Sunday, May 31, 2020

Night Monsters by Fritz Leiber

(pb; 1969: story anthology)


Overall review


Night Monsters is a standout tale collection. Its stories are presented in an intuitive, theme-linked and -progressive flow, the key elements of each story passed on─in altered form─to the next story. Three of the four pieces are excellent, one of them good (it’s chatty). Worth owning, this.



Stories


The Black Gondolier”: In Los Angeles, CA, a man recounts his friendship with a conspiracy theorist (Daloway), who lives in mortal fear of oil─which may possess a malevolent awareness. Creepy, atmospheric, entertaining, quirky and overly chatty work.


Midnight in the Mirror World”: A man (Giles Nefandor) sees weird, multiple figure reflections in his late-night mirror─is he being stalked? And if so, by whom or what?

As with his other works (e.g., Our Lady of Darkness, 1977), Leiber─in “Midnight”─abstract, odd notions of unease palpable and believable. Excellent piece, one of my favorite Leiber works thus far.


I’m Looking for Jeff”: A mysterious Veronica Lake look-alike─invisible to some people─regularly visits Tomtoms, a bar, looking for Jeff. Clever, fun and superb tale, would make a great Twilight Zone episode.


The Casket-Demon”: A notorious film star (Vividy Sheer) is repeatedly─and by necessity, if she is to continue living─attacked by a demon, whose purpose is to hunt and eventually kill those in her family.

Casket-Demon” is a unique, sly and full-of-twists story, one of the best stories I’ve read a long time.

#

Night Monsters was packaged as a reverse-bound “Ace Double” novel, which means that if readers flip the book over and upside down, there was another science fiction novel. Often, it was penned by another author. In this case, it is Fritz Leiber’s The Green Millennium.


Friday, May 29, 2020

Crabs on the Rampage by Guy N. Smith

(pb; 1981: fourth book in the ten-book Crabs series)

From the back cover

“The beach was filled with happy vacationers. They’d forgotten THE CRABS. . . like a bad dream chased away by the morning sun.

“We’d wiped out these mutant monsters. The giant creatures whose hunger raged for human flesh were dead.

“Or were they? Scientist Cliff Davenport feared the nightmare wasn’t over. But he didn’t know the terrifying truth. THE CRABS were back─disease-ridden, mad with pain. Mad with hunger.

“And on that beach were hundreds of men, women and children. Food for. . . crabs on the rampage.”


Review

Crabs is a solid, mostly by-the-numbers stalk-and-kill read, a well-written B-movie novel. Smith throws a few series-progressive twists in this melodramatic, also-works-as-a-standalone book, a setup for a much bigger ocean-born threat. I would be surprised if this is not the basis for a 1950s monster/Syfy Original film.  Followed by Crabs’ Moon.

Sunday, May 03, 2020

Frank Frazetta’s Death Dealer: Lords of Destruction by James Silke

(pb; 1989: second book in James Silke’s Frank Frazetta’s Death Dealer quadrilogy)

From the back cover

“In the mists of time, before Atlantis rose. . .

“Gath of Baal was imprisoned by the Horned Helmet, the Death Dealer. Only the innocent touch of the maiden Robin Lakehair could free him from its murderous power, even for a time.

“Now Tivvy, Nymph Queen of Pyram, seeks the godlike powers that she can gain only from Robin Lakehair’s death. To save Robin’s life, Gath must don the helmet again and confront the demons Tivvy has summoned from the primordial depths─demons that emerge from mankind’s deepest fears.

“For his own freedom and the life of his beloved, Gath of Baal, the Death Dealer, must face the Lords of Destruction.”


Review

Lords picks up shortly after the events of Prisoner of the Horned Helmet. Like its source novel and the artwork that inspired Prisoner, it is hypermasculine and cinematic-vivid, with genre-puncturing humor baked into the bloody, often-too-sexist storyline and characters (lots of women-wallowing-in-bathetic-naked-distress scenes). Because of these last bits of excess, there are occasional passages that are more filler than thriller, but, because of Silke’s ability to balance engaging characters, effective twists, intriguing action and storylines, clever wordplay and a hurly burly tone, it works for the most part. While not as good as Prisoner, it is a worthwhile continuation and expansion of the characters, themes and storyline from the first book.

Followed by Frank Frazetta’s Death Dealer: Tooth and Claw.

Vihorror! Cocktales of Sex and Death by Will Viharo

(pb; 2020: story anthology)

From the back cover

“. . . These titillating tales of erotic, existential terror are cinematic fever dreams in literary form, individually and collectively conveying the delirious desire that overwhelms our senses and the deep dread that undermines our spirits when confronted with the seemingly contradictory but essentially complementary twin fates of mating and mortality. There is only one entrance and one exit in this brief, beautiful horrific cycle of precious, ephemeral Flesh.

“Welcome to the uniquely stylized, conceptually uncompromising world of Vihorror.”


Overall review

Vihorror! continues to mine the dark, pulpy and neurotic vein of sex-media-horror-love-death that informs much of Viharo’s oeuvre. Not only does Vihorror! maintain that thematic consistency, it─in especially bleak, sometimes funny fashion─hyperfocuses on it in a way that Vihorror! could almost be stripped of the label entertainment. I say “almost” because the author has not abandoned his frakk-it-all, cinematic, sometimes hallucinatory blender approach, he’s just scaled it back a bit, compared to some of his recent works (e.g., his Mental Case Files trilogy). All of the stories, some better than others (but never uninteresting), ably flesh out the inherent, aforementioned values, images and action, and Vihorror!’s intuitive, loosely linked stories flow in an intriguing and anthology-true setup. 

