Stefan Grabinski in Eldritch Tales,2 A.M., South-east Arts
Review, The Grabinski Reader, Tales of Lovecraftian Horror,
Grue, Dagon, Ghosts and Scholars, Cemetery Dance,
and Noctulpa.
And there was some excellent poetry by Bruce Boston, Sue Marra, Leonard
Wallace Robinson, and Ree Young, in The Nightmare Collector (a chapbook
produced by 2 A.M. Publications), Not One of Us, The Atlantic
Monthly, and Noctulpa.
Some comments on small press horror magazines: Deathrealm,
published by Mark Rainey, has tiny but readable type and excellent
illustrations by Jeffrey Osier and Mark Rainey.
2 A.M., published by Gretta Anderson, varied greatly in 1988. In
general, the spring issue contained stories that started off well then trailed
into sloppiness and/or unoriginal endings and in the summer issue I felt there
wasn't enough variety in theme. But there were some standout stories.
Perdition Press issue #0, edited by Wayne Allen Sallee in
December. It looks like a one-shot and Sallee writes that the "magazine was
initially put together to spotlight the artwork of some of my fellow
Chicagoans." It does a nice job of it. The magazine is an attractive-looking and
readable digest-size publication. There were stories by up and coming names in
the horror field but none of the fiction really stood out.
Not One of Us #3 had an excellent story that actually is mainstream
by John Rosenman. The magazine is difficult to read, though, because the type is
single-spaced.
Fantasy Macabre #10 had some good work by David Starkey, Carol
Reid, and Jules Faye. #11 had consistently good writing but too many familiar
ideas, and some excellent collage illustrations.
Nightmares January-March had a good story by Richard King, and a
good interview with Joe Lansdale. However, the art was sophomoric and most of
the story endings were telegraphed miles away (sometimes in the title or
illustration).
Crypt of Cthulhu #56 was good in general, especially the Lin
Carter and Thomas Ligotti stories. The magazine is a good one for those
interested in the Lovecraft mythos.
The Fishers from Outside (Crypt of Cthulhu Presents) is a special
Lin Carter issue (he died February 7, 1988). All the stories are by Carter and
were never published before.
Ghosts and Scholars #10 had some good artwork by Nick Blinko.
(Many of the horror magazines listed here are only available by sub-scription,
and very few-particularly of the small press magazines -come out on a regular
schedule.
[Collections and Anthologies]
Even though there are now a few more slick magazines publishing horror
fiction, original anthologies continue to dominate the short horror fiction
field. Probably the most hyped anthology of the year was Prime Evil,
edited by Douglas E. Winter (NAL). On the cover, the publisher announces "new
stories by the Masters of Modern Horror" and inside proclaims "this is writing
that will shape the way horror is viewed and written well into the next
century." Does the anthology live up to these extravagant claims? Well, in
general the level of writing is excellent, but there's an abundance of old ideas
not freshened up enough to make the anthology as exciting as it could have been.
Very few stories are of Cutting Edge (edited by Dennis Etchison; St.
Martin's Press) quality, challenging the reader or even attempting to stretch
the boundaries of the acceptable, the major exception being Peter Straub's
novelette "The Juniper Tree," which was one of the best pieces of horror fiction
published in 1988. And the inclusion of Paul Hazel and Jack Cady as "masters of
horror" is perplexing to me. Neither is known for his horror, and Cady, while a
good writer, is barely known at all, even in the mainstream. Also, there is a
glaring absence of female writers in the anthology considering it's being
touted by the publisher as the "future of horror. " This is not a criticism of
the editor, who I know has little influence on how the book is advertised, but
of the way the book was marketed. Another gripe is that the stories are
advertised as "never before published," but Thomas Ligotti's "Alice's Last
Adventure" appeared three years ago in a small press collection of his
stories,Song of a Dead Dreamer. Despite all this, the anthology is a good
solid one, with excellent stories by M. John Harrison, Peter Straub, Jack Cady,
Clive Barker, and David Morrell.
Silver Scream, edited by David J. Schow (Dark Harvest/Tor),
is a theme anthology about the medium of film and filmmaking and is made up
primarily of original stories. The best are by John M. Ford, Joe R. Lansdale,
Edward Bryant, F. Paul Wilson, Robert McCammon (more fantasy than horror), and
Richard Christian Matheson.
