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Book Review: Seize the Night: New Tales of Vampiric Terror edited by Christopher Golden

Seize the Night: New Tales of Vampiric Terror edited by Christopher Golden

544 pages

Gallery Books 2015

ISBN-10: 1476783098

ISBN-13: 978-1476783093

 

When this reviewer first heard of a vampire anthology, expectations were tempered, to say the least. Vampires haven’t had teeth in years, so why would this collection be any different? Two words– Christopher Golden. In the anthologies Golden has edited, he has chosen fresh material with strong writing that overcomes the tired tropes of the horror genre. Previous themed anthologies he has edited, such as Monsters’ Corner, The New Dead, and 21st Century Dead have broken the confines of the expected, and Seize the Night bucks the trend of unimaginative stories about toothless, romantic,vampires. Golden challenged the writers within the pages to put their fangs to the sharpening stone and bite down into some serious flesh.

They responded.

What burns between the covers is a reason to care about the creatures of the night once again, a feat not easy to accomplish.  Nearly all of the tales here work here in establishing a sense of dread and fear, .Highlights include “Something Lost, Something Gained”, in which Seanan McGuire spins an eerie tale about a young girl in a storm. Her writing is swift and smooth. Kelley Armstrong’s “We Are All Monsters Here” envelops the reader in a claustrophobic event that puts the frights in human form. Leigh Perry’s “Direct Report” is a fascinating, chilling tale of a woman who awakens to a new personal world full of pain and despair, until she makes a discovery that turns the tables. Gary Braunbecks “Papercuts” is outstanding; it has to be the most unusual vampire tale in years, and it succeeds on all levels. Set in a bookstore, this is an imaginative story with very effective characterization. Finally, Rio Youers has a pair of stories that end the anthology in style, In all, Seize the Night has achieved the vision Golden imagined. Here’s to hoping that more writers will be inspired to put fear and dread back into the vampire genre, like those who accepted the challenge put forth here. Recommended for adult readers of vampire horror.

Reviewed by David Simms

 

The H-Word. Part 2

Watch out.

I’m gonna say it again. Horror. Horror fiction. It’s out there. And it not only crosses over, but exists outside the bounds of other genres. Don’t be afraid to say it. Some people just don’t seem to be able to get it down on paper.

In her new readers advisory guide, Fang-tastic Fiction: Twenty-First Century Paranormal Reads, Patricia O’Brien Mathews really tries hard to define the boundaries of what constitutes paranormal fiction, for the purposes of her guide. Her introduction makes it pretty specific, as a matter of fact. She excludes most science fiction, dystopian fiction, straight fantasy fiction, and horror fiction (which she defines as fiction with the primary intent to scare or horrify the audience). Alas, the world of literature is not so easily categorized these days, as she found when she searched for “paranormal” titles in bookstores and libraries. Does Kelley Armstrong write science fiction, horror, mystery or fantasy? Sarah Wendell of Smart Bitches, Trashy Books counts Armstrong’s novel Bitten as a favorite paranormal romance. Which is it? Are Rachel Vincent’s Werecats books(which we’ve reviewed here- check out this review for Stray science fiction, romance, or horror? And do they have anything in common with F. Paul Wilson’s Repairman Jack series (and here’s a review of Infernal from that series) at all, except for both being classified as science fiction and horror?

Do all of these really belong to the same family of books? Because horror keeps popping up, even in a book that specifically excludes books in that genre in favor of “paranormal reads”. Maybe someone should go shake the catalogers until they develop some consistency. No offense. I love catalogers.

I’ll mention here that Patricia contacted us and offered to help us out while I was in the middle of writing this. I really do think it’s great that she put this guide together. And it’s even better that she is willing to share her expertise. She has a blog where she updates her annotations, which is worth checking out.

So on to the next book that drove me bonkers. That would be Writing the Paranormal Novel: Techniques and Exercises For Weaving Supernatural Elements Into Your Story, by Steven Harper. I’m not really trying to write paranormal fiction, but for what it’s worth I think it’s an interesting and informative guide, and right at the beginning, Harper writes about “supernatural people”. You know, vampires, demons, zombies, shape-shifters, malevolent monsters… There’s lots about world building and developing character histories, plot, pacing, point of view… there are exercises you can try and checklists to use, but the closest Harper gets to the H-word is a mention of The Talisman, co-authored by Peter Straub and Stephen King. Now, obviously there are many types of books that use the classic monsters of the horror genre for their own ends (and the term “paranormal” covers a broad swath of literature), which is fine, but COME ON! Is the horror genre so invisible that you don’t notice it even when you are writing about writing about its tropes, creatures, and cliches?

Apparently it is.