Halloween Horrors ’09
Once again, Hellnotes is teaming up with several other horror websites to present you with a collection of horror book reviews for this Halloween season.
Once again, Hellnotes is teaming up with several other horror websites to present you with a collection of horror book reviews for this Halloween season.
Douglas Clegg knows the power of a ghostly whisper in the ear. In Isis, he creates a subtle yet scary spectral story; no screams are necessary.
Aptly named, Impossiblila introduces the reader to Douglas Smith’s magical reality where the impossible is readily accepted as normal.
Traditionally, the bulk of recently deceased (April 19th 2009) J.G. Ballard’s works have been classified as sci-fi, but in reality his works transcend the usually conservative ranks of such narrow labels.
In Cell you’ll find nods to both Matheson’s I Am Legend and Romero’s zombie apocalypse world, but it becomes more an apocalypse as filtered through the likes of J.G. Ballard and Cronenberg.
Terence Taylor’s debut horror novel is a crazy patchwork quilt of a book. There are so many plot threads running through the work, that zeroing in is a problem.