Ripper! (Tor), published to commemorate the centennial of Jack
the Ripper's crimes, edited by Gardner Dozois and Susan Casper, also contains
mostly original material. In it are powerful stories by Lewis Shiner, Sarah
Clemons (her first), Gene Wolfe (reminiscent of his early mysterious and
perplexing stories such as "Three Fingers"), Pat Cadigan, Charles L. Grant,
Lucius Shepard, Scott Baker, and Tim Sullivan. Some of the stories would have
had more impact if they'd appeared separately in various places rather than all
in one theme anthology. My advice is not to read through the anthology all at
once, but savor one or two stories at a time.
Tropical Chills (Avon), edited by Tim Sullivan, features eleven
original stories and three reprints. On the whole, the anthology is
entertaining, with standouts by Steve Rasnic Tern and Pat Cadigan.
14 Vicious Valentines (Avon), an original anthology (with two
reprints) edited by Rosalind M. Greenberg, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Charles
G. Waugh is uninspired with the exception of stories by Barry N. Malzberg and
Jeannette M. Hopper.
The Songbirds of Pain by Garry Kilworth (Unwin, pb., U.K.) is
finally out in paperback, albeit only in England. This remarkable collection by
an underrated British writer was published in 1982 and disgracefully has still
not been published in the U.S. A mixture of sf, fantasy, and horror. Beg, steal,
or borrow.
Scare Tactics (Tor) is a collection of two new stories and a
short novel by John Farris. Farris first became famous for his teenage potboiler
of the early sixties. Harrison High (it was on par with Peyton
Place as far as "checking out the dirty parts"), and then wrote a number of
energetic and effective horror novels' that gave him a different sort of fame
and following. The new short novel isn't bad but the two stories are quite
predictable. Also, Farris's characterizations are needlessly confusing be-cause
he refers to every female as "girl." As a result, readers have no idea how old
any of his female characters are.
Women of Darkness (Tor), edited by Kathryn Ptacek, is
disappointing. It doesn't do justice to either women horror writers in general
or to the variety of horror fiction women write. The book has an overabundance
of undistinguished stories--even some of the better known writers included aren't
at their best. Also, too many of the stories are stereotypical of what people
think women write about: relationships, family, and baby/child stories. This
does a disservice to the many women writing horror today who aren't in the
anthology, such as Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Suzy McKee Charnas, Joyce Carol Oates,
and Pat Cadigan, all of whom write a variety of types of horror. Despite the
anthology's flaws, it contains quite good stories by Tanith Lee, Nancy Varian
Berberick, Elizabeth Massie, Melanie Tern, Melissa Mia Hall, and Karen Haber.
The most hyped collection of the year was Blood and Water by
Patrick McGrath (Poseidon), who is touted by his publisher (who also publishes
Clive Barker) as the "Poe of the 80s." I found the collection (mostly reprints
from literary magazines) disappointing, the prose stilted and self-conscious,
the ideas a combination of warmed-over T. Coraghessan Boyle and Angela Carter
without the obsession of Boyle or the grace of either. McGrath works too hard at
trying to convey atmosphere and his work comes across as precious.
Bad Behavior, a collection by Mary Gaitskill (Poseidon). From
the publisher of Clive Barker and the overhyped Patrick McGrath, these nine
stories are horror only by the skin of their teeth--they provide horrifying
glimpses of sado-masochistic relationships in modern day N.Y.C. Quirky and
fascinating, Gaitskill's writing is unpretentious and direct in contrast to
McGrath's purportedly Poe-like baroque pretension. Highly recommended for
anyone who wants to see mainstream blended with horror and surrealism.
City Jitters and More City Jitters by Christopher
Fowler (Dell): The first collection, City Jitters, was originally
published in England in 1986; in 1988, Dell published it in the U.S. along with
More City Jitters. Both books feature some colorful writing and some good
imagery, but the basic plots are pretty unoriginal. These stories are a real
disappointment after reading his first novel, Roofworld (Ballantine, See
above).
Tales from the Hidden World by R. Chetwynd-Hayes (William
Kimber) is an original collection. Chetwynd-Hayes does a certain kind of British
ghost story and haunted/tainted house quite well. In this collection there is a
nice inkling of humor but also a low-level anti-female bias in some of the
stories.
