Wet Work by Philip Nutman (1993): Too Tough to Die
Too Much Horror Fiction
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2M ago
In 1993, in my early 20s, I was working in a giant chain bookstore known as BookStar in Cary, NC. It wasn't a bad place to work, basically a Barnes and Noble (who eventually bought and then closed down the store), although the guys had to wear ties and dress pants, like it was fucking church. Several of my coworkers were horror fiction fans, both of the modern and classic variety, and we wasted ..read more
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Latest Titles in Valancourt Books' Paperbacks from Hell Line: Two by Jere Cunningham
Too Much Horror Fiction
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2M ago
Around Spring 2024, Grady Hendrix, Valancourt Books, and I will be unleashing two devilishly good horror titles in our series of Paperbacks from Hell reprints: Jere Cunningham's The Legacy (1977) and The Abyss (1981). While the author, who died in 2018, only wrote a few horror novels, we think he deserves to be better known. The latter book, with Grady's intro, is available for pre-order; the ..read more
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Fine Frights: Stories That Scared Me, ed. by Ramsey Campbell (1988): A Feast of Fiends
Too Much Horror Fiction
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3M ago
Despite it coming out at the height of the Eighties horror boom and published by genre giant Tor Books, I have no recollection at all of Fine Frights: Stories That Scare Me. An anthology of short stories compiled by the great and prolific Ramsey Campbell, the subtitle is the seller here: a story that can frighten one of horror's premier authors will surely reduce regular readers to a slab of ..read more
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Bats Out of Hell by Guy N. Smith (1978): Wings of Pain Reach Out for You
Too Much Horror Fiction
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4M ago
Can you believe it's been over a decade since I read a Guy N. Smith novel?! Despite his having written a near countless number of books, none ever made it to the top of my to-read list. In my paperback collection I have maybe eight or so of his titles, some part of his infamous Crabs series, and others just random I've bought over the years. The itch was coming upon me to revisit the infamous ..read more
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The Revenant by Hugh Zachary (1988): The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
Too Much Horror Fiction
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5M ago
Well, this was an unexpected treat. Long on my to-read list after the author's 1974 eco-horror Gwen, in Green become a personal favorite, Hugh Zachary's umpteenth novel The Revenant (Onyx, Aug 1988) is a respectable addition to the haunted house pantheon. The esteemed illustrator Richard Newton provides the stunning skull cover art, which perfectly illustrates the terrors within (while he is not ..read more
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The Pyx by John Buell (1959): She's Like Heroin to Me
Too Much Horror Fiction
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8M ago
With the finely-detailed image of a nude willowy blonde, tresses flowing, nipples bared, stomach taut, slim legs, and arched feet in full Playboy-model effect, the cover art for The Pyx promises a helluva lot! Especially for the Sixties when it was originally published by Popular Library (no specific pub date given, nor is artist identified). This little guy was on my want-list for a few years ..read more
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Latest Titles in Valancourt Books' Paperbacks from Hell Series: Two by Thomas Tessier
Too Much Horror Fiction
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1y ago
Valancourt Books has announced the 2023 release of two more titles in their long-running series of paperback horror featured in my and Grady Hendrix's Paperbacks from Hell. This time it's two 1980s novels by the esteemed Thomas Tessier: we've got Finishing Touches (1986) and Rapture (1987), major works of psychosexual horror. Tessier is no pulpy schlockmeister: his style is chilling, literate ..read more
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Hide and Seek by Jack Ketchum (1984): Linger on Your Pale Blue Eyes
Too Much Horror Fiction
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1y ago
A brief, stark coming-of-age tale of terror, Hide and Seek was the second novel from the late Jack Ketchum—famous pseudonym of author Dallas Mayr, who died of cancer in 2018 at age 71. Published as a paperback original by Ballantine Books in June 1984, this slim little book reads like a James M. Cain or a Jim Thompson crime novel, with a no-account narrator meeting an enticing woman far outside ..read more
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The Cats by Nick Sharman (1977): Apocalypse Meow
Too Much Horror Fiction
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1y ago
Scott Grønmark was his name and writing pulp horror paperbacks under the pseudonym "Nick Sharman" was his game. Born in Oslo, Norway, in 1952, he was working in the PR department of New English Library (which is why of course he had to use a pseudonym) when he began his published career with The Cats. It was originally published by NEL in 1977 (below), and then by Signet in America in May 1979 ..read more
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The Damnation Game by Clive Barker (1985): Gambling's for Fools
Too Much Horror Fiction
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1y ago
Another reread of a famous Eighties horror novel, in which I ask the time-honored question: does it hold up lo these many decades later?If you've followed Too Much Horror Fiction at any time over the past 13 (!!!) years, you'll know Clive Barker is one of my lodestars of genre fiction, up there in my own personal pantheon with H.P. Lovecraft, Stephen King, and Harlan Ellison. It's not just ..read more
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