Tag: short stories

Review: It Waits in the Woods

It Waits in the Woods
Josh Malerman
From the Creature Feature collection for Amazon available free through Prime as a member

From the same collection as The Pram by Joe Hill, at 51 pages this novella follows a young woman as she seeks answers about her sister’s disappearance three years before. A budding documentarian, Brenda goes into the wilderness with a theory about a creature there that may be responsible for her sister’s disappearance and death; a death which Brenda has already accepted and which her parents have openly blamed her for.
I had initially been reading this story them stopped myself and started over because I felt I was reading it too quickly. It’s definitely a story to be savored so that the build is satisfying. It follows traditional horror novel plotting and slow, crawling progress buffered by world building.
On my second reading, I really enjoyed the way the world was plotted. It’s not something to listen to idly as an audio book or skim over. It also featured a first If seen in quite a while—an actual goddamn monster. Harkening to creature features it’s a wonderful homage to horror stories of 70s film when much of mainstream horror transitioned from Universal Monsters to the unknown, human, and perverse.



10/10, read it babes

Review: Big Bad

Big Bad
Chandler Baker


A copy paste disclaimer! :There are several stories available for free download if you are already subscribed to amazon prime, and I took advantage of that recently and thought I’d spend November telling you about the short stories and novellas I picked up that I liked best and thought was worth the read.

These tend to be stories commissioned by Amazon and put into collections by Amazon

Okay, back to review:

From the first line I knew I would like this one; a horror story wrapped in a failed marriage and the other way around.

At 58 pages, it’s a very quick read. The pacing and characterization is a lovely build to the end of the story; the twists are both obvious and not, telescoped well but always leaving the reader with doubts.

It’s another of those stories that is difficult to talk about without spoiling the whole of it, so very worth the read.

I honestly started to say more but am not sure how to without giving it away haha

The characters are extremely well done and feel organic, even under their bizarre circumstances.

Review: What the Dead Know

What the Dead Know
Nghi Vo

A copy paste disclaimer! :There are several stories available for free download if you are already subscribed to amazon prime, and I took advantage of that recently and thought I’d spend November telling you about the short stories and novellas I picked up that I liked best and thought was worth the read.

These tend to be stories commissioned by Amazon and put into collections by Amazon

Okay, back to review:

Of the stories I read, this one has stuck with me a long time. The narrative is immediately engaging, the characters relatable and enjoyable. It’s one of those stories difficult to talk about without spoiling it because you want to pull others into this same world that you were pulled into.
The gimmick of two con artists, one being utilized for and also taking advantage of the ignorance of those around them because of their race; the communication with spirits and motif of revenge all check very important boxes to me.
Of the ghosts stories I’ve read, which is not a small number, several of the images in this story are so evocative that they’re well stuck in my craw. I absolutely would recommend this story to anyone and at 30 pages it leaves you both wanting more and satisfied.

Review: The Six Deaths of the Saint

The Six Deaths of the Saint
Alix E Harrow

A copy paste ! :There are several stories available for free download if you are already subscribed to amazon prime, and I took advantage of that recently and thought I’d spend November telling you about the short stories and novellas I picked up that I liked best and thought was worth the read.

These tend to be stories commissioned by Amazon and put into collections by Amazon

Okay, back to review:

*Vomit, scream, fall over in vomit*
It’s perfect.
Professional start, no?

I absolutely adored this story. It checked every mark for me: time travel, time loop, deal with the devil, character development by progressing through trauma, sacrifice motif, clear evil, unclear anachronistic time period. The tone and voice of the story was so clear and strong immediately, the narrative wasting no time to establish the character outside of anything other than a force to be reckoned with through the motif of willpower.
I have recommended this short story to so many people at this point that even at 29 pages I’m willing to offer it up as one of my contenders for my favorite book I’ve read this year.
It is beautiful, the wording and flow of sentences purposeful and well sculpted.
No notes.

Never Whistle At Night

As always when I read any collection of short stories there are particular ones which catch my attention, but I really can’t stress how much I enjoyed ‘Never Whistle at Night’. The collection is extremely well put together, spanning a variety of topics impacting indigenous communities, whether that be indigenous folk lore inspired, inspired by racism, classism, internalized trauma, religious trauma, or all of the above and of course more. The cultural weight of each story has its place in the anthology.

The editors deserve all the credit in the world, it’s a wonderful collection. Please support them.

there is a plant growing in my belly

There is a plant growing in my belly.

I swallowed a seed many years ago, and since then there has been the plant. The plant, occasionally, leaves me with remarkable thirst, with aching pains, with twisting vines through my limbs. If I care for it, if I allow, the plant thrives. I tip my head back and open my mouth to the sun. I drink cool water, I eat only what I think a plant could appreciate. Like attracts like, does it not? And I have a plant growing in my belly.

When the plant is doing well, and I am taking care of myself, I can feel it bloom. It has bloomed notably, with gusto, on several miraculous occasions. It bloomed in high school when I kissed a boy (who’s father hated me) under the bleachers during homecoming, just beneath his father’s feet. It bloomed triumphantly when I finished college, for an entire week, where I waited after the end of exams for graduation; driving places with Layla Alsnany as she stuck her crossed feet from the passenger seat window, red nail polish on her toes, and back in our apartment teaching me how to make chips, and laying out at the reservoir to get a sunburn together.  And the plant bloomed all the way from my belly to the tips of my shoulders when I took Kate Carter to the diner and we sat there in the middle of the day, skipping out on work, to plan our futures together.