Gaslight and Ghosts, the 1988 World Fantasy Convention
program book, was a good-looking hardcover package with excellent, previously
unpublished stories by Charles L. Grant, Lisa Tuttle, Robert Holdstock, and
others. It also includes lovely color illustrations by Michael Foreman .
Night Visions V (Dark Harvest) featured fiction by Stephen
King, Dan Simmons, and George R. R. Martin. The King material was so-so, the
Simmons pretty good, but the Martin novella, "The Skin Trade," is a knockout,
and alone is worth the price of the book. Night Visions VI (Dark
Harvest) boasted "Faces," the excellent short fiction piece by F. Paul Wilson,
and powerful novellas by Ray Garton and Sheri Tepper.
Lord John Ten, edited by Dennis Etchison (Lord John Press),
is a volume created specially for this specialty press's anniversary and
includes original material by most of the writers (mainstream and genre) who
have con-tributed to the small press's success in its first ten years. There's
excellent horror fiction by Ramsey Campbell and Roberta Lannes.
Charles Beaumont: Selected Stories, edited by Roger Anker, is
selected and introduced by writers who knew him. A handsome volume illustrated
by Peter Scanlan (Dark Harvest). There are five original stories by Beaumont,
none of which are bad and a couple of which are excellent.
Tales from the Darkside Vol. 1, edited by Mitchell Galin and
Tom Allen (Berkley), is an anthology of stories from which various episodes of
the TV show have been taken. Two of the stories are based on original teleplays
by Michael McDowell. The writing is excellent, but perhaps because of the
limitations of television, the ideas, while effectively used, just aren't all
that new.
Other Edens II, edited by Christopher Evans and Robert
Holdstock (Unwin Hyman, U.K.) had only three stories that could remotely be
considered horror-Graham Charnock's beautiful "She Shall Have Music," Ian
Watson's "The Resurrection Man" and Colin Greenland's "The Wish."
Wild Cards IV: Aces Abroad edited by George R. R. Martin
(Bantam/Spectra) had some good borderline horror by John Miller and Victor W.
Milan, and Synergy 2, edited by George Zebrowski (Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich) had a good horror story by James Morrow.
There was also horror or borderline horror in the mostly reprint
collections The Consolation of Nature, by Valerie Martin (Houghton
Mifflin), Alan Ryan's The Bones Wizard (Doubleday), Dennis Etchison's
The Blood Kiss (Scream/Press), Rick DeMarinis's The Coming Triumph of
the Free World (Viking); and Isaac Bashevis Singer's The Death of
Methuselah and other Stories (Farrar, Straus & Giroux). And there was an
interestingly bizarre story by Kurt Tidmore in Soho Square, edited by
Isobel Fonseca (Blooms-bury Publishers).
Some other notable reprint collections or anthologies published in
1988 were John the Balladeer, the only complete set of this series of
stories by Manley Wade Wellman (Baen); The Year's Best Horror, edited by
Karl Edward Wagner (DA W); A Double Life: Newly Discovered Thrillers of
Louisa May Alcott, edited by Madeleine B. Stern (Little, Brown); The
Signalman and other Ghost Stories by Charles Dickens (Academy Chicago);
The Best Horror Stories of Arthur Conan Doyle, edited by Frank McSherry,
Martin Harry Greenberg, and Charles Waugh (Academy Chicago); The Best Horror
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, edited by Edward L. Ferman
and Anne Jordan (St. Martin's); The Best of Shadows, edited by Charles L.
Grant (Doubleday Foundation); The Best of Masques, edited by J. N.
Williamson (Berkley); The Horror in the Museum and Other Revisions by H.
