Dying to Live – Book Review
With Dying To Live, we see Kim Paffenroth not only knows zombies, but that he also knows the human condition as well.
With Dying To Live, we see Kim Paffenroth not only knows zombies, but that he also knows the human condition as well.
The eight reprinted and two new stories in Resurrection House horrifically reflect reminders of the fragility of being human.
Richard Finney and D. L. Snell have traced the outlines of a possibly transfixing tale; but don’t manage to give enough form, color, or texture to the narrative. It seems unfinished.
What happens when Stephen King, the 800-pound gorilla of horror, writes an over one thousand page novel? It works: He validates his weight; and even throws it around, a little.
In The Pleasure and Pain of Cult Horror Films: An Historical Survey, a Polish writer takes a look at the genre movies which are cinematically subversive.
After Charnel Wine (2004) and the excellent Omens (2007), Canadian author Richard Gavin returns with a new collection featuring thirteen short stories, most of whom previously unpublished.