There is a plant growing in my belly but now I think it is dying.

I am struggling to remember the last time that it bloomed. I have been doing everything I can, standing outside with my mouth open for many, painstaking hours, but it does not seem to get enough sun. It has been four years since I felt a flutter of it opening its petals. Its vines are distended. 

It seems to be only roused by surprise, so that when I try to instigate it the plant only shrivels. It needs to be taken, breathless, in mania. Passion is chased. If you just say, ‘here plant, here’s some water for you’ it huffs and turns away like a high schooler.

There is a plant growing in my belly and I can’t seem to make it happy. I look at other people and I think, well, of course.  They are smiling. They don’t have a pernicious plant to maintain. They can enjoy things. They can make a spontaneous decision, they don’t need to spend additional hours in sun gazing. They don’t have to feed themselves surprises and hope that the surprises please some insatiable, morose horticultural anomaly. 

They never have to look at the world around them and measure it in daylight, in nighttime, in fertilizer, in water. In circadian rhythms and early rising insomnia. They’re free. But I have a plant in my belly.

And I think that it is dying.

I don’t know what will happen if it does die.

I have been fostering this plant, tailoring myself to its whims, for such a very long time. I don’t know what its absence would be like. Would it be worse? Would I have the grooves of retracted vines inside of my limbs and veins like a network of ant tunnels, abandoned to crumble to dust? Or would something else be allowed to fill the space?

Something else can sound appealing, particularly on days when the plant burns up from too much sun or flops over from too much water.  But if I don’t know what is going to replace it, how do I know if that is better or worse?

I’ve lost petals before. A friend of mine had died very suddenly of a random, horrible medical condition that struck without warning. One moment we were discussing Voltron and the next she was dead on the ground, and I was abandoned with the terrible choice of whether or not to tell her family that Voltron had killed her.

I’ve lost other petals. Other disappointments or heartbreaks, the leaving of Kate Carter—but I don’t know what it would be like to be rid of the whole plant.

Frankly, I don’t know how our symbiosis works. I’m afraid to think, to potentiate the plant’s departure, because what if it is aware that I hate it and that is why it refuses to improve? So, intelligently, I have to mask these thoughts–so as to better trick the plant that is growing in my belly.

There are trees that are more than four thousand years old.

How long do I have to wait for a simple plant to die?

My son called me from school yesterday.

He informed me that Kate Carter had forgotten to pick him up and so I drove to and shuttled him toward Kate Carter’s house. 

In the car he had been silent. He had shambled to me, and gotten in, and looked out of the window.  It was sunny, the sky was blue, but he acting as if there was a rain cloud specifically meant for him. Surely this was not so grave as my abandonment by Kate Carter. And I had told him, your mother probably is running late at work and forgot about your practice. No need to be so dreary about it, more than likely just a misunderstanding. 

He’s old enough now, he could drive himself if he wanted, there’s no reason at all to be so muted.

But he didn’t seem enlightened or inspired by my words. He stared out of the window and didn’t acknowledge me at all.

So we drove in silence for a few long, drawing minutes. 

I found a new thing to say, rather than allow the silence to persist. I asked how his practice was. Some…sport…ball. He said track. I said ah. Nothing was improved.

I asked my son, how has school been? He said fine. He stared out of the window at passing scenery. At neatly manicured lawns and traffic stops and storefronts. He said nothing.

I asked him if he was seeing anyone, he grunted.

I asked him if he was hungry, he grunted.

I asked him if he was a pig, he rolled his eyes.

Finally, weary of my interrogation, my son told me: just leave it.

My son has a plant growing in his belly.

I must be careful in how I phrase this, because I don’t want it to suspect, but I have decided that you-know-who likely is going to die soon. In fact, I am going to help it along. Gently, of course. If for no other reason, so I can know what is on the other side, and tell him.

He came to the door and knocked against the screen. 

“That you, Chief?”

“Well I’ll be goddamned, Spinner?”

“How are you doing, old man?”

“Oh, Christ. Don’t ask me that,” He laughed. “Lee Spinner, my god. How have you been, boy?”

“Good, sir, good. I heard you were out here on Tamp and I said, by god, he finally sold the place on Wincrest.”

“I did, I did. Almost ten years now.”

“Well shit.”

“Where you been, Spinner?”

“Did thirty, sir, you may recall.”

“Is that so?”

“You may recall.”

“I was sure you would have gotten out sooner.”

“Well I did, sir, but then when I got out I just went an’ did it again three more times.”

“You did, Lee?”

“Oh yes, sir. You wasn’t fire chief anymore then.”

“No, I suppose I wasn’t.”

“What happened, sir?”

“Oh, I had to get out, Lee. Terrible business with a family of six. The whole house gone up.”

“I’m sorry to hear that, sir.”

“That’s all right, Lee. Shit, nothing to do with you.”

“I appreciate that, Chief, I appreciate that. I have to say, I’m sure glad to see you.”

“Well thank you, Lee. It’s nice seeing you.”

“You sure about that, Chief?”

“Of course!”

“Well gee, Chief, that’s awful nice of you.”

“Anytime, anytime. You get to be my age, all your friends dying off, I’ll tell you, I appreciate a familiar face.”

“Gosh, sir.”

“You want to stay for dinner? My oldest comes around in about an hour and brings me supper. Sundays is chicken.”

“No, sir, I really oughta get going, I just thought I’d stop in and say hello when I heard you was out here.”

“Well I’m glad you did, Lee. You don’t burn any more barns on your way out.”

“I’ll do my best, Chief. You know me.”