P. Lovecraft (Arkham House); Darkness at Dawn (some occult) by Cornell
Woolrich (Peter Bedrick); The Mammoth Book of Short Horror Novels, edited
by Mike Ashley (First U.S., Carroll & Graf); White Wolf Calling and Others:
The Year's Best Horror Stories IV, edited by Ger-ald W. Page (Starmont);
Haunting Women, edited by Alan Ryan (Avon); A Rendezvous in
Averoigne by Clark Ashton Smith, with an introduction by Ray Bradbury and
illustrations by J. K. Potter, containing thirty of his best stories (Arkham
House); Ghosts of The Car-olinas, Ghosts of the Southern Mountains and
Appalachia, and This Haunted Southland: Where Ghosts Still Roam, all
edited by Nancy Roberts (D. of South Carolina Press); The Wine-Dark Sea
by Robert Aickman (Arbor House/Morrow); The Supernatural Tales of Fitz-James
O'Brien, volumes one and two edited with notes and introduction by Jessica
Amanda Salmonson (Doubleday); The Book of Fantasy, edited by Jorge Luis
Borges, Silvina Ocampo, and Adolfo Bioy Casares (Viking); Fine Frights:
Stories that Scared Me by Ramsey Campbell (Tor); Monsters, edited by
Isaac Asimov, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Charles Waugh (Signet); Hunger for
Horror, edited by Robert Adams, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Pamela Crippen
Adams DAW); and the following edited by McSherry, Greenberg, and Waugh:
Yankee Witches (Lance Tapley), Haunted New England: Classic Tales of
the Strange and Supernatural (Yankee Books), Pirate Ghosts of the
American Coastgust House), and Red Jack (DAW).
The small specialty presses were fairly active in 1988, producing
attractive high-priced "collectors" editions of books along with more
reasonably-priced trade editions. Donald M. Grant published a special
signed-by-all-authors edition of the anthology Prime Evil, which is
already sold out, and also published Robert E. Howard's The Hour of the
Dragon (Ilustrated by Ezra Tucker), My Lady of Hy-Brasil by Peter
Tremayne (illustrated by Duncan Eagleson), and Madame Two Swords by
Tanith Lee (illustrated by Thomas Canty). Hill House Publishers offered an
attractive limited edition of Faerie Tale, by Raymond E. Feist, with a
jacket by Don Maitz and interiors by Lela Dowling. This year Dark Harvest
published, in addition to the Night Visions collections, the limited
edition of Silver Scream, edited by David J. Schow, and Ray Garton's
Crucifax Autumn (interior illustrations and cover art by Bob Eggleton) as
well as House of Thunder, a Dean Koontz novel originally published under
his pseudonym Leigh Nichols, and Charles Beaumont: Selected Stories.
Underwood-Miller released The Selected Stories of Robert Bloch (three
volumes); Reign of Fear: Fiction and Film of Stephen King edited by Don
Herron. Space and Time published a novel by Jeffrey Ford called Vanitas.
Paul Ganley published a signed and numbered slipcased edition of Brian Lumley's
The Burrowers Beneath. Jeff Conner's Scream/Press long awaited special
edition of Clive Barker's Books of Blood IV-VI finally made an
appearance-or at least, number IV did. Scheduled for 1987 but plagued by
production delays, the limited edition illustrated by Harry O. Morris finally
appeared in 1988. It's a handsome volume and was worth the wait. The Blood
Kiss, Dennis Etchison's collection, also was published in 1988 by
Scream/Press.
There were also several chapbooks published in limited editions. Mark
Ziesing published The Silver Pillow: A Tale of Witchcraft by Thomas M.
Disch, illustrated by Harry O. Morris. 2 A.M, Publications put out The
Nightmare Collector, mostly reprint poems by Bruce Boston, illustrated by
Gregorio Montejo, and also a novella by David Starkey called "Wishes and Fears"
(an ambitious ten titles are scheduled for 1989). Bill Munster's Footsteps Press
released Richard Christian Matheson's short story, "Holiday." Chris Drumm
published the mostly reprint collection Skin Trades: Ten Tales of Terror and
Transformation by Bruce Boston, Wordcraft (David and Susan Memmott)
published Misha's mixed genre pieces in Prayers of Steel, illustrated by
Ferret.
Some of the more intriguing nonfiction books concerning the horror
field were: Private Demons: The Life of Shirley Jackson by Judy
Oppenheimer (Putnam); Horror: 100 Best Books, edited by Stephen Jones and
Kim Newman (Carroll & Graf); Raising Goosebumps for Fun and Profit by T.E.D. Klein (Footsteps Press); Bare Bones: Conversations on Terror With
Stephen King, edited by Tim Underwood and Chuck Miller (McGraw-Hill, first
trade edition); Cornell Woolrich: First You Dream, Then You Die by
Francis M. Nevins, Jr. (Mysterious Press); Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde After 100
Years, edited by William Veeder and Gordon Hirsch (U. of Chicago Press);
The Gothic World of Stephen King: Landscape of Nightmares, edited by Gary
Hoppenstand and Ray B. Browne (Bowling Green State U. Press); The Letters of
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Volume 3, edited by Betty T. Bennett (John
Hopkins U. Press); Dracula: The Vampire and the Critics by Margaret L.