This may be one of my favorite Viharo works because it shows Viharo creating in mature, dealing-with-troubling-events mode, one that is not for prudes or the easily offended, but for those willing to enter a sometimes uncomfortable, pulptastic and R-sometimes-X-rated surreality. 


Stories


Dismember Me”: A half-naked, panicked woman runs around a dangerous city, trying to remember who she is and what happened to her. An entertaining, fast-moving, adrenalized and nasty sex-and-violence work, it reads like a Fifties noir/Twilight Zone crossover episode, given how cinematic, brief and effective as it is.



The Lost Sock”: Mood-effective desperation, dread and eroticism and surrealism highlight this pop-culture savvy and lust-crusty work about a down-on-his-luck man trying to locate a missing sock. Excellent, Twilight Zone-esque work, this.

This story was previously published in the Winter 2014 issue of Dark Corners magazine and Viharo's anthology, Chumpy Walnut and Other Stories.



Nightmare Cloud”: A lonely man has wet, disturbing dreams about a nameless woman whose ultimate nature is redemptive and damning. Atmospheric piece that effectively shows the protagonist’s increasing desperation.



Dead Nudes”: A stripper heads into work, only to find that the club─with music still playing─is empty, aside from one mysterious customer sitting at a table. Good character-centered read, with an equal, tone-true mix of sleaze, dread and realization. Not only that, it makes mention of a certain ex-P.I.-turned-dog-walker!



Mood Massacre”: This one put me in the mindset of a sped-up Jess-Franco-meets-other-Seventies-sleaze-merchants film. A woman goes on a rampage of sucking off men before shooting them to death. Initially, I was not into this one, but second-half backstory explanations and a great stuff-to-follow ending made it work.



Slaughter of the Senses”: An unnamed, bored female man-killer, who may or may not have dreamed the events of “Mood Massacre,” has a threesome with a waitress and a stranger, whose affiliations may complicate the man-killer’s existence. This is an entertaining story that not only─possibly─links to the previous tale, but maintains the X-rated, violent and over-the-top tone of most of the stories in this anthology.



Fleshpot Orgy”: A demon, linked to the antiheroines of “Mood Massacre”/ “Slaughter of the Senses” and “Nightmare Cloud,” wallows in the increasingly cold comfort of 24/7 possession and nasty sex.



Like, Dig”: A sociopathic killer with acromegaly (physical disfiguration), attacked by a strange dog, crosses paths with a certain ex-private-investigator-turned-dog-walker. This has all the usual Viharo touches: vivid lust, fetishism; gratuitous-for-some violence and love of movies, music and books; world-weary and wandering characters; onomatopoeic swirls of emotions and actions. But, like many of the tales in this anthology, it ties them together in sometimes surprising, natural story arcs that do not feel writerly.

One of my favorite entries in this story collection.



The Fleeting Feeling of Forever”: A woman, stumbling under the weight of her ennui and failing relationships, accidentally finds animalistic release. Fans of Paul Schrader’s 1982 film Cat People are a good audience for this story, loosely linked to “Like, Dig” and “Slaughter of the Senses.”



Claw Marks on the Hourglass”: An ex-porn actress/stripper falls victim to the resulting violence of her declining lifestyle. Another evocative mood-piece work, this, linked to “The Fleeting Feeling of Forever.”



Wet Dreams of a Mermaid”: The clever, bloody, tone-shifting and oddly fulfilling porn film mentioned in “Claw Marks on the Hourglass” is described, reel by reel. This is an especially fun piece, and standout entry in this anthology. If filmed, this quick, constant reality-shifting work would be amazing and distinctive.



Big Bust at the Cha Cha Lounge”: An older, life-battered Vic Valentine ruminates on all that he has seen and experienced, a summing-up of the underlying themes of this series of stories.



Hunt, Kill, Feed, F**k, Repeat”: Five human survivors from different crawls of life hole up in their post-humanity-wipeout resort, engaging in the titular activities. Excellent, bleakly funny and final work in this intense burst of tales. One of my favorite works as well.


The House That Stood Still by A.E. van Vogt

(pb; 1950)

From the back cover

“Stephens had to solve the mystery of the centuries-old house that stood still─or Earth would be destroyed!

“At first Allison Stephens knew only that there was something strange about the house and its sinister inhabitants. Then he stumbled onto the spaceship and learned of the catastrophe that threatened to obliterate the universe from the heavens─a catastrophe that the masked immortals from the house that stood still could prevent.

“But the immortals planned instead to escape to another planet─leaving Earth to its terrible fate. Only one of them, the unearthly Mistra Lannett, agreed to help save the world. During the fateful days that followed, Stephens and Mistra met the challenge to defeat the most indestructible aliens the world had ever known!”


Review

House is an excellent, fun thriller-science-fiction-P.I.-mystery novel, its prose lean for the most part, always compelling and fast-paced, with constant twists, turns and mysterious identities. This is a hard-to-set-down genre hybrid work, one that I read in short period of time, and one that is great enough to be kept on my bookshelf (I don’t keep most books), a high bar work for the genres it straddles.