1,632 Books
See allA short, excellent book!
Yes. Birds do start attacking people, but the real horror is linking nature and destruction around real war and sieges.
A truly unsettling experience.
4/5
Quick thoughts: What can I say. A collection of some of the finest horror shorts I have read. The wide range of genres and excellent story telling will have you devouring each one.
Here are all the individual updates:
Story 1 of 20: “Jerusalem's Lot” - What a fun, brooding, spooky tale featuring a family home and a town with a dark past. LOVED the letter writing perspective and the church sequences. (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Story 2 of 20: “Graveyard Shift” - A deceptively fun story that quite literally creeps up on you at the end. Stay out of the basement!
Yoko Ogawa writes a range of thrilling shorts in this collection called “Revenge.” Each story takes a short look into the lives of seemingly interconnected characters. However, once you get to know the characters, their tendencies, and their innermost thoughts, each thread sort of winds its way together.
The dark narratives always include some sort of macabre undertone and subtly that really gets under the skin. For instance, in “Sewing for the Heart” (my absolute favorite of the bunch), we are introduced to a singer who literally has her heart attached to the outside of her body. She is self-conscious of it, and as you can imagine, she wants it covered up so nobody can see it when she performs. She enlists the help of a handbag designer to develop something that fits over it. He has some interesting inner thoughts (to say the least) and develops a unique solution. This story really captures the feel of Japanese horror in a way that excites, nauseates, and makes you think. Sadly, not all of the shorts are as good as this one.
To me, most of the stories are a bit too heavy-handed. Yes, the universe being built between the stories is interesting, but it meanders quite a bit throughout, leaving some of the ah-ha moments to fall flat. I really did not have the inkling to review some of the past stories to really connect each and every thread together.
So, who is this for? Well, that is a tricky question to answer. It is effective enough to give you genuine goosebumps if you are a seasoned horror fan while also stimulating the brain with some extra sensory imaginative underpinnings if you are looking for something a bit more challenging. It just does not hit any trope with a wide brush.
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A reaction to each story and a separate review for each:
Story 1 of 11: “Afternoon at the Bakery” - This one was on the creepy side. Especially the refrigerator scene. (⭐⭐⭐)
Story 2 of 11: “Fruit Juice” - this story had an eerie feel to it. A weird date, some fruit eating, and a melancholy follow up later in life. (⭐⭐)
Story 3 of 11 - “Old Mrs. J” - This was the best one so far! A drunk husband, fingerling vegetables, and massages gone wrong.
Knowing that the book is a classic really hinders my review in a way. About halfway through the Maltese Falcon i was could not help but think about why its considered so great. The book has unlikable and scummy characters who are hard to root for and as i neared the last few pages became even more disappointed. Maybe the film is better and allows for more character development but the old detective story is just plain bland. We have had several decades of similarly paced books based on detectives and maybe this was groundbreaking at the time. I just did not have a great time with it in the present.
Stephen King writes epic tales of horror with flashes of symbolism that induce panic, fear, and thoughtfulness, that needle their way into the psyche.
Misery was certifiably nuts from start to finish.
This book has no demonic cars, vampires, or reincarnated pets; what it has is much worse. It has Annie Wilkes, and she wants a happy ending to her favorite book series. Be afraid, be very afraid!