Carter (UMI); Lovecraft: A Study in the Fantastic by Maurice Levy (Wayne
State U., first English translation); Redefining the American Gothic: From
Wieland to Day of the Dead by Louis Gross (UMI); Mary Shelley: Her Life,
Her Fiction, Her Monsters by Anne K. Mellor (Routledge, Chapman and Hall);
Gothic Fiction: A Master List of 20th Century Criticism and Research by
Frederick S. Frank (Meckler Publishing); Sudden Fear:The Horror and Dark
Suspense Novels of Dean R. Koontz, edited by Bill Munster (Starmont);
Roald Dahl by Alan Warren (Starmont); Dream Lovers and Their Victims
in British Fiction by Toni Reed (U. Press of Kentucky); Science Fiction,
Fantasy and Horror: 1987 by Charles L. Brown and William G. Contento (Locus
Press).
Some of the nonfiction movie books published included Revenge of
the Creature Feature Movie Guide by John Stanley (Creatures at Large Press);
Roger Corman, a short biography and picture-by-picture description of his
films by Mark McGee (McFarland); The Dead That Walk: Dracula, Fran-kenstein,
The Mummy and Other Favorite Movie Monsters by Leslie Halliwell
(Crossroad/Continuum); Interviews with "B" SF and Horror Movie Makers;
Writers, Producers, Directors, Actors, Moguls and Makeup by Tom Weaver
(McFarland); Films of Science Fiction and Fantasy by Baird Searles
(Abrams); Forgotten Horrors: Early Talkie Chillers from Poverty Row by
George Turner and Michael Price (Eclipse); and The De Palma Cut: the Films of
America's Most Controversial Director by Laurent Bouzerean (Dembner Books).
The first Horror Writers of America banquet and conference took
place in New York City at the Warwick Hotel the weekend of June 24-26. To start
things off, Friday evening HWA and Berkley/Putnam publishers co-hosted a
cocktail party. The official program started Saturday morning with an HWA
business meeting, and panels were held that afternoon on various aspects of the
publishing business. In the evening there was another cocktail reception, and
then the Bram Stoker Awards Banquet. The actual award, given for Superior
Achievement, is an eerily detailed haunted house sculpture with the winner's
name inscribed behind a little door that opens. It was designed by Stephen M.
Kirk. The recipients were: for Life Achievement: Fritz Leiber, Frank Belknap
Long, and Clifford D. Simak; for Novel (tie): Misery, Stephen King
(Viking) and Swan Song, Robert McCammon (Pocket); First Novel: The
Manse, Lisa Cantrell (Tor); Novelette (tie): "The Pear-Shaped Man," George
R. R. Martin (OMNI) and "The Boy Who Came Back From the Dead," Alan Rodgers
(Masques II, Maclay pub.); Short Story: "The Deep End," Robert Mc-Cammon
(Night Visions IV, Dark Harvest); Collection: The Essential
Ellison (Nemo Press); Nonfiction: Mary Shelley, Muriel Spark (E. P.
Dutton). Last year I mentioned a number of people responsible for making the
Horror Writers of America a reality. It has been pointed out to me that I
neglected to mention Karen Lansdale, whose participation was crucial in the
organization's creation. My apologies.
1988 was the year Phantom of the Opera became the biggest
hit on Broadway. Yet only after unofficial (and finally legal) protests was
author of the original 1910 novel, Gaston Leroux, credited in the production
notes. It was also the year Stephen King's novel Carrie made it to the
Great White Way and became one of the biggest flops in Broadway history--thanks
to its savaging (undeserved) by the critics. I saw the show in preview and it
was pretty good, despite some silly moments. The rest of the audience seemed to
enjoy it, too.
The following are some odds and ends I've come across in the past year
that defy classification but are worthy of attention. They may be mixed genres
or mixed media or merely associational.
Graphic novels have become the newest hot artform, thanks in part to
Alan Moore's brilliant work in Watchmen (Warner) and Frank Miller's
The Dark Knight Returns (Warner). This year brought a new Batman special
by Alan Moore, Brian Bolland, and John Higgins, The Killing Joke (DC
Comics)-fascinating, horrific, atmospheric, and downbeat.
