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Book Review: Christmas and Other Horrors: A Winter Solstice Anthology edited by Ellen Datlow

Cover art for Christmas and Other Stories: An Anthology of Solstice Horror

 

Christmas and Other Horrors:: An Anthology of Solstice Horror edited by Ellen Datlow

Titan Books, 2023

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1803363264

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook

Buy:    Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com

 

 

Many people think of the Christmas season as a cheerful time of year, but it’s always been a time where sprits, gods, and terrifying creatures roam. Ghost stories set at Christmas abound: Charles Dickens and M.R James both published them every year. Coinciding with the winter solstice, it’s also a time of sacrifice. Christmas and Other Horrors draws on this tradition, with a wide variety of stories, ranging from folk horror to apocalyptic clifi.

 

There are several stories I found especially enjoyable.

In “The Importance of a Tidy Home,” ,by Christopher Golden, grotesque creatures local to Salzburg, Austria murder residents of homes that haven’t been tidied for the new year;

“The Ghost of Christmases Past”, by Richard Kadrey, describes Christmas Eve with Laura, who boards herself into her house every year to prevent the return of a cannibalistic witch who ate her brother in front of her, to her husband’s disbelief;

“All The Pretty People” by Nadia Bulkin, describes a Festivus party reuniting college friends, who are surprised when their friend Sam, who ghosted them months ago, arrives

“Cold”, by Cassandra Khaw, is an apocalyptic clifi story in which a saint, Brede, arrives every year on the winter solstice, asking if she can stay and sleep until spring… but what happens when spring doesn”t come? The figurative language and world-building in this story were fantastic.

In “Löyly Sow-na”,by Josh Malerman, Russell visits his Finnish girlfriend Hannele’s family, where he is trapped in a sauna with her father. I had no idea how this story was going to play out!

“Grave of Small Birds”, by Kaaron Warren, is a folk horror tale in which a bad-tempered reality show chef specializing in medieval cookery takes a job on a small British island with strange Christmas traditions. While it was fairly predictable, the setting was well-done. The main character was unlikable, so I found the ending very satisfying. This was a very atmospheric story, and descriptions of the island and its unusual traditions were excellent..

 

While the winter solstice and the Christmas season have passed, I can recommend this book for any time of year.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

 

Women in Horror Month: Book Review: Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women edited by Lee Murray and Geneve Flynn

cover art for Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women edited by Lee Murray and Geneve Flynn

( Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women, edited by Lee Murray and Geneve Flynn

Omnium Gatherum 2020

ISBN: 9781949054279

Available: Paperback, Kindle

 

Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women is an anthology of stories by Southeast Asian women writers of horror. No one questions that the dangers cultures try to warn against in their ancient stories exist, but should we take the stories themselves as fact or fiction? The “unquiet” Southeast Asian mothers, daughters, wives, and girlfriends in Black Cranes ask this very question as they experience the the disturbing intrusion of these supernatural stories into their modern lives. Many of these characters think that by leaving home or separating themselves from their cultural roots, they can learn to forget, discount or even reject the stories they have grown up with about ghosts, terrifying beasts, bloodthirsty demons, deadly tricksters, and zombies only to find out that is impossible.

 

Several of the stories in this collection are built around characters from Asian myths and legends. The kapre, a tree demon, protects an infant and loves her for life, as kapres do, in “A Love Story” by Rin Chupeco. In Gabriela Lee’s “Rites of Passage,” no matter how an unmarried pregnant girl from Manila tries to escape, the demon child or tiyanak that she has killed will eventually make her pay. Nadia Bulkin asserts that “Truth Is Order and Order Is Truth” in her tale of a conquering Demon Queen who retakes her kingdom from the “fish people,” while the wily fox spirit of Rena Mason’s “Ninth Tale” masquerading as a beautiful woman vies for a tricky bride-to-be’s young man. There is also a daughter who is shocked into believing in a kwee-kia, a dead or miscarried child brought to life again, by catching her mother breastfeeding her own in “Little Worm” by Geneve Flynn. There is even a take on what started as a 1970’s Japanese urban legend involving the kuchisake-onna, or “slit-mouthed woman” in “A Pet Is for Life,” also by Geneve Flynn.

 

A few of these tales read like modern updates of older stories. Their focus is the clash of cultures within an individual’s psyche. Grace Chan’s “Of Hunger and Fury” explores the separation between a daughter and the mother who sent her into a foreign world for a better life. Chan’s poetic descriptions and strong sense of place enhance this tale of the superstition and deeply held beliefs that hold the old generation captive and threaten to erase those in the new who dare to ignore their roots or move beyond the past. The resulting sense of loss is revealed from the mother’s perspective in “Frangipani Wishes” by Lee Murray, in which the mother destroys her own life to forge a future for her daughter. In “Phoenix Claws”, also by Lee Murray, a young woman’s boyfriend is culture tested when he is offered chicken feet at a family meal. When she covers for him by eating the feet herself, she is given a supernatural punishment.

 

The remaining science fiction stories suggest what could happen when culture, relationships, and conflict reach the mythological future. Elaine Cukegkeng predicts the next iteration of overbearing mothers as those who can genetically alter their daughters. A “cosmetech” surgeon can upgrade his wife’s appearance in “Skin Dowdy” by Angela Yuriko Smith, but will she or he ever be satisfied? In Smith’s “Vanilla Rice,” a daughter threatens to undo her mother’s work by removing her physical trait chip. Finally, in “Fury” by Christina Sng, we find out what new horrors  a pandemic will unleash and ask ourselves why the husband in “The Mark” by Grace Chan has a zipper on his chest.

 

There are so many ways into this horror collection: mythology, science fiction, legend, women’s issues, and cultural issues. Readers will appreciate the variety and be drawn in by the storytelling that leads us to believe that the horrors of the past are real, have not died, and are waiting to be reborn in the present. Recommended.

Contains: violence and sexual situations

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley