Ratings1
Average rating4
We live in anxious times, you and I, desperately uncertain times. An era in which governments behave irrationally. Diseases ravage the populous. And internet culture threatens to change who we really are. Modern life, for many, is one giant trigger warning. You need a place of sanctuary, a refuge from the chaos - so follow me now, into The Comfort Zone and Other Safe Spaces. In the Zone nothing is what it seems. Houses defy the laws of nature while bodies become portals to impossible worlds. Viruses harbour mystifying enigmas and technologies incite the most subversive of desires. Unfathomable encounters lurk both beneath the waves and between the stars. Even birth and death, once knowable certainties, are here warped beyond all recognition. In his debut collection, Tom Over pushes the boundaries of genre storytelling into startling new realms. From transgressive weird fiction to 80s-inspired splatterpunk, from surreal dreamscapes to body horror nightmares. Exploring both earthbound fears and uncharted cosmic terror, these stories will lure you into spaces that, upon inspection, may prove not safe after all... - "Tom Over shows no bounds in how far he's willing to go with the absurd and grotesque and I love him for it. He is a tightrope walker of a writer, balancing horror and pitch black humour with literary flare. Reading this book was the most fun I've had in a while. I loved these stories. I love this collection."- Philip LoPresti, author of The Things We Bury - "...Safe Spaces is conclusive evidence that Tom Over is the new heir to the throne of nihilism and chaos. A future transgressive classic!"- Chris Kelso, author of The DREGS Trilogy - "Discomfiting. Unsafe. Grotesque. Night after night, these stories invaded my dreams." - Gregor Xane, author of The Hanover Block - "Inventive, transgressive, and bristling with dark life, Tom Over's The Comfort Zone and Other Safe Spaces is an auspicious debut-it'll have you turning on all the lights, laughing, wincing, asking yourself if he'll GO THERE and discovering with gratitude that yes, he will in fact GO THERE...There and Beyond."- Matthew M. Bartlett, author of Gateways to Abomination.
Reviews with the most likes.
I need to stop reading this author over my lunch, his stuff is not particularly graphic or gross (compared to other stuff I read at least) and yet the moment I sit down with food, I'll read something foul.
I really enjoyed The Vegetarians (that progression, that ending, chef's kiss) and Physical Media (horror comedy about a smart TV). The imagery was generally pretty solid. The first 5 stories in the collection were all really strong and would recommend this collection even if it was just for these.
There's also a couple of stories I didn't particularly like such as the one where the child main character read more like a teenager than like the 6 year old he was supposed to be (which was too bad because the idea behind the story was really cool) and the 2 stories that were more on the bizzarro side (though for these 2 I think it was more because I wasn't in the right headspace to enjoy them).