Then there's Hard-boiled Defective Stories by Charles Burns
(Pantheon). It's from RAW, producers of Art Spiegelman's Maus. The cover
sports a gorgeous dame with a gun-and two heads. The demented oversize comic
features El Borbah, a big mug of an anti-hero detective in a world of mutants,
mad scientists, greedy humans with weird hairdos, and ungrateful children.
Bizarre and wonderful. Violent Cases by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean
(Escape Magazine) was published in England in 1987 and is worth looking for. An
excellent evocation of confused childhood memories and the roaring '20s, it's
about a child's encounter with Al Capone's oesteopath. Phoenix Restaurant
by Ferret (Fandom House) pro-vides dark humor with horrific elements and could
be subtitled "Eating Well During the Apocalypse." Quirky and weird.
Taboo, published by Stephen R. Bissette and Nancy O'Connor, packaged by
Bissette and John Totleben (Spiderbaby Graphix), is an anthology of mixed genre
work by S. Clay Wilson, Alan Moore, Charles Burns, and others I'm not familiar
with. Most of the material is horrific, all of it is disturbing. Stray
Toasters, created, written, and drawn by Bill Sienkiewicz (Epic) is a
brilliant dark mini-series that dredges up the unconscious by enveloping the
reader in abstract rather than literal impressions in its art and text. The
first three of four parts came out in 1988, the fourth is due in early 1989.
Fly in my Eye (Arcane), an anthology of comics edited by Steve Niles, has
an art portfolio by Clive Barker, effective horror comics by Steve Bissette, Ted
McKeever, and others, and an excellent, chilling horror story by John Shirley.
Everybody's Favorite Duck: A Novel of Crime and Adventure by
Gahan Wilson (Mysterious Press) is quirky and should be of interest to anyone
who enjoys his work. The Magic Mirror by Mickey Friedman (Viking) is a
mystery about murder and the theft of what is purported to be the mirror
Nostradamus used for predictions. Not hor-rific, but dark fantasy. Apocalypse
Culture is a trade paperback by Adam Parfrey published by Amok Press. It's
true-life horror, a collection of essays on such subjects as self-mutilation and
necrophilia. Brought to you by the folks at the Amok bookstore in L.A., which
carries the paintings of convicted serial killer John Wayne Gacy (killer clown)
and photographic books on freaks and oddities, in addition to cutting edge
fiction by Ballard, Dick, Gibson, Burroughs, et al.
High Weirdness by Mail: A Directory of the Fringe-Mad Prophets,
Crackpots, Kooks and True Visionaries by Rev. Ivan Stang (Church of the
Sub-genius). A subversive, anarchic, absurdist cult which is an elaborate parody
of nut-cult religions.
Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux (Mysterious Press). A
special edition in honor of the seventy-fifth anniversary of its first
publication. Illustrated by Andre Castaigne. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
(Peter Bedrick). A new edition illustrated by Charles Keeping. Dracula by
Bram Stoker (Peter Bedrick). A new edition illustrated by Charles Keeping.
The Monster Garden by Vivian Alcock (Delacorte) is a charming and
poignant young adult novel that's more sf than horror--about young Frankie
Stein, the motherless daughter of a busy geneticist who decides to "create" her
own creature from some leftovers from the lab. Highly recommended.
A special treat for those who like pop-up books is Classic Tales of
Horror: A Fiendish Pull-the-Tab Pop-Up Book by Terry Oakes (Souvenir Press/
Dutton), containing pop-up scenes from Frankenstein, Dracula,
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The Pit and the Pendulum, and The
Phantom of the Opera. And The Phantom of the Opera Pop-Up Book
(Harper and Row).
For Clive Barker fans, a couple of art portfolios: One, called
Nightmares in Blood, is work by artist Stephen Fabian based on Barker's
Books of Blood. Included are twelve black-and-white plates in a color
wraparound portfolio jacket. (Outland Publishers). The other is artwork by
Barker himself, a portfolio of six full-color lithographs of the British cover
art for The Books of Blood, with one new black-and-white print specially
created for this limited edition, signed and numbered by Barker (Arcane).
Running Wild, by J. G. Ballard (A Hutchinson Novella-new
series, U.K.). A wonderful psychological horror about an upscale planned
com-munity in England which becomes the site of an inexplicable massacre and
apparent kidnapping of the victims' children. Chilling.